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I'm trying to pass parameters from a PHP middle tier to a java backend that understands J2EE. I'm writing the controller code in Groovy. In there, I'm trying to decode some parameter that will likely contain international characters.

I am really puzzled by the results of my debugging this problem so far, hence I wanted to share it with you in the hope that someone will be able to give the correct interpretation of my results.

For the sake of my little test, the parameter I'm passing is "déjeuner". Just to be sure, System.out.println("déjeuner") correctly gives me:

déjeuner

in the console

Now following are the char/dec and hex values of each char of the original string:

next char: d 100 64
next char: ? -61 c3
next char: ? -87 a9
next char: j 106 6a
next char: e 101 65
next char: u 117 75
next char: n 110 6e
next char: e 101 65
next char: r 114 72

note that the c3a9 sequence in UTF-8 is the wished-for character: http://www.fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/00e9/index.htm

Now if I try to read this string as an UTF-8 string, as in stmt.getBytes("UTF-8"), I suddenly end up having a 11 bytes sequence, as follows:

64 c3 83 c2 a9 6a 65 75 6e 65 72

whereas stmt.getBytes("iso-8859-1") gives me 9 bytes:

64 c3 a9 6a 65 75 6e 65 72

note the c3a9 sequence here!

now if I try to convert the UTF-8 sequence to UTF-8, as in

new String(stmt.getBytes("UTF-8"), "UTF-8");

I get:

next char: d 100 64
next char: ? -61 c3
next char: ? -87 a9
next char: j 106 6a
next char: e 101 65
next char: u 117 75
next char: n 110 6e
next char: e 101 65
next char: r 114 72

note the c3a9 sequence

while

new String(stmt.getBytes("iso-8859-1"), "UTF-8")

results in:

next char: d 100 64
next char: ? -23 e9
next char: j 106 6a
next char: e 101 65
next char: u 117 75
next char: n 110 6e
next char: e 101 65
next char: r 114 72

note the e9 which in utf-8 (and ascii) is, again, the 'é' character that I'm longing for.

Unfortunately, in neither case am I ending up with a proper string that would display like the literal string "déjeuner". Strangely enough, the byte sequences both seem correct though.

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2 Answers

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When dealing with Strings, always remember: byte != char. So in your first example, you have the char c3, not the byte c3 which is a huge difference: The byte would be part of the UTF-8 sequence but the char already is Unicode. So when you convert that to UTF-8, the Unicode character c3 must become the byte sequence c3 83.

So the question is: How did you get the String? There must be a bug in that code which doesn't properly handle UTF-8 encoded byte sequences.

The reason why ISO-8859-1 usually works is that this encoding doesn't modify any char with a code point < 256 (i.e. anything between 0 and 255), so UTF-8 encoded byte sequences won't be modified.

Your last example is also wrong: The char e9 is é in ISO-8859-1 and Unicode. In UTF-8, it's not valid since it's not a byte and since it's the byte c3 prefix is missing. That said, it correctly represents the Unicode string you seek.

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Thanks for the very informative answer. So it boils down to request.getParameter() in javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest to not correctly handle UTF-8 encoded byte sequences, right? I have called req.setCharacterEncoding("UTF-8") on it though. What possible workaround am I being left with? It still isn't clear for me how I get the original data for my parameters (its bytes, not chars) so I can get some non-buggy String implementation to work out the right UTF string out of it... – candide.kemmler Oct 29 at 10:33
My guess is that the sender encodes the data with UTF-8 but fails to set the correct HTTP headers for this. – Aaron Digulla Oct 29 at 11:25
So make sure that the PHP part generates web pages that correctly specify their encoding, especially in forms. – Aaron Digulla Oct 29 at 11:26
After that, the Java code should decode the data correctly without any manual corrections by you. – Aaron Digulla Oct 29 at 11:27
1  
okay ... do I get "correct answer", then? :) – Aaron Digulla Oct 30 at 8:26
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If you start with the Java String where "d\u00C3\u00A9jeuner".equals(stmt) then the data is already corrupt at this stage.

A Java char is not a C char. A char in Java is 16bits wide and implicitly contains UTF-16 encoded data. Trying to store any other encoded data in a Java char/String type is asking for trouble. Character data in any other encoding should be as byte data.

If you are reading the parameter using the servlet API, then it is likely that the HTTP request contains inconsistent or insufficient encoding information. Check the calling code and the HTTP headers. It is likely that the client is encoding the data as UTF-8, but the servlet is decoding it as ISO-8859-1.

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