4

Problem: Arabic words in my text files read by java show as series of question marks : ??????

Here is the code:

        File[] fileList = mainFolder.listFiles();
        BufferedReader bufferReader = null;
        Reader reader = null;


        try{

        for(File f : fileList){           
            reader = new InputStreamReader(new FileInputStream(f.getPath()), "UTF8");
            bufferReader = new BufferedReader(reader);
            String line = null;

            while((line = bufferReader.readLine())!= null){
               System.out.println(new String(line.getBytes(), "UTF-8"));
            }              

        }
        }
        catch(Exception exc){
            exc.printStackTrace();
        }

        finally {
            //Close the BufferedReader
            try {
                if (bufferReader != null)
                    bufferReader.close();
            } catch (IOException ex) {
                ex.printStackTrace();
            }

As you can see I have specified the UTF-8 encoding in different places and still I get question marks, do you have any idea how can I fix this??

Thanks

2 Answers 2

3

Instead of trying to print out the line directly, print out the Unicode values of each character. For example:

char[] chars = line.toCharArray();
for (int i = 0; i < chars.length; i++)
{
    System.out.println(i + ": " + chars[i] + " - " + (int) chars[i]);
}

Then look up the relevant characters in the Unicode code charts.

If you find it's printing 63, then those really are question marks... which would suggest that your text file isn't truly UTF-8 to start with.

If, on the other hand for some characters it's printing out "?" but then a value other than 63, then that would suggest it's a console display issue and you're reading the data correctly.

1
  • I agree, first separate the encoding issue from the display issue Dec 22, 2010 at 23:40
2

Replace

System.out.println(new String(line.getBytes(), "UTF-8"));

by

System.out.println(line);

The String#getBytes() without the charset argument namely uses platform default encoding to get the bytes from the string, which may not be UTF-8 per se. You're already reading the bytes as UTF-8 by InputStreamReader, so you don't need to massage it forth and back afterwards.

Further, ensure that your display console (where you're reading those lines) supports UTF-8. In for example Eclipse, you can do that by Window > Preferences > General > Workspace > Text File Encoding > Other > UTF-8.

See also:

7
  • I had this and It still displayed ????. However how do I make sure the console supports UTF-8? I'm pretty sure my console has support for utf-8 since I was able to print some arabic text on it from another project from the mySQL database. Dec 22, 2010 at 23:20
  • Depends on the kind of console. I added an example for Eclipse. It will however still fail when you massage the bytes forth and back using the default encoding as you did in your initial code.
    – BalusC
    Dec 22, 2010 at 23:21
  • do you know how can I do this in netbeans? Thanks Dec 22, 2010 at 23:27
  • Sorry, I haven't touched Netbeans for years. Look around in its manual (F1?) using keyword "encoding". To exclude the one or other, does it display properly when you do System.out.println("somearabic") directly?
    – BalusC
    Dec 22, 2010 at 23:27
  • 1
    Is the file itself saved as UTF-8? In Notepad you can specify that in some dropdown below the file name field on Save As. Otherwise please post a small snippet of arabic text and the byte numbers of the byte array which you got when you read it by InputStream, then we can determine if it has properly been decoded.
    – BalusC
    Dec 22, 2010 at 23:36

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