2

I know that JavaScript strings are usually encoded with an encoding taking at least two bytes per character (UTF-16 or UCS-2).

However, when constructing a Blob, a different encoding appears to be used because when I read it as ArrayBuffer, the length of the returned buffer is 3 for an Euro sign.

var b = new Blob(['€']);

1 Answer 1

3

According to the W3C, it is UTF-8 encoded.

Demo:

// Create a Blob with an Euro-char (U+20AC)
var b = new Blob(['€']);
var fr = new FileReader();

fr.onload = function() {
  ua = new Uint8Array(fr.result);
  // This will log "3|226|130|172"
  //                  E2  82  AC
  // In UTF-16, it would be only 2 bytes long
  console.log(
    fr.result.byteLength + '|' + 
    ua[0]  + '|' + 
    ua[1] + '|' + 
    ua[2] + ''
  );
};
fr.readAsArrayBuffer(b);

Play with that on JSFiddle.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.