There are a few misconceptions - or at least problematic descriptions - in your post:
- Strings consist of characters, not bytes
- Numbers aren't hexadecimal or decimal etc; their representations are hex etc
You're then calling String.getBytes()
, but it's not clear what encoding you want to use. As stated before, a String is a sequence of characters. To convert that into bytes, you need to apply an encoding. Unfortunately, String.getBytes()
uses the "platform default encoding" which is almost never a good choice. You should always specify which encoding you want to use.
When you have converted the String into bytes (if you definitely want to do that) it's easy to convert that to hex:
for (byte b : test.getBytes("UTF-8"))
{
int x = b & 0xff; // I suspect you don't want negative numbers
System.out.println(Integer.toHexString(b));
}
Alternatively you might want to convert each Unicode character to its hex representation:
for (char c : test.toCharArray())
{
System.out.println(Integer.toHexString(c));
}
Note that Integer.toHexString
doesn't pad its output to a particular number of characters.
If you could give more information about your input and expected output, that would really help.