Reputation: 21
i have a problem when reading special charatters from oracle database (use JDBC driver and glassfish tooplink).
I store on database the name "GRØNLÅEN KJÆTIL" through WebService and, on database, the data are store correctly.
But when i read this String, print on log file and convert this in byte array whit this code:
int pos = 0;
byte[] msg=new byte[1024];
String F = "F" + passenger.getName();
logger.debug("Add " + F + " " + F.length());
msg = addStringToArrayBytePlusSeparator(msg, F,pos);
..............
private byte[] addStringToArrayBytePlusSeparator(byte[] arrDest,String strToAdd,int destPosition)
{
System.arraycopy(strToAdd.getBytes(Charset.forName("ISO-8859-1")), 0, arrDest, destPosition, strToAdd.getBytes().length);
arrDest = addSeparator(arrDest,destPosition+strToAdd.getBytes().length,1);
return arrDest;
}
1) In the log file there is:"Add FGRÃNLÃ " (the name isn't correct and the F.length() are not printed).
2) The code throw: java.lang.ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException at java.lang.System.arraycopy(Native Method) at it.edea.ebooking.business.chi.control.VingCardImpl.addStringToArrayBytePlusSeparator(Test.java:225).
Any solution?
Tanks
Upvotes: 2
Views: 2620
Reputation: 5559
Encoding/Decoding problems are hard. In every process step you have to do the correct encoding/decoding. So,
?useUnicode=true&characterEncoding=UTF-8
when using UTF-8, I don't know about oracle.Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1500525
You're calling strToAdd.getBytes()
without specifying the character encoding, within the System.arraycopy
call - that will be using the system default encoding, which may well not be ISO-8859-1. You should be consistent in which encoding you use. Frankly I'd also suggest that you use UTF-8 rather than ISO-8859-1 if you have the choice, but that's a different matter.
Why are you dealing with byte arrays anyway at this point? Why not just use strings?
Also note that your addStringToArrayBytePlusSeparator
method doesn't give any indication of how many bytes it's copied, which means the caller won't have any idea what to do with it afterwards. If you must use byte arrays like this, I'd suggest making addStringToArrayBytePlusSeparator
return either the new "end of logical array" or the number of bytes copied. For example:
private static final Charset ISO_8859_1 = Charset.forName("ISO-8859-1");
/**
* (Insert fuller description here.)
* Returns the number of bytes written to the array
*/
private static int addStringToArrayBytePlusSeparator(byte[] arrDest,
String strToAdd,
int destPosition)
{
byte[] encodedText = ISO_8859_1.getBytes(strToAdd);
// TODO: Verify that there's enough space in the array
System.arraycopy(encodedText, 0, arrDest, destPosition, encodedText.length);
return encodedText.length;
}
Upvotes: 3