You can write your data to a ByteBuffer and then you can distort your data by a simple algorithm. For example, assume that the data you want to save is a String array, you can do this:
String[] data; // the data you want to save
int byteLength = 0;
byte[][] bytes = new byte[data.length][];
// Calculate the length of the content.
for(int i=0; i<data.length; i++) {
bytes[i] = data[i].getBytes();
byteLength += bytes[i].length;
byteLength += 4; // this is for an integer, which is for the length of the String
}
// Transfer the content to a ByteBuffer object
ByteBuffer buffer = ByteBuffer.allocate(byteLength);
for(int i=0; i<bytes.length; i++) {
// Put the length of the current byte array
buffer.putInt(bytes[i].length);
for(int j=0; j<bytes[i].length; j++) {
// Reverse the byte so that it can't be understood
buffer.put((byte)(~bytes[i][j]));
}
}
After writing all of your content to the ByteBuffer object, you can take the resulting byte array and write it down to a file.
FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream("YourFileName.anyExtension");
fos.write(buffer.array());
fos.close();
While reading the file back, you should first read an integer, which is the length of the data you should read as byte array, then you should read this byte array.
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream("YourFileName.anyExtension");
DataInputStream dis = new DataInputStream(fis);
ArrayList<String> list = new ArrayList<String>();
byte[] bytes;
while(dis.available()) {
int length = dis.readInt();
bytes = new byte[length];
for(int i=0; i<length; i++) {
// Those bytes were reversed, right?
bytes[i] = (byte)(~dis.readByte());
}
// Convert byte array to String
String str = new String(bytes);
list.add(str);
}
Now you have an ArrayList of your String data.
Of course this is not the best, the safest, and the fastest algorithm. You can always find or create faster. But I think this is a good example of doing those kind of things.