How do I truncate a java String so that I know it will fit in a given number of bytes storage once it is UTF-8 encoded?
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Here is a simple loop that counts how big the UTF-8 representation is going to be, and truncates when it is exceeded:
This does handle surrogate pairs that appear in the input string. Java's UTF-8 encoder (correctly) outputs surrogate pairs as a single 4-byte sequence instead of two 3-byte sequences, so I haven't done a lot of testing on that code, but here are some preliminary tests:
Updated Modified code example, it now handles surrogate pairs. | |||||||||||||
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UTF-8 encoding has a neat trait that allows you to see where in a byte-set you are. check the stream at the character limit you want.
Example: If your stream is: 31 33 31 C1 A3 32 33 00, you can make your string 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, or 7 bytes long, but not 4, as that would put the 0 after C1, which is the start of a multi-byte char. | |||||||||||||
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You can calculate the number of bytes without doing any conversion.
You would have to detect surrogate pairs (D800-DBFF and U+DC00–U+DFFF) and count 4 bytes for each valid surrogate pair. If you get the first value in the first range and the second in the second range, it's all ok, skip them and add 4. But if not, then it is an invalid surrogate pair. I am not sure how Java deals with that, but your algorithm will have to do right counting in that (unlikely) case. | ||||
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You should use CharsetEncoder, the simple Something like this:
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