You can save a string raw as is by using FileReader.
Save the string in a blob and call readAsArrayBuffer(). Then the onload-event results an arraybuffer, which can converted in a Uint8Array.
Unfortunately this call is asynchronous.
This little function will help you:
function stringToBytes(str)
{
let reader = new FileReader();
let done = () => {};
reader.onload = event =>
{
done(new Uint8Array(event.target.result), str);
};
reader.readAsArrayBuffer(new Blob([str], { type: "application/octet-stream" }));
return { done: callback => { done = callback; } };
}
Call it like this:
stringToBytes("\u{1f4a9}").done(bytes =>
{
console.log(bytes);
});
output: [240, 159, 146, 169]
explanation:
JavaScript use UTF-16 and surrogate-pairs to store unicode characters in memory. To save unicode character in raw binary byte streams an encoding is necessary.
Usually and in the most case, UTF-8 is used for this. If you not use an enconding you can't save unicode character, just ASCII up to 0x7f.
FileReader.readAsArrayBuffer() uses UTF-8.