354

I have to convert a byte array to string in Android, but my byte array contains negative values.

If I convert that string again to byte array, values I am getting are different from original byte array values.

What can I do to get proper conversion? Code I am using to do the conversion is as follows:

// Code to convert byte arr to str:
byte[] by_original = {0,1,-2,3,-4,-5,6};
String str1 = new String(by_original);
System.out.println("str1 >> "+str1);

// Code to convert str to byte arr:
byte[] by_new = str1.getBytes();
for(int i=0;i<by_new.length;i++) 
System.out.println("by1["+i+"] >> "+str1);

I am stuck in this problem.

2
  • 5
    Why are you trying to convert arbitrary binary data to a String in the first place? Apart from all the charset problems the answers already mention, there's also the fact that you're abusing String if you do this. What's wrong with using a byte[] for your binary data and String for your text? Oct 8, 2009 at 8:16
  • 13
    @Joachim - sometimes you have external tools that can do things like store strings. You want to be able to turn a byte array into a (encoded in some way) string in that case. Jul 11, 2011 at 0:23

25 Answers 25

527

Your byte array must have some encoding. The encoding cannot be ASCII if you've got negative values. Once you figure that out, you can convert a set of bytes to a String using:

byte[] bytes = {...}
String str = new String(bytes, StandardCharsets.UTF_8); // for UTF-8 encoding

There are a bunch of encodings you can use, look at the supported encodings in the Oracle javadocs.

8
  • 4
    @MauricePerry can you explain why it will not work with UTF-8 ? Mar 31, 2016 at 8:46
  • 14
    @UnKnown because UTF-8 encodes some characters as 2- or 3- byte strings. Not every byte array is a valid UTF-8-encoded string. ISO-8859-1 would be a better choise: here each character is encoded as a byte. Apr 1, 2016 at 6:06
  • 2
    This might work, but you should avoid using String constructor at all cost.
    – hfontanez
    Jun 26, 2017 at 17:13
  • to map one byte to one char (with 8859-1) and no exception handling (with nio.charset): String str = new String(bytes, java.nio.charset.StandardCharsets.ISO_8859_1);
    – iman
    Nov 20, 2017 at 7:33
  • 4
    since Java 1.7, you can use new String(bytes, StandardCharsets.UTF_8)
    – ihebiheb
    Feb 18, 2019 at 19:45
120

The "proper conversion" between byte[] and String is to explicitly state the encoding you want to use. If you start with a byte[] and it does not in fact contain text data, there is no "proper conversion". Strings are for text, byte[] is for binary data, and the only really sensible thing to do is to avoid converting between them unless you absolutely have to.

If you really must use a String to hold binary data then the safest way is to use Base64 encoding.

2
46

The root problem is (I think) that you are unwittingly using a character set for which:

 bytes != encode(decode(bytes))

in some cases. UTF-8 is an example of such a character set. Specifically, certain sequences of bytes are not valid encodings in UTF-8. If the UTF-8 decoder encounters one of these sequences, it is liable to discard the offending bytes or decode them as the Unicode codepoint for "no such character". Naturally, when you then try to encode the characters as bytes the result will be different.

The solution is:

  1. Be explicit about the character encoding you are using; i.e. use a String constructor and String.toByteArray method with an explicit charset.
  2. Use the right character set for your byte data ... or alternatively one (such as "Latin-1" where all byte sequences map to valid Unicode characters.
  3. If your bytes are (really) binary data and you want to be able to transmit / receive them over a "text based" channel, use something like Base64 encoding ... which is designed for this purpose.

For Java, the most common character sets are in java.nio.charset.StandardCharsets. If you are encoding a string that can contain any Unicode character value then UTF-8 encoding (UTF_8) is recommended.

If you want a 1:1 mapping in Java then you can use ISO Latin Alphabet No. 1 - more commonly just called "Latin 1" or simply "Latin" (ISO_8859_1). Note that Latin-1 in Java is the IANA version of Latin-1 which assigns characters to all possible 256 values including control blocks C0 and C1. These are not printable: you won't see them in any output.

From Java 8 onwards Java contains java.util.Base64 for Base64 encoding / decoding. For URL-safe encoding you may want to to use Base64.getUrlEncoder instead of the standard encoder. This class is also present in Android since Android Oreo (8), API level 26.

0
34

We just need to construct a new String with the array: http://www.mkyong.com/java/how-do-convert-byte-array-to-string-in-java/

String s = new String(bytes);

The bytes of the resulting string differs depending on what charset you use. new String(bytes) and new String(bytes, Charset.forName("utf-8")) and new String(bytes, Charset.forName("utf-16")) will all have different byte arrays when you call String#getBytes() (depending on the default charset)

2
  • 10
    No. The bytes of the resulting string differs depending on what charset you use. new String(bytes) and new String(bytes, Charset.forName("utf-8")) and new String(bytes, Charset.forName("utf-16")) will all have different byte arrays when you call String#getBytes() (depending on the default charset)
    – dutoitns
    Feb 19, 2015 at 6:04
  • 1
    Misleading. The chars (and thereby the text displayed) of the resulting String differs when decoding bytes differently. The conversion back to bytes using the default encoding (use String#getBytes("charset") to specify otherwise) will necessarily differ because it converts different input. Strings don't store the byte[] they were made from, chars don't have an encoding and a String does not store it otherwise.
    – zapl
    May 24, 2016 at 8:39
16

Using new String(byOriginal) and converting back to byte[] using getBytes() doesn't guarantee two byte[] with equal values. This is due to a call to StringCoding.encode(..) which will encode the String to Charset.defaultCharset(). During this encoding, the encoder might choose to replace unknown characters and do other changes. Hence, using String.getBytes() might not return an equal array as you've originally passed to the constructor.

0
11

Why was the problem: As someone already specified: If you start with a byte[] and it does not in fact contain text data, there is no "proper conversion". Strings are for text, byte[] is for binary data, and the only really sensible thing to do is to avoid converting between them unless you absolutely have to.

I was observing this problem when I was trying to create byte[] from a pdf file and then converting it to String and then taking the String as input and converting back to file.

So make sure your encoding and decoding logic is same as I did. I explicitly encoded the byte[] to Base64 and decoded it to create the file again.

Use-case: Due to some limitation I was trying to sent byte[] in request(POST) and the process was as follows:

PDF File >> Base64.encodeBase64(byte[]) >> String >> Send in request(POST) >> receive String >> Base64.decodeBase64(byte[]) >> create binary

Try this and this worked for me..

File file = new File("filePath");

        byte[] byteArray = new byte[(int) file.length()];

        try {
            FileInputStream fileInputStream = new FileInputStream(file);
            fileInputStream.read(byteArray);

            String byteArrayStr= new String(Base64.encodeBase64(byteArray));

            FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream("newFilePath");
            fos.write(Base64.decodeBase64(byteArrayStr.getBytes()));
            fos.close();
        } 
        catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
            System.out.println("File Not Found.");
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
        catch (IOException e1) {
            System.out.println("Error Reading The File.");
            e1.printStackTrace();
        }
1
  • 2
    Does this use an external library such as Apache codec? If so please indicate this in the answer. Dec 27, 2021 at 12:30
7

Even though

new String(bytes, "UTF-8")

is correct it throws a UnsupportedEncodingException which forces you to deal with a checked exception. You can use as an alternative another constructor since Java 1.6 to convert a byte array into a String:

new String(bytes, StandardCharsets.UTF_8)

This one does not throw any exception.

Converting back should be also done with StandardCharsets.UTF_8:

"test".getBytes(StandardCharsets.UTF_8)

Again you avoid having to deal with checked exceptions.

1
  • 2
    That's a good remark, but using new String itself is bad, so it doesn't solve the underlying problems. Dec 27, 2021 at 12:28
7

Following is the sample code safely converts byte array to String and String to byte array back.

 byte bytesArray[] = { 1, -2, 4, -5, 10};
 String encoded = java.util.Base64.getEncoder().encodeToString(bytesArray);
 byte[] decoded = java.util.Base64.getDecoder().decode(encoded);
 System.out.println("input: "+Arrays.toString(bytesArray));
 System.out.println("encoded: "+encoded);
 System.out.println("decoded: "+Arrays.toString(decoded));

Output:

input: [1, -2, 4, -5, 10]
encoded: Af4E+wo=
decoded: [1, -2, 4, -5, 10]
6
private static String toHexadecimal(byte[] digest){
        String hash = "";
    for(byte aux : digest) {
        int b = aux & 0xff;
        if (Integer.toHexString(b).length() == 1) hash += "0";
        hash += Integer.toHexString(b);
    }
    return hash;
}
2
  • 1
    This doesn't answer the question. Oct 1, 2015 at 11:48
  • Doesn't answer the question but was useful +1
    – Lazy Ninja
    Sep 13, 2018 at 3:53
4

I did notice something that is not in any of the answers. You can cast each of the bytes in the byte array to characters, and put them in a char array. Then the string is

new String(cbuf)
where cbuf is the char array. To convert back, loop through the string casting each of the chars to bytes to put into a byte array, and this byte array will be the same as the first.


public class StringByteArrTest {

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        // put whatever byte array here
        byte[] arr = new byte[] {-12, -100, -49, 100, -63, 0, -90};
        for (byte b: arr) System.out.println(b);
        // put data into this char array
        char[] cbuf = new char[arr.length];
        for (int i = 0; i < arr.length; i++) {
            cbuf[i] = (char) arr[i];
        }
        // this is the string
        String s = new String(cbuf);
        System.out.println(s);

        // converting back
        byte[] out = new byte[s.length()];
        for (int i = 0; i < s.length(); i++) {
            out[i] = (byte) s.charAt(i);
        }
        for (byte b: out) System.out.println(b);
    }

}

1
  • Why would you add another block of memory in addition to the already horrid String? Dec 27, 2021 at 12:26
4

This works fine for me:

String cd = "Holding some value";

Converting from string to byte[]:

byte[] cookie = new sun.misc.BASE64Decoder().decodeBuffer(cd);

Converting from byte[] to string:

cd = new sun.misc.BASE64Encoder().encode(cookie);
1
  • Never ever use sun. internal classes. Every Java tutorial since 1.0 will warn against it, and the new modular system even directly disallows it by default. Dec 27, 2021 at 12:27
2

javax.xml.bind.DatatypeConverter should do it:

byte [] b = javax.xml.bind.DatatypeConverter.parseHexBinary("E62DB");
String s = javax.xml.bind.DatatypeConverter.printHexBinary(b);
1
  • In newer versions of Java there is a Base64 class included in java.util, and in the latest versions it can even handle hexadecimals directly (gasp!). Dec 27, 2021 at 12:24
2
  byte[] bytes = "Techie Delight".getBytes();
        // System.out.println(Arrays.toString(bytes));
 
        // Create a string from the byte array without specifying
        // character encoding
        String string = new String(bytes);
        System.out.println(string);
1

Heres a few methods that convert an array of bytes to a string. I've tested them they work well.

public String getStringFromByteArray(byte[] settingsData) {

    ByteArrayInputStream byteArrayInputStream = new ByteArrayInputStream(settingsData);
    Reader reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(byteArrayInputStream));
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
    int byteChar;

    try {
        while((byteChar = reader.read()) != -1) {
            sb.append((char) byteChar);
        }
    }
    catch(IOException e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }

    return sb.toString();

}

public String getStringFromByteArray(byte[] settingsData) {

    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
    for(byte willBeChar: settingsData) {
        sb.append((char) willBeChar);
    }

    return sb.toString();

}
0
1

While base64 encoding is safe and one could argue "the right answer", I arrived here looking for a way to convert a Java byte array to/from a Java String as-is. That is, where each member of the byte array remains intact in its String counterpart, with no extra space required for encoding/transport.

This answer describing 8bit transparent encodings was very helpful for me. I used ISO-8859-1 on terabytes of binary data to convert back and forth successfully (binary <-> String) without the inflated space requirements needed for a base64 encoding, so is safe for my use-case - YMMV.

This was also helpful in explaining when/if you should experiment.

2
  • Why the hell would you store TB of data in a string, what's wrong with binary in the first place? What fucked up protocol or API would require the data as a string? Dec 27, 2021 at 12:22
  • @MaartenBodewes, not TB in a single string buffer, more like a stream of data over time. Been a few years since this post, but I think this was to satisfy a requirement using Apache Ignite. Not something I'd generally recommend, but useful if you need it. Dec 30, 2021 at 10:03
0
import sun.misc.BASE64Decoder;
import sun.misc.BASE64Encoder;    

private static String base64Encode(byte[] bytes)
{
    return new BASE64Encoder().encode(bytes);
}

private static byte[] base64Decode(String s) throws IOException
{
    return new BASE64Decoder().decodeBuffer(s);
}
3
  • Why? Why would go through Base64 in order to convert a byte to a String? The overhead. Oct 1, 2015 at 11:51
  • @james.garriss Because there is no need to go from an unspecified byte value to string for storage, in the end you would only need it to communicate or display. And generally, it is hard to communicate e.g. a backspace or other control character (if not an unmapped character) in any kind of text based protocol. You'd only convert if you know if the text is printable in some kind of encoding format (UTF-8, Latin 1 etc.). Dec 27, 2021 at 12:19
  • Cannot resolve symbol 'BASE64Encoder' Mar 22, 2022 at 7:55
0

I succeeded converting byte array to a string with this method:

public static String byteArrayToString(byte[] data){
    String response = Arrays.toString(data);

    String[] byteValues = response.substring(1, response.length() - 1).split(",");
    byte[] bytes = new byte[byteValues.length];

    for (int i=0, len=bytes.length; i<len; i++) {
        bytes[i] = Byte.parseByte(byteValues[i].trim());
    }

    String str = new String(bytes);
    return str.toLowerCase();
}
1
  • This is an unexplained answer, indicate what you did and why it would fit. And if it is anything special, provide a decoder. Dec 27, 2021 at 12:22
0

This one works for me up to android Q:

You can use the following method to convert o hex string to string

    public static String hexToString(String hex) {
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
    char[] hexData = hex.toCharArray();
    for (int count = 0; count < hexData.length - 1; count += 2) {
        int firstDigit = Character.digit(hexData[count], 16);
        int lastDigit = Character.digit(hexData[count + 1], 16);
        int decimal = firstDigit * 16 + lastDigit;
        sb.append((char)decimal);
    }
    return sb.toString();
}

with the following to convert a byte array to a hex string

    public static String bytesToHex(byte[] bytes) {
    char[] hexChars = new char[bytes.length * 2];
    for (int j = 0; j < bytes.length; j++) {
        int v = bytes[j] & 0xFF;
        hexChars[j * 2] = hexArray[v >>> 4];
        hexChars[j * 2 + 1] = hexArray[v & 0x0F];
    }
    return new String(hexChars);
}
1
  • OK, hex works, but you forgot to supply hexArray, and for some reason your methods are not symmetrical (hex string -> string, followed by byte[] -> hex string). Jan 3, 2022 at 23:39
-1

Here the working code.

            // Encode byte array into string . TemplateBuffer1 is my bytearry variable.

        String finger_buffer = Base64.encodeToString(templateBuffer1, Base64.DEFAULT);
        Log.d(TAG, "Captured biometric device->" + finger_buffer);


        // Decode String into Byte Array. decodedString is my bytearray[] 
        decodedString = Base64.decode(finger_buffer, Base64.DEFAULT);
-1

You can use simple for loop for conversion:

public void byteArrToString(){
   byte[] b = {'a','b','$'};
   String str = ""; 
   for(int i=0; i<b.length; i++){
       char c = (char) b[i];
       str+=c;
   }
   System.out.println(str);
}
-1
byte[] image = {...};
String imageString = Base64.encodeToString(image, Base64.NO_WRAP);
-2

Read the bytes from String using ByteArrayInputStream and wrap it with BufferedReader which is Char Stream instead of Byte Stream which converts the byte data to String.

package com.cs.sajal;

import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.ByteArrayInputStream;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.io.UnsupportedEncodingException;

public class TestCls {

    public static void main(String[] args) {

        String s=new String("Sajal is  a good boy");

        try
        {
        ByteArrayInputStream bis;
        bis=new ByteArrayInputStream(s.getBytes("UTF-8"));

        BufferedReader br=new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(bis));
        System.out.println(br.readLine());

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

    }
}

Output is:

Sajal is a good boy

-2

You can do the following to convert byte array to string and then convert that string to byte array:

// 1. convert byte array to string and then string to byte array

    // convert byte array to string
    byte[] by_original = {0, 1, -2, 3, -4, -5, 6};
    String str1 = Arrays.toString(by_original);
    System.out.println(str1); // output: [0, 1, -2, 3, -4, -5, 6]

    // convert string to byte array
    String newString = str1.substring(1, str1.length()-1);
    String[] stringArray = newString.split(", ");
    byte[] by_new = new byte[stringArray.length];
    for(int i=0; i<stringArray.length; i++) {
        by_new[i] = (byte) Integer.parseInt(stringArray[i]);
    }
    System.out.println(Arrays.toString(by_new)); // output: [0, 1, -2, 3, -4, -5, 6]

But to convert the string to byte array and then convert that byte array to string, below approach can be used:

// 2. convert string to byte array and then byte array to string

    // convert string to byte array
    String str2 = "[0, 1, -2, 3, -4, -5, 6]";
    byte[] byteStr2 = str2.getBytes(StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
    // Now byteStr2 is [91, 48, 44, 32, 49, 44, 32, 45, 50, 44, 32, 51, 44, 32, 45, 52, 44, 32, 45, 53, 44, 32, 54, 93]

    // convert byte array to string
    System.out.println(new String(byteStr2, StandardCharsets.UTF_8)); // output: [0, 1, -2, 3, -4, -5, 6]
2
  • I've downvoted. The question doesn't specify what is in the byte array. Sure you can encode a byte array to string and decode that using your code, but a single call to a base64 encoding will create a more dense and (more importantly) standardized encoding. So 1. it doesn't really address the question, and 2. if it would address the question, then the encoding is suboptimal. It's also basically a "code only" answer as it doesn't describe the encoding format or why this would be beneficial. Explicit methods would be nice as well. Dec 27, 2021 at 15:14
  • @MaartenBodewes In the question it was mentioned about what is in the byte array. I have answered the same. Please check the question bro. Dec 27, 2021 at 15:17
-4
public class byteString {

    /**
     * @param args
     */
    public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
        // TODO Auto-generated method stub
        String msg = "Hello";
        byte[] buff = new byte[1024];
        buff = msg.getBytes("UTF-8");
        System.out.println(buff);
        String m = new String(buff);
        System.out.println(m);


    }

}
2
  • Pass The Charset Encoding as arguement to getBytes Jul 21, 2015 at 14:56
  • 1
    You may want to consider fleshing out this answer with an explanation in addition to the code. Jul 21, 2015 at 16:25
-5

A string is a collection of char's (16bit unsigned). So if you are going to convert negative numbers into a string, they'll be lost in translation.

8
  • 2
    -1: This is incorrect. While 'byte' is a signed type in Java, they are treated as unsigned by the library code that does character set encoding and decoding.
    – Stephen C
    Oct 8, 2009 at 7:53
  • A fine example why having an unsigned 8 bit datatype really is a good idea to have in a language. Avoids unnecessary confusion ;^)
    – Toad
    Oct 8, 2009 at 8:18
  • Be careful about assuming that a Java char will be 16 bits, because of Java's UTF-16, they can expand up to 32 bits
    – Joe Plante
    Aug 30, 2012 at 19:44
  • 1
    @Toad actually yes, some Unicode characters when stored as UTF-16 take up two code points, i.e. 32 bits. The same happens in UTF-8: some characters use two/three/four code points, i.e. 16/24/32 bits. In fact, that's exactly what UTF is about (i.e. UTF != Unicode).
    – CAFxX
    Dec 1, 2012 at 17:52
  • 1
    @Toad you'd get the first surrogate - i.e. only the first "half" of the character. Look at the docs for the String.charAt method and the Character class.
    – CAFxX
    Dec 4, 2012 at 12:52

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