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I have a byte array that may or may not have null bytes at the end of it. After converting it to a string I have a bunch of blank space at the end. I tried using Trim() to get rid of it, but it doesn't work. How can I remove all the blank space at the end of the string after converting the byte array?

I am writing this is C#.

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  • What are the values in the byte array? And are you sure that the byte array contains an ASCII string and not Unicode or UTF-8? Mar 15, 2010 at 19:01

2 Answers 2

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Trim() does not work in your case, because it only removes spaces, tabs and newlines AFAIK. It does not remove the '\0' character. You could also use something like this:

byte[] bts = ...;

string result = Encoding.ASCII.GetString(bts).TrimEnd('\0');

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  • Perhaps not the most eficcient one for me (having 20k of "0"s) but worked as a charm. Thanks Oct 8, 2015 at 16:40
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public string TrimNulls(byte[] data)
{
    int rOffset = data.Length - 1;

    for(int i = data.Length - 1; i >= 0; i--)
    {
        rOffset = i;

        if(data[i] != (byte)0) break;            
    }

    return System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetString(data, 0, rOffset + 1);
}

In the interest of full disclosure, I'd like to be very clear that this will only work reliably for ASCII. For any multi-byte encoding this will crap the bed.

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  • 1
    Please add that your solution works great for ASCII encoding (as the OP requested), but will break horribly for anything else. Mar 15, 2010 at 19:03
  • That will work. Thanks. i was hoping to be able to do something like Trim on the resulting string, but I guess not. Thanks!
    – Brian
    Mar 15, 2010 at 19:05
  • Small bug with this solution. The return value should be: return System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetString(data, 0, rOffset+1); Otherwise it will cut off the last byte.
    – Brian
    Mar 15, 2010 at 19:18
  • 1
    @Brian: I already added that a few minutes ago, but thanks ;) Mar 15, 2010 at 19:24

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