I'm outputting a byte array to a text file using the following method:
try{
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(filePath+".8102");
fos.write(concatenatedIVCipherMAC);
fos.close();
}catch(Exception e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
which outputs to the file a UTF-16 encoded data, example:
¢¬6î)ªÈP~m˜LïiƟê•Àe»/#Ó ö¹¥‘þ²XhÃ&¼lG:Öé )GU3«´DÃ{+í—Ã]íò
However when I'm reading it back in I get þÿ prepended to the front of the data, e.g:
þÿ¢¬6î)ªÈP~m˜LïiƟê•Àe»/?#Ó ö¹¥‘þ²XhÃ&¼lG:Öé )GU3«´DÃ{+í—Ã]íò
This is the method I'm using to read in the file:
private String getFilesContents()
{
String fileContents = "";
Scanner sc = null;
try {
sc = new Scanner(file, "UTF-16");
System.out.println("Can read file: "+file.canRead());
} catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
while(sc.hasNextLine()){
fileContents += sc.nextLine();
}
sc.close();
return fileContents;
}
and then byte[] contentsOfFile = fileContents.getBytes("UTF-16"); to convert the String into a byte array.
A quick Google told me that þÿ represents the byte order but is it Java putting that there or Windows? How can I avoid having the þÿ prepended at the start of the data I'm reading in? I was thinking of just ignoring the first two bytes but if it is Windows then this will obviously break the program on other platforms.
edit: changed appended to prepended.