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When i use

small =Byte.parseByte("01101001",2)

and then use this:

String binary = Integer.toBinaryString(small & 0xFF);
binarynumber= Integer.parseInt(binary);

they give different values. binary number = 1101001

what happened to the leading 0?

-edit- i think i figured it out, thanks for all the responses!

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  • Integers always have their leading 0s removed. 4 == 00000000000004, but is represented as 4.
    – rocketboy
    Sep 24, 2013 at 5:31

2 Answers 2

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Why should there be a leading zero? How would you expect differing results for Byte.parseByte("01101001",2) and Byte.parseByte("1101001",2)? Both return the same byte.

The same applies to Integer.parseInt().

If you want to have leading zeroes in your output, you have to use a format string.

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Integer#parseInt()

always returns an Integer i.e decimal representation, which never have leading zeros.

Returns an Integer object holding the value extracted from the specified String when parsed with the radix given by the second argument. The first argument is interpreted as representing a signed integer in the radix specified by the second argument, exactly as if the arguments were given to the parseInt(java.lang.String, int) method. The result is an Integer object that represents the integer value specified by the string.

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