How would I write a method to compress a Gzip string that does not contain a header file, and have it compress to exactly the way it was before I have decompressed it. The original compression is done in C#, and I am inflating in Ruby using the following method:
EDIT: basically, I would like the matching deflate method to this inflate:
def inflate(string)
zstream = Zlib::Inflate.new(-Zlib::MAX_WBITS)
buf = zstream.inflate(string)
zstream.finish
zstream.close
buf
end
Before decompressing, the string is:
"5\x891\n\xC30\x10\x04{\xBDb\xEB\xE0F&\x81\xA4\xCA3\xDC\xA81\xD2\x1A]\xA1\x13\xB1.\x100\xFEF\xDE\e\x19\x9Cb\x99Yf\xCA\xB3A\x1A,\x13\xB1\x96R\x15I\x96\x85+5\x12\xA2=\xF4:\xAFb\xB9\xD0$\xA2\xF1\xF5>\xDA\xD3\xB9\x9A\xA8f\xFC\xD8\xE6\xFD\x00\x7F\xEB{\f!Uk{\xCF,\x91\xDC\x1C\x10J\xC4\xF7z\xCA\xE8p9\xF8\xFF\xF7\x93\xDEw\xD9\x7F"
And after decompressing using inflate, it is:
"What is the common difference in this arithmetic sequence?\n\n\\indenttext{11, 15, 19,\\dots}\n\n\\emcee{\n \\mc \x964\n \\mc 2\n *\\mc 4\n \\mc 8\n \\mc 11\n }"
I've tried creating multiple deflate methods, but none that can get it back to the original. Thanks for your help!
EDIT: The original compression was done in .NET 2.0 using the following
byte[] compressedStringBytes = CompressGzipString(String);
and CompressGzipString does:
MemoryStream compressed = new MemoryStream();
DeflaterOutputStream zosCompressed = new DeflaterOutputStream(compressed, new Deflater(Deflater.BEST_COMPRESSION, true));
zosCompressed.Write(data, 0, data.Length);
If it's not possible to get it to the exact original, what would be the most standardized compression, by which I mean general and that would be able to be decompressed in the same way that the original was?
CompressGzipString
andDeflator
- are not part of the standard .NET library. Where did they come from?