Reputation:
I'm reading data from an SNES ROM using Java. I am opening a stream and reading in the bytes into an array:
InputStream stream = open("foo.rom");
final int startingSize = stream.available();
byte[] data = new byte[startingSize];
final int numberRead = stream.read(data, 0, startingSize);
In the ROM, I have this value:
E4 2B 00 02 03 00 FF 3A 00 83
228 43 0 2 3 0 255 58 0 131 (in decimal)
However, my code is behaving weirdly. After setting up some debug statements, I have this pattern when printing with String.valueOf(data[ref]):
-28 43 0 2 3 0 -1 58 0 -125
(This address in the ROM is the first where data appears, but I am noticing incorrect values elsewhere in the program.)
As near as I can tell my Java byte array is not respecting the hexadecimal data. How can I set my byte array to do so?
Upvotes: 5
Views: 4956
Reputation: 10136
Try using a function to print out each byte in the more well-known zero-padded hex string format:
public static String toHexString(byte b) {
return String.format("%02X", b);
}
(Yes I know there are more efficient ways to write this method.)
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 54316
Java treats all bytes as being signed, so they can only be in the range -128 to +127. The bit pattern E4
corresponds to -28 in two's complement.
You can convert signed bytes to pretend-unsigned-ints by doing something like String.valueOf(data[ref] & 0x00FF)
. That will strip off the sign bit and auto-convert to an int.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 77752
It's working perfectly fine. Keep in mind that byte
is a signed type, so a value greater or equal than 128 is interpreted as 256 - value
.
Upvotes: 1