1). Read bytes from the stream:
// use net.rim.device.api.io.IOUtilities
byte[] data = IOUtilities.streamToBytes(inputStream);
2). Create a String from the bytes:
String s = new String(data, "UTF-8");
This implies you know the encoding the text data was encoded with before sending from the server. In the example right above the encoding is UTF-8. BlackBerry supports the following character encodings:
* "ISO-8859-1"
* "UTF-8"
* "UTF-16BE"
* "US-ASCII"
The default encoding is "ISO-8859-1". So when you use String(byte[] data)
constructor it is the same as String(byte[] data, "ISO-8859-1")
.
If you don't know what encoding the server uses then I'd recommend to try UTF-8 first, because by now it has almost become a default one for servers. Also note the server may send the encoding via an http header, so you can extract it from the response. However I saw a lot of servers which put "UTF-8" into the header while actually use ISO-8859-1 or even ASCII for the data encoding.