So a 'char' in Java is 2 bytes. (Can be verified from here.)
I have this sample code:
public class FooBar {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String foo = "€";
System.out.println(foo.getBytes().length);
final char[] chars = foo.toCharArray();
System.out.println(chars[0]);
}
}
And the output is as follows:
3
€
My question is, how did Java fit a 3 byte character into a char data type? BTW, I am running the application with the parameter: -Dfile.encoding=UTF-8
Also if I edit the code a little further and add the following statements:
File baz = new File("baz.txt");
final DataOutputStream dataOutputStream = new DataOutputStream(new FileOutputStream(baz));
dataOutputStream.writeChar(chars[0]);
dataOutputStream.flush();
dataOutputStream.close();
the final file "baz.txt" will only be 2 bytes, and it will not show the correct character even if I treat it as a UTF-8 file.
Edit 2: If I open the file "baz.txt" with encoding UTF-16 BE, I will see the € character just fine in my text editor, which makes sense I guess.