15

I have a text read from a XML file stored in UTF8 encoding. C# reads it perfectly, I checked with the debugger, but when I try to convert it to ASCII to save it in another file I get a ? char in places where there was a conflicting character. For instance, this text:

string s = "La introducción masiva de las nuevas tecnologías de la información";

Will be saved as

"La introducci?n masiva de las nuevas tecnolog?as de la informaci?n"

I cannot just replace them for their latin (a, e, i, o, u) vowels because some words in spanish would miss the sense. I've already tried this and this questions with no sucess. So Im hoping someone can help me. The selected answer in the second one didnt even compiled...!

In case someone wants to take a look, my code is this one:

private void WriteInput( string input )
{
   byte[] byteArray = Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(input);
   byte[] asciiArray = Encoding.Convert(Encoding.UTF8, Encoding.ASCII, byteArray);
   string finalString = Encoding.ASCII.GetString(asciiArray);

   string inputFile = _idFile + ".in";
   var batchWriter = new StreamWriter(inputFile, false, Encoding.ASCII);
   batchWriter.Write(finalString);
   batchWriter.Close();
}

2 Answers 2

39

Those characters have no mapping in ASCII. Review an ASCII table, like Wikipedia's, to verify this. You might be interested in the Windows 1252 encoding, or "extended ASCII", as it's sometimes called, which has code points for many accented characters, Spanish included.

var input = "La introducción masiva de las nuevas tecnologías de la información";
var utf8bytes = Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(input);
var win1252Bytes = Encoding.Convert(
                Encoding.UTF8, Encoding.GetEncoding("windows-1252"), utf8bytes);
File.WriteAllBytes(@"foo.txt", win1252Bytes);
3
  • @David: works perfectly for me, using the test case above. Make sure you don't have an ASCII encoding (Encoding.ASCII) stuck in your code somewhere. Dec 4, 2010 at 6:24
  • Sorry about that! tested again and works like a charm... Now I know why you have 18.3K rep!!! ;) Dec 4, 2010 at 6:28
  • I would add much more +1's if I could! :)
    – dba
    Sep 13, 2016 at 19:04
9

Can't be done. ASCII does not have those letters, so the best you can do is to URL-encode or unicode-escape-encode them.

3
  • How come? If ASCII doesnt have those letters how can I change the encoding from UTF8 to ASCII using Notepad++ and works like a charm? Dec 4, 2010 at 6:10
  • 5
    Because Notepad++ isn't really using ASCII. It's using something like CP1250, which does have those letters. Dec 4, 2010 at 6:13
  • 2
    Notepad++ converts to Win-1252 codepage (Latin), which has the accented in the higher half of the table (char codes 128+). However, that's not ASCII, that's an expansion of ASCII. ASCII only defines chars in the 0-127 range. Meanwhile, opening that file on a machine set with a different codepage, will show different characters in place of the accented one. In Win-1251 for example, you would see some Cyrillic letters instead. Dec 4, 2010 at 6:18

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