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What's the best way to pipe the output from an java.io.OutputStream to a String in Java?

Say I have the method:

  writeToStream(Object o, OutputStream out)

Which writes certain data from the object to the given stream. However, I want to get this output into a String as easily as possible.

I'm considering writing a class like this (untested):

class StringOutputStream extends OutputStream {

  StringBuilder mBuf;

  public void write(int byte) throws IOException {
    mBuf.append((char) byte);
  }

  public String getString() {
    return mBuf.toString();
  }
}

But is there a better way? I only want to run a test!

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4  
Do you have only ASCII bytes? DO you need no Codepage? – Horcrux7 Oct 19 '08 at 20:13
In this case, yes. However, good point - I hadn't thought about it. – Adrian Mouat Oct 19 '08 at 20:19
Good question - this is something I easily forget, despite having done it before. – Jonik Jun 7 '09 at 15:37

5 Answers

up vote 162 down vote accepted

I would use a ByteArrayOutputStream. And on finish you can call:

new String( baos.toByteArray(), codepage );

or better

baos.toString( codepage );
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3  
ByteArrayOutputStream has no toArray() method; it does have toByteArray() though. Can you fix the answer? Also, why not use baos.toString(String charsetName) which would be slightly simpler. – Jonik Jun 7 '09 at 15:29
Thanks for the tip with the toString(charset). I have never look on the toString because I have expect a ByteArrayOutputStream@123456. I have also correct the mistake with toByteArray(). – Horcrux7 Jun 7 '09 at 18:41
Also note that some codepages are not installed unless you explicitly ask for them with a custom install. – Thorbjørn Ravn Andersen Jun 7 '09 at 21:14
1  
can return simply baos.toString(), what is the coepage thing for? – Tom Brito May 26 '10 at 13:42
10  
A bytearray is just binary data. As (unicode) text can be encoded binary in many different ways, the ByteArrayOutputStream needs to know what encoding was used to encode the bytes, so it can use the same encoding to decode the bytes to a string again. Simply using toString without an argument is not wise as you just ignore the problem instead of tackling it; Java will use the platform encoding which could be correct...or not. It's random basically. You need to find out what encoding was used to write the text to bytes and pass that encoding to toString. – Stijn de Witt Feb 10 '11 at 13:46
show 3 more comments

I like the Apache Commons IO library. Take a look at its version of ByteArrayOutputStream, which has a toString(String enc) method as well as toByteArray() . Using existing and trusted components like the Commons project lets your code be smaller and easier to extend and repurpose. Good luck.

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5  
Save yourself a year of your life and read through all the common's APIs so when you encounter a problem, you can unleash a fully tested and community owned solution. – Bob Herrmann Oct 20 '08 at 0:53
4  
Hmm, I'm an avid Apache Commons user, but in this case I fail to see why you should use Commons IO's ByteArrayOutputStream instead of JDK's own java.io.ByteArrayOutputStream. The latter also provides toString(String charsetName) and toByteArray() methods. Care to elaborate? – Jonik Jun 7 '09 at 15:33
Yeah, since the original context was a better way to stream and extract content, I included the Commons IO example since it included a 'write(InputStream)' method for a then-undefined/questionable mechanism for populating the OutputStream. I'd go with the JDK, too. – Joe Liversedge Jun 8 '09 at 18:21

this worked nicely

    OutputStream output = new OutputStream()
    {
        private StringBuilder string = new StringBuilder();
        @Override
        public void write(int b) throws IOException {
            this.string.append((char) b );
        }

        //Netbeans IDE automatically overrides this toString()
        public String toString(){
            return this.string.toString();
        }
    };

method call =>> marshaller.marshal( (Object) toWrite , (OutputStream) output);

then to print the string or get it just reference the "output" stream itself As an example, to print the string out to console =>> System.out.println(output);

FYI: my method call marshaller.marshal(Object,Outputstream) is for working with xml. It is irrelevant to this topic.

This is higly wasteful for productional use, there are way to many conversion and it is a bit loose. This was just coded to prove to you that it is totally possible to create a custom OuputStream and output a string. But just go Horcrux7 way and all is good with merely two method calls.

And the world lives on another day....

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4  
Just casting a byte to char will only work on ascii. Use ByteArrayOutputStream like Horcrux7 – Dave Ray Oct 11 '09 at 22:45
Agreed with Dave Ray. You can't assume that your byte is an ASCII character. You need to interpret the bytes using an encoding. Use byteArrayOutputStream.toString("UTF-8") or new String(byteArrayOutputStream.toByteArray(), "UTF-8"). – Martin Dow Apr 5 '12 at 15:30

Here's what I ended up doing:

Obj.writeToStream(toWrite, os);
try {
    String out = new String(os.toByteArray(), "UTF-8");
    assertTrue(out.contains("testString"));
} catch (UnsupportedEncondingException e) {
    fail("Caught exception: " + e.getMessage());
}

Where os is a ByteArrayOutputStream.

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1  
what is 'os' in your code? – Synox Feb 12 '10 at 12:31

From what you describe I would suggest having a look at java.io.StringWriter. It collects in a StringBuffer which you can then convert to a String when you need it.

http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/io/StringWriter.html

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2  
Writers require char data, not bytes as the question has, which would require some intermediate decoding. – McDowell Jun 7 '09 at 19:40
1  
You are right - somehow I mixed Writers/Streams up while checking. For OutputStreams the usual trick is to use a ByteArrayOutputStream. – Thorbjørn Ravn Andersen Jun 7 '09 at 21:13

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