2364

How do I convert a string to a byte[] in .NET (C#) without manually specifying a specific encoding?

I'm going to encrypt the string. I can encrypt it without converting, but I'd still like to know why encoding comes to play here.

Also, why should encoding even be taken into consideration? Can't I simply get what bytes the string has been stored in? Why is there a dependency on character encodings?

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  • 30
    Every string is stored as an array of bytes right? Why can't I simply have those bytes? Jan 23, 2009 at 14:05
  • 149
    The encoding is what maps the characters to the bytes. For example, in ASCII, the letter 'A' maps to the number 65. In a different encoding, it might not be the same. The high-level approach to strings taken in the .NET framework makes this largely irrelevant, though (except in this case). Apr 13, 2009 at 14:13
  • 23
    To play devil's advocate: If you wanted to get the bytes of an in-memory string (as .NET uses them) and manipulate them somehow (i.e. CRC32), and NEVER EVER wanted to decode it back into the original string...it isn't straight forward why you'd care about encodings or how you choose which one to use.
    – Greg
    Dec 1, 2009 at 19:47
  • 36
    A char is not a byte and a byte is not a char. A char is both a key into a font table and a lexical tradition. A string is a sequence of chars. (A words, paragraphs, sentences, and titles also have their own lexical traditions that justify their own type definitions -- but I digress). Like integers, floating point numbers, and everything else, chars are encoded into bytes. There was a time when the encoding was simple one to one: ASCII. However, to accommodate all of human symbology, the 256 permutations of a byte were insufficient and encodings were devised to selectively use more bytes.
    – George
    Aug 28, 2014 at 15:43
  • 10
    Four years later, I stand by my original comment on this question. It's fundamentally flawed because the fact that we're talking about a string implies interpretation. The encoding of that string is an implicit part of the serialized contract, otherwise it's just a bunch of meaningless bits. If you want meaningless bits, why generate them from a string at all? Just write a bunch of 0's and be done with it.
    – Greg D
    Dec 12, 2014 at 22:44

41 Answers 41

1947

Contrary to the answers here, you DON'T need to worry about encoding if the bytes don't need to be interpreted!

Like you mentioned, your goal is, simply, to "get what bytes the string has been stored in".
(And, of course, to be able to re-construct the string from the bytes.)

For those goals, I honestly do not understand why people keep telling you that you need the encodings. You certainly do NOT need to worry about encodings for this.

Just do this instead:

static byte[] GetBytes(string str)
{
    byte[] bytes = new byte[str.Length * sizeof(char)];
    System.Buffer.BlockCopy(str.ToCharArray(), 0, bytes, 0, bytes.Length);
    return bytes;
}

// Do NOT use on arbitrary bytes; only use on GetBytes's output on the SAME system
static string GetString(byte[] bytes)
{
    char[] chars = new char[bytes.Length / sizeof(char)];
    System.Buffer.BlockCopy(bytes, 0, chars, 0, bytes.Length);
    return new string(chars);
}

As long as your program (or other programs) don't try to interpret the bytes somehow, which you obviously didn't mention you intend to do, then there is nothing wrong with this approach! Worrying about encodings just makes your life more complicated for no real reason.

Additional benefit to this approach: It doesn't matter if the string contains invalid characters, because you can still get the data and reconstruct the original string anyway!

It will be encoded and decoded just the same, because you are just looking at the bytes.

If you used a specific encoding, though, it would've given you trouble with encoding/decoding invalid characters.

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    What's ugly about this one is, that GetString and GetBytes need to executed on a system with the same endianness to work. So you can't use this to get bytes you want to turn into a string elsewhere. So I have a hard time to come up with a situations where I'd want to use this. May 13, 2012 at 11:14
  • 73
    @CodeInChaos: Like I said, the whole point of this is if you want to use it on the same kind of system, with the same set of functions. If not, then you shouldn't use it.
    – user541686
    May 13, 2012 at 18:00
  • 219
    -1 I guarantee that someone (who doesn't understand bytes vs characters) is going to want to convert their string into a byte array, they will google it and read this answer, and they will do the wrong thing, because in almost all cases, the encoding IS relevant.
    – artbristol
    Jun 15, 2012 at 11:07
  • 438
    @artbristol: If they can't be bothered to read the answer (or the other answers...), then I'm sorry, then there's no better way for me to communicate with them. I generally opt for answering the OP rather than trying to guess what others might do with my answer -- the OP has the right to know, and just because someone might abuse a knife doesn't mean we need to hide all knives in the world for ourselves. Though if you disagree that's fine too.
    – user541686
    Jun 15, 2012 at 14:04
  • 205
    This answer is wrong on so many levels but foremost because of it's decleration "you DON'T need to worry about encoding!". The 2 methods, GetBytes and GetString are superfluous in as much as they are merely re-implementations of what Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes() and Encoding.Unicode.GetString() already do. The statement "As long as your program (or other programs) don't try to interpret the bytes" is also fundamentally flawed as implicitly they mean the bytes should be interpreted as Unicode.
    – David
    Jul 11, 2012 at 12:36
1143

It depends on the encoding of your string (ASCII, UTF-8, ...).

For example:

byte[] b1 = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes (myString);
byte[] b2 = System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes (myString);

A small sample why encoding matters:

string pi = "\u03a0";
byte[] ascii = System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes (pi);
byte[] utf8 = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes (pi);

Console.WriteLine (ascii.Length); //Will print 1
Console.WriteLine (utf8.Length); //Will print 2
Console.WriteLine (System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetString (ascii)); //Will print '?'

ASCII simply isn't equipped to deal with special characters.

Internally, the .NET framework uses UTF-16 to represent strings, so if you simply want to get the exact bytes that .NET uses, use System.Text.Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes (...).

See Character Encoding in the .NET Framework (MSDN) for more information.

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    But, why should encoding be taken into consideration? Why can't I simply get the bytes without having to see what encoding is being used? Even if it were required, shouldn't the String object itself know what encoding is being used and simply dump what is in memory? Jan 23, 2009 at 13:48
  • 67
    A .NET strings are always encoded as Unicode. So use System.Text.Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(); to get the set of bytes that .NET would using to represent the characters. However why would you want that? I recommend UTF-8 especially when most characters are in the western latin set. Jan 23, 2009 at 14:33
  • 9
    Also: the exact bytes used internally in the string don't matter if the system that retrieves them doesn't handle that encoding or handles it as the wrong encoding. If it's all within .Net, why convert to an array of bytes at all. Otherwise, it's better to be explicit with your encoding Jan 23, 2009 at 15:42
  • 13
    @Joel, Be careful with System.Text.Encoding.Default as it could be different on each machine it is run. That's why it's recommended to always specify an encoding, such as UTF-8.
    – Ash
    Jan 28, 2010 at 9:01
  • 27
    You don't need the encodings unless you (or someone else) actually intend(s) to interpret the data, instead of treating it as a generic "block of bytes". For things like compression, encryption, etc., worrying about the encoding is meaningless. See my answer for a way to do this without worrying about the encoding. (I might have given a -1 for saying you need to worry about encodings when you don't, but I'm not feeling particularly mean today. :P)
    – user541686
    Apr 30, 2012 at 7:55
304

The accepted answer is very, very complicated. Use the included .NET classes for this:

const string data = "A string with international characters: Norwegian: ÆØÅæøå, Chinese: 喂 谢谢";
var bytes = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(data);
var decoded = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetString(bytes);

Don't reinvent the wheel if you don't have to...

10
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    In case the accepted answer gets changed, for record purposes, it is Mehrdad's answer at this current time and date. Hopefully the OP will revisit this and accept a better solution. Sep 27, 2013 at 18:20
  • 9
    good in principle but, the encoding should be System.Text.Encoding.Unicode to be equivalent to Mehrdad's answer.
    – Jodrell
    Nov 25, 2014 at 9:08
  • 7
    The question has been edited an umptillion times since the original answer, so, maybe my answer is a bit outdates. I never intended to give an exace equivalent to Mehrdad's answer, but give a sensible way of doing it. But, you might be right. However, the phrase "get what bytes the string has been stored in" in the original question is very unprecise. Stored, where? In memory? On disk? If in memory, System.Text.Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes would probably be more precise. Nov 26, 2014 at 11:36
  • 8
    @AMissico, your suggestion is buggy, unless you are sure your string is compatible with your system default encoding (string containing only ASCII chars in your system default legacy charset). But nowhere the OP states that.
    – Frédéric
    Apr 6, 2016 at 20:53
  • 6
    @AMissico It can cause the program to give different results on different systems though. That's never a good thing. Even if it's for making a hash or something (I assume that's what OP means with 'encrypt'), the same string should still always give the same hash.
    – Nyerguds
    Apr 22, 2016 at 10:33
121
BinaryFormatter bf = new BinaryFormatter();
byte[] bytes;
MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream();

string orig = "喂 Hello 谢谢 Thank You";
bf.Serialize(ms, orig);
ms.Seek(0, 0);
bytes = ms.ToArray();

MessageBox.Show("Original bytes Length: " + bytes.Length.ToString());

MessageBox.Show("Original string Length: " + orig.Length.ToString());

for (int i = 0; i < bytes.Length; ++i) bytes[i] ^= 168; // pseudo encrypt
for (int i = 0; i < bytes.Length; ++i) bytes[i] ^= 168; // pseudo decrypt

BinaryFormatter bfx = new BinaryFormatter();
MemoryStream msx = new MemoryStream();            
msx.Write(bytes, 0, bytes.Length);
msx.Seek(0, 0);
string sx = (string)bfx.Deserialize(msx);

MessageBox.Show("Still intact :" + sx);

MessageBox.Show("Deserialize string Length(still intact): " 
    + sx.Length.ToString());

BinaryFormatter bfy = new BinaryFormatter();
MemoryStream msy = new MemoryStream();
bfy.Serialize(msy, sx);
msy.Seek(0, 0);
byte[] bytesy = msy.ToArray();

MessageBox.Show("Deserialize bytes Length(still intact): " 
   + bytesy.Length.ToString());
2
  • 2
    You could use the same BinaryFormatter instance for all of those operations Jan 23, 2009 at 17:25
  • 3
    Very Interesting. Apparently it will drop any high surrogate Unicode character. See the documentation on [BinaryFormatter]
    – user334911
    Nov 18, 2010 at 18:51
104

This is a popular question. It is important to understand what the question author is asking, and that it is different from what is likely the most common need. To discourage misuse of the code where it is not needed, I've answered the latter first.

Common Need

Every string has a character set and encoding. When you convert a System.String object to an array of System.Byte you still have a character set and encoding. For most usages, you'd know which character set and encoding you need and .NET makes it simple to "copy with conversion." Just choose the appropriate Encoding class.

// using System.Text;
Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(".NET String to byte array")

The conversion may need to handle cases where the target character set or encoding doesn't support a character that's in the source. You have some choices: exception, substitution, or skipping. The default policy is to substitute a '?'.

// using System.Text;
var text = Encoding.ASCII.GetString(Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes("You win €100")); 
                                                      // -> "You win ?100"

Clearly, conversions are not necessarily lossless!

Note: For System.String the source character set is Unicode.

The only confusing thing is that .NET uses the name of a character set for the name of one particular encoding of that character set. Encoding.Unicode should be called Encoding.UTF16.

That's it for most usages. If that's what you need, stop reading here. See the fun Joel Spolsky article if you don't understand what encoding is.

Specific Need

Now, the question author asks is, "Every string is stored as an array of bytes, right? Why can't I simply have those bytes?"

He doesn't want any conversion.

From the C# spec:

Character and string processing in C# uses Unicode encoding. The char type represents a UTF-16 code unit, and the string type represents a sequence of UTF-16 code units.

So, we know that if we ask for the null conversion (i.e., from UTF-16 to UTF-16), we'll get the desired result:

Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes(".NET String to byte array")

But to avoid the mention of encodings, we must do it another way. If an intermediate data type is acceptable, there is a conceptual shortcut for this:

".NET String to byte array".ToCharArray()

That doesn't get us the desired datatype but Mehrdad's answer shows how to convert this Char array to a Byte array using BlockCopy. However, this copies the string twice! And, it too explicitly uses encoding-specific code: the datatype System.Char.

The only way to get to the actual bytes the String is stored in is to use a pointer. The fixed statement allows taking the address of values. From the C# spec:

[For] an expression of type string, ... the initializer computes the address of the first character in the string.

To do so, the compiler writes code skipping over the other parts of the string object with RuntimeHelpers.OffsetToStringData. So, to get the raw bytes, just create a pointer to the string and copy the number of bytes needed.

// using System.Runtime.InteropServices
unsafe byte[] GetRawBytes(String s)
{
    if (s == null) return null;
    var codeunitCount = s.Length;
    /* We know that String is a sequence of UTF-16 code units 
       and such code units are 2 bytes */
    var byteCount = codeunitCount * 2; 
    var bytes = new byte[byteCount];
    fixed(void* pRaw = s)
    {
        Marshal.Copy((IntPtr)pRaw, bytes, 0, byteCount);
    }
    return bytes;
}

As @CodesInChaos pointed out, the result depends on the endianness of the machine. But the question author is not concerned with that.

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  • 4
    @Jan That's correct but string length already gives the number of code-units (not codepoints). Feb 4, 2014 at 2:35
  • 1
    Thanks for pointing that out! From MSDN: "The Length property [of String] returns the number of Char objects in this instance, not the number of Unicode characters." Your example code is therefore correct as written. Feb 4, 2014 at 5:42
  • 1
    @supercat "The char type represents a UTF-16 code unit, and the string type represents a sequence of UTF-16 code units."—_C# 5 Specification._ Although, yes, there is nothing that prevents a invalid Unicode string: new String(new []{'\uD800', '\u0030'}) Nov 13, 2014 at 0:15
  • 1
    @TomBlodget: Interestingly, if one takes instances of Globalization.SortKey, extracts the KeyData, and packs the resulting bytes from each into a String [two bytes per character, MSB first], calling String.CompareOrdinal upon the resulting strings will be substantially faster than calling SortKey.Compare on the instances of SortKey, or even calling memcmp on those instances. Given that, I wonder why KeyData returns a Byte[] rather than a String?
    – supercat
    Nov 13, 2014 at 17:56
  • 2
    Alas, the right answer, but years too late, will never has as many votes as the accepted. Due to TL;DR people will think the accepted answer rocks. copyenpastit and up-vote it. Jun 30, 2015 at 2:38
100

You need to take the encoding into account, because 1 character could be represented by 1 or more bytes (up to about 6), and different encodings will treat these bytes differently.

Joel has a posting on this:

The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets (No Excuses!)

4
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    "1 character could be represented by 1 or more bytes" I agree. I just want those bytes regardless of what encoding the string is in. The only way a string can be stored in memory is in bytes. Even characters are stored as 1 or more bytes. I merely want to get my hands on them bytes. Jan 23, 2009 at 14:07
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    You don't need the encodings unless you (or someone else) actually intend(s) to interpret the data, instead of treating it as a generic "block of bytes". For things like compression, encryption, etc., worrying about the encoding is meaningless. See my answer for a way to do this without worrying about the encoding.
    – user541686
    Apr 30, 2012 at 7:54
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    @Mehrdad - Totally, but the original question, as stated when I initially answered, didn't caveat what OP was going to happen with those bytes after they'd converted them, and for future searchers the information around that is pertinent - this is covered by Joel's answer quite nicely - and as you state within your answer: provided you stick within the .NET world, and use your methods to convert to/from, you're happy. As soon as you step outside of that, encoding will matter. Apr 30, 2012 at 10:48
  • 1
    One code point can be represented by up to 4 bytes. (One UTF-32 code unit, a UTF-16 surrogate pair, or 4 bytes of UTF-8.) The values that UTF-8 would need more than 4 bytes for are outside the 0x0..0x10FFFF range of Unicode. ;-)
    – DevSolar
    Oct 8, 2018 at 15:05
53

The first part of your question (how to get the bytes) was already answered by others: look in the System.Text.Encoding namespace.

I will address your follow-up question: why do you need to pick an encoding? Why can't you get that from the string class itself?

The answer is in two parts.

First of all, the bytes used internally by the string class don't matter, and whenever you assume they do you're likely introducing a bug.

If your program is entirely within the .Net world then you don't need to worry about getting byte arrays for strings at all, even if you're sending data across a network. Instead, use .Net Serialization to worry about transmitting the data. You don't worry about the actual bytes anymore: the Serialization formatter does it for you.

On the other hand, what if you are sending these bytes somewhere that you can't guarantee will pull in data from a .Net serialized stream? In this case, you definitely do need to worry about encoding, because obviously, this external system cares. So again, the internal bytes used by the string don't matter: you need to pick an encoding so you can be explicit about this encoding on the receiving end, even if it's the same encoding used internally by .Net.

I understand that in this case, you might prefer to use the actual bytes stored by the string variable in memory where possible, with the idea that it might save some work creating your byte stream. However, I put it to you it's just not important compared to making sure that your output is understood at the other end, and to guarantee that you must be explicit with your encoding. Additionally, if you really want to match your internal bytes, you can already just choose the Unicode encoding, and get those performance savings.

This brings me to the second part... picking the Unicode encoding is telling .Net to use the underlying bytes. You do need to pick this encoding because when some new-fangled Unicode-Plus comes out the .Net runtime needs to be free to use this newer, better encoding model without breaking your program. But, for the moment (and foreseeable future), just choosing the Unicode encoding gives you what you want.

It's also important to understand your string has to be rewritten to wire, and that involves at least some translation of the bit-pattern even when you use a matching encoding. The computer needs to account for things like Big vs Little Endian, network byte order, packetization, session information, etc.

6
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    There are areas in .NET where you do have to get byte arrays for strings. Many of the .NET Cryptrography classes contain methods such as ComputeHash() that accept byte array or stream. You have no alternative but to convert a string to a byte array first (choosing an Encoding) and then optionally wrap it in a stream. However as long as you choose an encoding (ie UTF8) an stick with it there are no problems with this.
    – Ash
    Jan 28, 2010 at 9:33
  • 2
    When I didn't knew what encoding was about and refused to learn about due to laziness, I was exactly on the same mood as the OP (just give me the bytes already...) Your answer is the first (among the top) to care to give a clear warning. I was just happy to write and read binary files on my PC... until I had to deal with MAC/Linux users, network, upgrade apps to latest OS, understand endianness more, custom encodings (electronics ROM and data). The day .Net will encode Unicode with 4 bytes, UTF8 up to 8 bytes.. I learned the hard way to avoid bypassing native methods whenever possible. Apr 12, 2022 at 17:59
  • @KarlStephen In the world outside of ASCII, we've had plenty of experience with how stupid it is to treat anything as the so-called "plain text" thirty years ago. Heck, my language had eight different incompatible encodings that you were actually quite likely to have on the same DOS machine at the same time. It's crazy there's still high-profile applications that "don't care about encoding" - the last time I was changing my address in Amazon, it still couldn't properly represent my name. 2016-ish, and I still had to replace special characters (which changes the name ).
    – Luaan
    Oct 10, 2022 at 6:19
  • @Luaan : I don't think it was stupid, just efficient at the expense of ignoring others. I said why not an Unicode64 with even more standardized characters, (possibly including a covid char) ? I still believe choice is key : do provide unicode extensions updates, but also maintain encodings alive. Sadly recent OS tend to reduce encoding support, especially on mobile devices. I do support this answer for that reason : encode your string data and specify the encoding used, that's the secure and efficient way. It indeed means, every developper should learn about encoding... not there yet Oct 18, 2022 at 7:31
  • I just want to mention that sometimes ignoring cross-platform compatibility is the right thing to do, primarily for caches which can be rebuilt at any time with some computational expense. In such scenario performance is the only concern because if you don't have that, you might as well rebuild the cache. Examples to follow....
    – Ben Voigt
    Jun 2, 2023 at 21:09
46

Just to demonstrate that Mehrdrad's sound answer works, his approach can even persist the unpaired surrogate characters(of which many had leveled against my answer, but of which everyone are equally guilty of, e.g. System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes, System.Text.Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes; those encoding methods can't persist the high surrogate characters d800 for example, and those just merely replace high surrogate characters with value fffd ) :

using System;

class Program
{     
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        string t = "爱虫";            
        string s = "Test\ud800Test"; 

        byte[] dumpToBytes = GetBytes(s);
        string getItBack = GetString(dumpToBytes);

        foreach (char item in getItBack)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("{0} {1}", item, ((ushort)item).ToString("x"));
        }    
    }

    static byte[] GetBytes(string str)
    {
        byte[] bytes = new byte[str.Length * sizeof(char)];
        System.Buffer.BlockCopy(str.ToCharArray(), 0, bytes, 0, bytes.Length);
        return bytes;
    }

    static string GetString(byte[] bytes)
    {
        char[] chars = new char[bytes.Length / sizeof(char)];
        System.Buffer.BlockCopy(bytes, 0, chars, 0, bytes.Length);
        return new string(chars);
    }        
}

Output:

T 54
e 65
s 73
t 74
? d800
T 54
e 65
s 73
t 74

Try that with System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes or System.Text.Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes, they will merely replace high surrogate characters with value fffd

Every time there's a movement in this question, I'm still thinking of a serializer(be it from Microsoft or from 3rd party component) that can persist strings even it contains unpaired surrogate characters; I google this every now and then: serialization unpaired surrogate character .NET. This doesn't make me lose any sleep, but it's kind of annoying when every now and then there's somebody commenting on my answer that it's flawed, yet their answers are equally flawed when it comes to unpaired surrogate characters.

Darn, Microsoft should have just used System.Buffer.BlockCopy in its BinaryFormatter

谢谢!

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    Don't surrogates have to appear in pairs to form valid code points? If that's the case, I can understand why the data would be mangled.
    – dtanders
    Jun 14, 2012 at 14:27
  • 2
    @dtanders Yes,that's my thoughts too, they have to appear in pairs, unpaired surrogate characters just happen if you deliberately put them on string and make them unpaired. What I don't know is why other devs keep on harping that we should use encoding-aware approach instead, as they deemed the serialization approach(my answer,which was an accepted answer for more than 3 years) doesn't keep the unpaired surrogate character intact. But they forgot to check that their encoding-aware solutions doesn't keep the unpaired surrogate character too,the irony ツ Jun 14, 2012 at 23:23
  • 1
    If there's a serialization library that uses System.Buffer.BlockCopy internally, all encoding-advocacy folks' arguments will be moot Jun 14, 2012 at 23:23
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    @MichaelBuen It seem to me that the main issue is that you are in big bold letters saying something doesn't matter, rather than saying that it does not matter in their case. As a result, you are encouraging people who look at your answer to make basic programming mistakes which will cause others frustration in the future. Unpaired surrogates are invalid in a string. It is not a char array, so it makes sense that converting a string to another format would result in an error FFFD on that character. If you want to do manual string manipulation, use a char[] as recommended.
    – Trisped
    Nov 11, 2014 at 20:06
  • 4
    @dtanders: A System.String is an immutable sequence of Char; .NET has always allowed a String object to be constructed from any Char[] and export its content to a Char[] containing the same values, even if the original Char[] contains unpaired surrogates.
    – supercat
    Nov 12, 2014 at 21:57
42

Try this, a lot less code:

System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes("TEST String");
3
  • 1
    Then try this System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes("Árvíztűrő tükörfúrógép);, and cry! It will work, but System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes("Árvíztűrő tükörfúrógép").Length != System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes("Arvizturo tukorfurogep").Length while "Árvíztűrő tükörfúrógép".Length == "Arvizturo tukorfurogep".Length
    – mg30rg
    Dec 5, 2017 at 16:30
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    @mg30rg: Why do you think your example is strange? Surely in a variable-width encoding not all characters have the same byte lengthes. What's wrong with it?
    – Vlad
    Feb 25, 2018 at 1:18
  • @Vlad A more valid comment here, though, is that as encoded unicode symbols (so, as bytes), characters which include their own diacritics will give a different result than diacritics split off into modifier symbols added to the character. But iirc there are methods in .net to specifically split those off, to allow getting a consistent byte representation.
    – Nyerguds
    Mar 31, 2020 at 12:43
26

Well, I've read all answers and they were about using encoding or one about serialization that drops unpaired surrogates.

It's bad when the string, for example, comes from SQL Server where it was built from a byte array storing, for example, a password hash. If we drop anything from it, it'll store an invalid hash, and if we want to store it in XML, we want to leave it intact (because the XML writer drops an exception on any unpaired surrogate it finds).

So I use Base64 encoding of byte arrays in such cases, but hey, on the Internet there is only one solution to this in C#, and it has bug in it and is only one way, so I've fixed the bug and written back procedure. Here you are, future googlers:

public static byte[] StringToBytes(string str)
{
    byte[] data = new byte[str.Length * 2];
    for (int i = 0; i < str.Length; ++i)
    {
        char ch = str[i];
        data[i * 2] = (byte)(ch & 0xFF);
        data[i * 2 + 1] = (byte)((ch & 0xFF00) >> 8);
    }

    return data;
}

public static string StringFromBytes(byte[] arr)
{
    char[] ch = new char[arr.Length / 2];
    for (int i = 0; i < ch.Length; ++i)
    {
        ch[i] = (char)((int)arr[i * 2] + (((int)arr[i * 2 + 1]) << 8));
    }
    return new String(ch);
}
2
  • Instead of using your custom method to convert a byte array to base64, all you had to do was use the built-in converter: Convert.ToBase64String(arr);
    – Makotosan
    Feb 10, 2012 at 15:53
  • @Makotosan thank you, but I did use Convert.ToBase64String(arr); for the base64 conversions byte[] (data) <-> string (serialized data to store in XML file). But to get the initial byte[] (data) I needed to do something with a String that contained binary data (it's the way MSSQL returned it to me). SO the functions above are for String (binary data) <-> byte[] (easy accessible binary data).
    – Gman
    Mar 6, 2012 at 19:15
25

Also please explain why encoding should be taken into consideration. Can't I simply get what bytes the string has been stored in? Why this dependency on encoding?!!!

Because there is no such thing as "the bytes of the string".

A string (or more generically, a text) is composed of characters: letters, digits, and other symbols. That's all. Computers, however, do not know anything about characters; they can only handle bytes. Therefore, if you want to store or transmit text by using a computer, you need to transform the characters to bytes. How do you do that? Here's where encodings come to the scene.

An encoding is nothing but a convention to translate logical characters to physical bytes. The simplest and best known encoding is ASCII, and it is all you need if you write in English. For other languages you will need more complete encodings, being any of the Unicode flavours the safest choice nowadays.

So, in short, trying to "get the bytes of a string without using encodings" is as impossible as "writing a text without using any language".

By the way, I strongly recommend you (and anyone, for that matter) to read this small piece of wisdom: The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets (No Excuses!)

4
  • 2
    Allow me to clarify: An encoding has been used to translate "hello world" to physical bytes. Since the string is stored on my computer, I am sure that it must be stored in bytes. I merely want to access those bytes to save them on disk or for any other reason. I do not want to interpret these bytes. Since I do not want to interpret these bytes, the need for an encoding at this point is as misplaced as requiring a phone line to call printf. Jul 16, 2009 at 15:30
  • 3
    But again, there is no concept of text-to-physical-bytes-translation unless yo use an encoding. Sure, the compiler stores the strings somehow in memory - but it is just using an internal encoding, which you (or anyone except the compiler developer) do not know. So, whatever you do, you need an encoding to get physical bytes from a string.
    – Konamiman
    Jul 22, 2009 at 8:35
  • @Agnel Kurian: It is of course true, that a string has a bunch of bytes somewhere that store its content (UTF-16 afair). But there is a good reason to prevent you from accessing it: strings are immutable and if you could obtain the internal byte[] array, you could modify it, too. This breaks immutability, which is vital because multiple strings may share the same data. Using an UTF-16 encoding to get the string will probably just copy the data out.
    – ollb
    May 14, 2011 at 0:06
  • 3
    @Gnafoo, A copy of the bytes will do. May 14, 2011 at 5:06
23

C# to convert a string to a byte array:

public static byte[] StrToByteArray(string str)
{
   System.Text.UTF8Encoding  encoding=new System.Text.UTF8Encoding();
   return encoding.GetBytes(str);
}
20
byte[] strToByteArray(string str)
{
    System.Text.ASCIIEncoding enc = new System.Text.ASCIIEncoding();
    return enc.GetBytes(str);
}
2
  • 1
    But, why should encoding be taken into consideration? Why can't I simply get the bytes without having to see what encoding is being used? Even if it were required, shouldn't the String object itself know what encoding is being used and simply dump what is in memory? Jan 23, 2009 at 13:46
  • 6
    This doesn't always work. Some special characters can get lost in using such a method I've found the hard way.
    – JB King
    Jan 23, 2009 at 17:14
17

You can use the following code for conversion between string and byte array.

string s = "Hello World";

// String to Byte[]

byte[] byte1 = System.Text.Encoding.Default.GetBytes(s);

// OR

byte[] byte2 = System.Text.ASCIIEncoding.Default.GetBytes(s);

// Byte[] to string

string str = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetString(byte1);
1
  • VUPthis one solved my problem ( byte[] ff = ASCIIEncoding.ASCII.GetBytes(barcodetxt.Text);)
    – r.hamd
    Sep 9, 2015 at 13:19
17

With the advent of Span<T> released with C# 7.2, the canonical technique to capture the underlying memory representation of a string into a managed byte array is:

byte[] bytes = "rubbish_\u9999_string".AsSpan().AsBytes().ToArray();

Converting it back should be a non-starter because that means you are in fact interpreting the data somehow, but for the sake of completeness:

string s;
unsafe
{
    fixed (char* f = &bytes.AsSpan().NonPortableCast<byte, char>().DangerousGetPinnableReference())
    {
        s = new string(f);
    }
}

The names NonPortableCast and DangerousGetPinnableReference should further the argument that you probably shouldn't be doing this.

Note that working with Span<T> requires installing the System.Memory NuGet package.

Regardless, the actual original question and follow-up comments imply that the underlying memory is not being "interpreted" (which I assume means is not modified or read beyond the need to write it as-is), indicating that some implementation of the Stream class should be used instead of reasoning about the data as strings at all.

1
  • new string(f) is wrong, you at least need to use the constructor overload that accepts an explicit length if you want any hope of round-tripping all strings.
    – Ben Voigt
    Dec 7, 2020 at 23:09
14

I'm not sure, but I think the string stores its info as an array of Chars, which is inefficient with bytes. Specifically, the definition of a Char is "Represents a Unicode character".

take this example sample:

String str = "asdf éß";
String str2 = "asdf gh";
EncodingInfo[] info =  Encoding.GetEncodings();
foreach (EncodingInfo enc in info)
{
    System.Console.WriteLine(enc.Name + " - " 
      + enc.GetEncoding().GetByteCount(str)
      + enc.GetEncoding().GetByteCount(str2));
}

Take note that the Unicode answer is 14 bytes in both instances, whereas the UTF-8 answer is only 9 bytes for the first, and only 7 for the second.

So if you just want the bytes used by the string, simply use Encoding.Unicode, but it will be inefficient with storage space.

1
  • That is if your string is in English - is it Chinese, you are better of with UTF-16.
    – Christoph
    Feb 14, 2021 at 9:00
11

The key issue is that a glyph in a string takes 32 bits (16 bits for a character code) but a byte only has 8 bits to spare. A one-to-one mapping doesn't exist unless you restrict yourself to strings that only contain ASCII characters. System.Text.Encoding has lots of ways to map a string to byte[], you need to pick one that avoids loss of information and that is easy to use by your client when she needs to map the byte[] back to a string.

Utf8 is a popular encoding, it is compact and not lossy.

2
  • 3
    UTF-8 is compact only if the majority of your characters are in the English (ASCII) character set. If you had a long string of Chinese characters, UTF-16 would be a more compact encoding than UTF-8 for that string. This is because UTF-8 uses one byte to encode ASCII, and 3 (or maybe 4) otherwise. Jan 23, 2009 at 20:40
  • 8
    True. But, how can you not know about encoding if you're familiar with handling Chinese text? Jan 24, 2009 at 3:40
10

Use:

    string text = "string";
    byte[] array = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(text);

The result is:

[0] = 115
[1] = 116
[2] = 114
[3] = 105
[4] = 110
[5] = 103
1
  • OP specifically asks to NOT specify an encoding... "without manually specifying a specific encoding"
    – Ferdz
    Aug 30, 2018 at 13:40
9

Fastest way

public static byte[] GetBytes(string text)
{
    return System.Text.ASCIIEncoding.UTF8.GetBytes(text);
}

EDIT as Makotosan commented this is now the best way:

Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(text)
1
  • 8
    ASCIIEncoding..... is not needed. Simply using Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(text) is preferred.
    – Makotosan
    Feb 17, 2012 at 20:40
8

The closest approach to the OP's question is Tom Blodget's, which actually goes into the object and extracts the bytes. I say closest because it depends on implementation of the String Object.

"Can't I simply get what bytes the string has been stored in?"

Sure, but that's where the fundamental error in the question arises. The String is an object which could have an interesting data structure. We already know it does, because it allows unpaired surrogates to be stored. It might store the length. It might keep a pointer to each of the 'paired' surrogates allowing quick counting. Etc. All of these extra bytes are not part of the character data.

What you want is each character's bytes in an array. And that is where 'encoding' comes in. By default you will get UTF-16LE. If you don't care about the bytes themselves except for the round trip then you can choose any encoding including the 'default', and convert it back later (assuming the same parameters such as what the default encoding was, code points, bug fixes, things allowed such as unpaired surrogates, etc.

But why leave the 'encoding' up to magic? Why not specify the encoding so that you know what bytes you are gonna get?

"Why is there a dependency on character encodings?"

Encoding (in this context) simply means the bytes that represent your string. Not the bytes of the string object. You wanted the bytes the string has been stored in -- this is where the question was asked naively. You wanted the bytes of string in a contiguous array that represent the string, and not all of the other binary data that a string object may contain.

Which means how a string is stored is irrelevant. You want a string "Encoded" into bytes in a byte array.

I like Tom Bloget's answer because he took you towards the 'bytes of the string object' direction. It's implementation dependent though, and because he's peeking at internals it might be difficult to reconstitute a copy of the string.

Mehrdad's response is wrong because it is misleading at the conceptual level. You still have a list of bytes, encoded. His particular solution allows for unpaired surrogates to be preserved -- this is implementation dependent. His particular solution would not produce the string's bytes accurately if GetBytes returned the string in UTF-8 by default.


I've changed my mind about this (Mehrdad's solution) -- this isn't getting the bytes of the string; rather it is getting the bytes of the character array that was created from the string. Regardless of encoding, the char datatype in c# is a fixed size. This allows a consistent length byte array to be produced, and it allows the character array to be reproduced based on the size of the byte array. So if the encoding were UTF-8, but each char was 6 bytes to accommodate the largest utf8 value, it would still work. So indeed -- encoding of the character does not matter.

But a conversion was used -- each character was placed into a fixed size box (c#'s character type). However what that representation is does not matter, which is technically the answer to the OP. So -- if you are going to convert anyway... Why not 'encode'?

6
  • These characters are not supported by UTF-8 or UTF-16 or even UTF-32 for exapmle: 񩱠 & (Char) 55906 & (Char) 55655. So you may be wrong and Mehrdad's answer is a safe conversion without considering what type of encodings are used. Feb 11, 2016 at 19:48
  • Raymon, the characters are already represented by some unicode value -- and all unicode values can be represented by all the utf's. Is there a longer explanation of what you are talking about? What character encoding do those two values (or 3..) exist in? Feb 11, 2016 at 20:47
  • They are invalid characters which not supported by any encoding ranges. This not means they are 100% useless. A code which converts any type of string to its byte array equivalent regardless of the encodings is not a wrong solution at all and have its own usages on desired occasions. Feb 11, 2016 at 21:02
  • 1
    Ok, then I think you are not understanding the problem. We know it is a unicode compliant array -- in fact, because it is .net, we know it is UTF-16. So those characters will not exist there. You also didn't fully read my comment about internal representations changing. A String is an object, not an encoded byte array. So I'm going to disagree with your last statement. You want code to convert all unicode strings to any UTF encoding. This does what you want, correctly. Feb 11, 2016 at 22:17
  • Objects are sequence of data originally sequence of bits which describe an object in its current state. So every data in programming languages are convertible to array of bytes(each byte defines 8 bits) as you may need to keep some state of any object in memory. You can save and hold a sequence of bytes in file or memory and cast it as integer, bigint, image, Ascii string, UTF-8 string, encrypted string, or your own defined datatype after reading it from disk. So you can not say objects are something different than bytes sequence. Feb 11, 2016 at 23:00
8

How do I convert a string to a byte[] in .NET (C#) without manually specifying a specific encoding?

A string in .NET represents text as a sequence of UTF-16 code units, so the bytes are encoded in memory in UTF-16 already.

Mehrdad's Answer

You can use Mehrdad's answer, but it does actually use an encoding because chars are UTF-16. It calls ToCharArray which looking at the source creates a char[] and copies the memory to it directly. Then it copies the data to a byte array that is also allocated. So under the hood it is copying the underlying bytes twice and allocating a char array that is not used after the call.

Tom Blodget's Answer

Tom Blodget's answer is 20-30% faster than Mehrdad since it skips the intermediate step of allocating a char array and copying the bytes to it, but it requires you compile with the /unsafe option. If you absolutely do not want to use encoding, I think this is the way to go. If you put your encryption login inside the fixed block, you don't even need to allocate a separate byte array and copy the bytes to it.

Also, why should encoding be taken into consideration? Can't I simply get what bytes the string has been stored in? Why is there a dependency on character encodings?

Because that is the proper way to do it. string is an abstraction.

Using an encoding could give you trouble if you have 'strings' with invalid characters, but that shouldn't happen. If you are getting data into your string with invalid characters you are doing it wrong. You should probably be using a byte array or a Base64 encoding to start with.

If you use System.Text.Encoding.Unicode, your code will be more resilient. You don't have to worry about the endianness of the system your code will be running on. You don't need to worry if the next version of the CLR will use a different internal character encoding.

I think the question isn't why you want to worry about the encoding, but why you want to ignore it and use something else. Encoding is meant to represent the abstraction of a string in a sequence of bytes. System.Text.Encoding.Unicode will give you a little endian byte order encoding and will perform the same on every system, now and in the future.

3
  • Actually a string in C# is NOT restricted to just UTF-16. What is true is that it contains a vector of 16-bit code units, but these 16-bit code units are not restricted to valid UTF-16. But as they are 16-bit, you need an encoding (byte order) to convert them to 8bit. A string can then store non-Unicode data, including binary code (e.g. a bitmap image). It becomes interpreted as UTF-16 only in I/O and text formatters that make such interpretation.
    – verdy_p
    Sep 7, 2019 at 15:42
  • So in a C# string, you can safely store a code unit like 0xFFFF or 0xFFFE, even if they are non-characters in UTF-16, and you can store an isolated 0xD800 not followed by a code unit in 0xDC00..0xDFFF (i.e. unpaired surrogates which are invalid in UTF-16). The same remark applies to strings in Javascript/ECMAscript and Java.
    – verdy_p
    Sep 7, 2019 at 15:47
  • When you use "GetBytes", of course you don't specify an encoding, but you assume a byte order to get the two bytes in a specic for each code unit stored locally in the string. When you build a new string from bytes, you also need a converter, not necessarily UTF-8 to UTF-16, you could insert the extra 0 in the high byte, or pack two bytes (in MSB first or LSB first order) in the same 16-bit code unit. Strings are then compact form for arrays of 16-bit integers. The relation with "characters" is another problem, in C# they're not actual types as they are still represented as strings
    – verdy_p
    Sep 7, 2019 at 15:55
6

You can use following code to convert a string to a byte array in .NET

string s_unicode = "abcéabc";
byte[] utf8Bytes = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(s_unicode);
4

If you really want a copy of the underlying bytes of a string, you can use a function like the one that follows. However, you shouldn't please read on to find out why.

[DllImport(
        "msvcrt.dll",
        EntryPoint = "memcpy",
        CallingConvention = CallingConvention.Cdecl,
        SetLastError = false)]
private static extern unsafe void* UnsafeMemoryCopy(
    void* destination,
    void* source,
    uint count);

public static byte[] GetUnderlyingBytes(string source)
{
    var length = source.Length * sizeof(char);
    var result = new byte[length];
    unsafe
    {
        fixed (char* firstSourceChar = source)
        fixed (byte* firstDestination = result)
        {
            var firstSource = (byte*)firstSourceChar;
            UnsafeMemoryCopy(
                firstDestination,
                firstSource,
                (uint)length);
        }
    }

    return result;
}

This function will get you a copy of the bytes underlying your string, pretty quickly. You'll get those bytes in whatever way they are encoding on your system. This encoding is almost certainly UTF-16LE but that is an implementation detail you shouldn't have to care about.

It would be safer, simpler and more reliable to just call,

System.Text.Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes()

In all likelihood this will give the same result, is easier to type, and the bytes will round-trip, as well as a byte representation in Unicode can, with a call to

System.Text.Encoding.Unicode.GetString()
4
  • As mentioned in many other comments, Unicode.GetBytes() / Unicode.GetString() does NOT round-trip for all .NET string instances.
    – Ben Voigt
    Dec 7, 2020 at 23:13
  • @BenVoigt, I tweaked the answer. I'd do something less Windows specific these days.
    – Jodrell
    Dec 9, 2020 at 12:12
  • You might consider avoiding p/invoke for that, Marshal.Copy will work fine for copying from a pointer to a byte array. stackoverflow.com/a/54453180/103167
    – Ben Voigt
    Dec 9, 2020 at 16:45
  • @BenVoigt or even stackoverflow.com/a/48195448/659190
    – Jodrell
    Dec 10, 2020 at 8:39
3

Here is my unsafe implementation of String to Byte[] conversion:

public static unsafe Byte[] GetBytes(String s)
{
    Int32 length = s.Length * sizeof(Char);
    Byte[] bytes = new Byte[length];

    fixed (Char* pInput = s)
    fixed (Byte* pBytes = bytes)
    {
        Byte* source = (Byte*)pInput;
        Byte* destination = pBytes;

        if (length >= 16)
        {
            do
            {
                *((Int64*)destination) = *((Int64*)source);
                *((Int64*)(destination + 8)) = *((Int64*)(source + 8));

                source += 16;
                destination += 16;
            }
            while ((length -= 16) >= 16);
        }

        if (length > 0)
        {
            if ((length & 8) != 0)
            {
                *((Int64*)destination) = *((Int64*)source);

                source += 8;
                destination += 8;
            }

            if ((length & 4) != 0)
            {
                *((Int32*)destination) = *((Int32*)source);

                source += 4;
                destination += 4;
            }

            if ((length & 2) != 0)
            {
                *((Int16*)destination) = *((Int16*)source);

                source += 2;
                destination += 2;
            }

            if ((length & 1) != 0)
            {
                ++source;
                ++destination;

                destination[0] = source[0];
            }
        }
    }

    return bytes;
}

It's way faster than the accepted anwser's one, even if not as elegant as it is. Here are my Stopwatch benchmarks over 10000000 iterations:

[Second String: Length 20]
Buffer.BlockCopy: 746ms
Unsafe: 557ms

[Second String: Length 50]
Buffer.BlockCopy: 861ms
Unsafe: 753ms

[Third String: Length 100]
Buffer.BlockCopy: 1250ms
Unsafe: 1063ms

In order to use it, you have to tick "Allow Unsafe Code" in your project build properties. As per .NET Framework 3.5, this method can also be used as String extension:

public static unsafe class StringExtensions
{
    public static Byte[] ToByteArray(this String s)
    {
        // Method Code
    }
}
2
  • Is the value of RuntimeHelpers.OffsetToStringData a multiple of 8 on the Itanium versions of .NET? Because otherwise this will fail due to the unaligned reads.
    – Jon Hanna
    Jan 6, 2014 at 14:09
  • wouldn't it be simpler to invoke memcpy? stackoverflow.com/a/27124232/659190
    – Jodrell
    Nov 25, 2014 at 10:33
3

Upon being asked what you intend to do with the bytes, you responded:

I'm going to encrypt it. I can encrypt it without converting but I'd still like to know why encoding comes to play here. Just give me the bytes is what I say.

Regardless of whether you intend to send this encrypted data over the network, load it back into memory later, or stream it to another process, you are clearly intending to decrypt it at some point. In that case, the answer is that you're defining a communication protocol. A communication protocol should not be defined in terms of implementation details of your programming language and its associated runtime. There are several reasons for this:

  • You may need to communicate with a process implemented in a different language or runtime. (This might include a server running on another machine or sending the string to a JavaScript browser client, for example.)
  • The program may be re-implemented in a different language or runtime in the future.
  • The .NET implementation might change the internal representation of strings. You may think this sounds farfetched, but this actually happened in Java 9 to reduce memory usage. There's no reason .NET couldn't follow suit. Skeet suggests that UTF-16 probably isn't optimal today give the rise of the emoji and other blocks of Unicode needing more than 2 bytes to represent as well, increasing the likelihood that the internal representation could change in the future.

For communicating (either with a completely disparate process or with the same program in the future), you need to define your protocol strictly to minimize the difficulty of working with it or accidentally creating bugs. Depending on .NET's internal representation is not a strict, clear, or even guaranteed to be consistent definition. A standard encoding is a strict definition that will not fail you in the future.

In other words, you can't satisfy your requirement for consistency without specifying an encoding.

You may certainly choose to use UTF-16 directly if you find that your process performs significantly better since .NET uses it internally or for any other reason, but you need to choose that encoding explicitly and perform those conversions explicitly in your code rather than depending on .NET's internal implementation.

So choose an encoding and use it:

using System.Text;

// ...

Encoding.Unicode.GetBytes("abc"); # UTF-16 little endian
Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes("abc")

As you can see, it's also actually less code to just use the built in encoding objects than to implement your own reader/writer methods.

3

Computers only understand raw binary data, raw bits. One bit is a Binary Digit : 0 or 1. An 8-bits number is a byte. One byte is a number between 0 and 255.

ASCII is a table that converts numbers to characters. Numbers between 0 and 31 are controls: tab, new line, and others. Numbers between 32 and 126 are printable characters : letter a, number 1, % sign, underscore _

So with ASCII, there are 33 control characters and 95 printable characters.

ASCII is the most commonly used character encoding today. The first entries of the Unicode table are ASCII and match the ASCII character set.

ASCII is a 7-bit character set. Numbers between 0 and 127. With 8 bits we can go up to 255.

The most common alternative to ASCII is EBCDIC which is not compatible with ASCII and still exists today on IBM computers and databases.

1 byte, so 8 bits number is the most common unit in computer science nowadays. 1 byte is a number between 0 and 255.

ASCII defines a meaning for each number between 0 and 127.

The character associated with numbers between 128 and 255 depends on the character encoding being used. Two widely used character encodings used nowadays are windows1252 and UTF-8.

In windows1252 the number corresponding to the € sign is 128. 1 byte : [A0]. In the Unicode Database, the € sign is number 8364.

Now I give you the number 8364. Tow bytes : [20,AC]. In UTF-8 the Euro sign is the number 14844588. Three bytes : [E282AC].

Now I give you some raw data. Let's say 20AC. Is it two windows1252 characters: £ or one single Unicode € sign?

I give you some more raw data. E282AC. Well, 82 is an unassigned character in windows1252 so it is probably not windows1252. It could be macRoman "‚Ǩ" or OEM 437 "ßéó" or the UTF-8 "€" sign.

It is possible to guess the encoding of a stream of raw bytes based on the characteristics of the character encodings and on statistics but there is no reliable way to do that. Numbers between 128 and 255 on their own are invalid in UTF-8. The é is common in some languages (french) so if you see many bytes with the value E9 surrounded by letters it is probably a windows1252-encoding string, the E9 byte representing the é character.

When you have a stream of raw bytes that represents a string, it is far better to know the matching encoding rather than trying to guess.

Below is a screenshot of one raw byte in various encodings that were once widely used.

one byte character shown in various encodings

1
2

The string can be converted to byte array in few different ways, due to the following fact: .NET supports Unicode, and Unicode standardizes several difference encodings called UTFs. They have different lengths of byte representation but are equivalent in that sense that when a string is encoded, it can be coded back to the string, but if the string is encoded with one UTF and decoded in the assumption of different UTF if can be screwed up.

Also, .NET supports non-Unicode encodings, but they are not valid in general case (will be valid only if a limited sub-set of Unicode code point is used in an actual string, such as ASCII). Internally, .NET supports UTF-16, but for stream representation, UTF-8 is usually used. It is also a standard-de-facto for Internet.

Not surprisingly, serialization of string into an array of byte and deserialization is supported by the class System.Text.Encoding, which is an abstract class; its derived classes support concrete encodings: ASCIIEncoding and four UTFs (System.Text.UnicodeEncoding supports UTF-16)

Ref this link.

For serialization to an array of bytes using System.Text.Encoding.GetBytes. For the inverse operation use System.Text.Encoding.GetChars. This function returns an array of characters, so to get a string, use a string constructor System.String(char[]).
Ref this page.

Example:

string myString = //... some string

System.Text.Encoding encoding = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8; //or some other, but prefer some UTF is Unicode is used
byte[] bytes = encoding.GetBytes(myString);

//next lines are written in response to a follow-up questions:

myString = new string(encoding.GetChars(bytes));
byte[] bytes = encoding.GetBytes(myString);
myString = new string(encoding.GetChars(bytes));
byte[] bytes = encoding.GetBytes(myString);

//how many times shall I repeat it to show there is a round-trip? :-)
2

It depends on what you want the bytes FOR

This is because, as Tyler so aptly said, "Strings aren't pure data. They also have information." In this case, the information is an encoding that was assumed when the string was created.

Assuming that you have binary data (rather than text) stored in a string

This is based off of OP's comment on his own question, and is the correct question if I understand OP's hints at the use-case.

Storing binary data in strings is probably the wrong approach because of the assumed encoding mentioned above! Whatever program or library stored that binary data in a string (instead of a byte[] array which would have been more appropriate) has already lost the battle before it has begun. If they are sending the bytes to you in a REST request/response or anything that must transmit strings, Base64 would be the right approach.

If you have a text string with an unknown encoding

Everybody else answered this incorrect question incorrectly.

If the string looks good as-is, just pick an encoding (preferably one starting with UTF), use the corresponding System.Text.Encoding.???.GetBytes() function, and tell whoever you give the bytes to which encoding you picked.

2

If you are using .NET Core or System.Memory for .NET Framework, there is a very efficient marshaling mechanism available via Span<T> and Memory<T> that can effectively reinterpret string memory as a span of bytes. Once you have a span of bytes you are free to marshal back to another type, or copy the span to an array for serialization.

To summarize what others have said:

  • Storing a representation of this kind of serialization is sensitive to system endianness, compiler optimizations, and changes to the internal representation of strings in the executing .NET Runtime.
    • Avoid long-term storage
    • Avoid deserializing or interpreting the string in other environments
      • This includes other machines, processor architectures, .NET runtimes, containers, etc.
      • This includes comparisons, formatting, encryption, string manipulation, localization, character transforms, etc.
    • Avoid making assumptions about the character encoding
      • The default encoding tends to be UTF-16LE in practice, but the compiler / runtime can choose any internal representation

Implementation

public static class MarshalExtensions
{
   public static ReadOnlySpan<byte> AsBytes(this string value) => MemoryMarshal.AsBytes(value.AsSpan());
   public static string AsString(this ReadOnlySpan<byte> value) => new string(MemoryMarshal.Cast<byte, char>(value));
}

Example

static void Main(string[] args)
{
    string str1 = "你好,世界";
    ReadOnlySpan<byte> span = str1.AsBytes();
    string str2 = span.AsString();

    byte[] bytes = span.ToArray();

    Debug.Assert(bytes.Length > 0);
    Debug.Assert(str1 == str2);
}

Furthur Insight

In C++ this is roughly equivalent to reinterpret_cast, and C this is roughly equivalent to a cast to the system's word type (char).

In recent versions of the .NET Core Runtime (CoreCLR), operations on spans effectively invoke compiler intrinsics and various optimizations that can sometimes eliminate bounds checking, leading to exceptional performance while preserving memory safety, assuming that your memory was allocated by the CLR and the spans are not derived from pointers from an unmanaged memory allocator.

Caveats

This uses a mechanism supported by the CLR that returns ReadOnlySpan<char> from a string; Additionally, this span does not necessarily encompass the complete internal string layout. ReadOnlySpan<T> implies that you must create a copy if you need to perform mutation, as strings are immutable.

2
  • 1
    Some commentary: despite what appears to be the popular opinion, an entirely valid use-case for this mechanism is runtime encryption: extract byte representation, encrypt bytes, and keep the encrypted payload in memory. This minimizes encoding overhead, and as long as it's not serialized and transferred to another environment, will not suffer from any encoding-specific issues due to interpretation semantics or internal representation. There's an argument for using SecureString for this purpose, and concerns about garbage collection, but otherwise the premise appears sound. Aug 3, 2020 at 21:23
  • There is at least one proposal for CoreCLR to introduce a more compact internal representation: github.com/dotnet/runtime/issues/6612 Aug 3, 2020 at 21:26
1

Two ways:

public static byte[] StrToByteArray(this string s)
{
    List<byte> value = new List<byte>();
    foreach (char c in s.ToCharArray())
        value.Add(c.ToByte());
    return value.ToArray();
}

And,

public static byte[] StrToByteArray(this string s)
{
    s = s.Replace(" ", string.Empty);
    byte[] buffer = new byte[s.Length / 2];
    for (int i = 0; i < s.Length; i += 2)
        buffer[i / 2] = (byte)Convert.ToByte(s.Substring(i, 2), 16);
    return buffer;
}

I tend to use the bottom one more often than the top, haven't benchmarked them for speed.

2
  • 4
    What about multibyte characters? Feb 23, 2009 at 9:57
  • @AgnelKurian Msdn says "This method returns an unsigned byte value that represents the numeric code of the Char object passed to it. In the .NET Framework, a Char object is a 16-bit value. This means that the method is suitable for returning the numeric codes of characters in the ASCII character range or in the Unicode C0 Controls and Basic Latin, and C1 Controls and Latin-1 Supplement ranges, from U+0000 to U+00FF."
    – mg30rg
    Jan 11, 2018 at 11:30

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