Zeeno
Zeeno

Reputation: 2721

In Java, when writing to a file with DataOutputStream, how do I define the Endian of the data being written?

I'm using DataOutputStream to write to a file, however I want to change the endian of the data.

This is how i'm writing the byte data to the file (it outputs in Little endian by default)

public void generateBinObjFile(String outputFile)
    try {
        // Create file

        DataOutputStream stream = new DataOutputStream(
                new FileOutputStream(outputFile));

        stream.writeShort(this.quantize(this.xComponents.get(index), //<-- Short is written in little Endian
                    this.min_x, this.max_x) - 32768);

        } // catch statements here

Is there a way i can define the Endian of how byte data is written in Java?

Upvotes: 13

Views: 15128

Answers (5)

Simone Gianni
Simone Gianni

Reputation: 11662

all the given answers are right. You can, however, take the source of DataOutputStream, paste it into a new class, and reverse the order of bytes in the various writeShort, writeLong etc.. (or at least in the ones you need). It is not such a difficult work.

Obviously you cannot then use it to communicate with a DataInputStream on the other side, but I suppose you need to write to a file or socket with a C program on the other side, so you'll not need a DataInputStream.

Upvotes: 0

Joachim Sauer
Joachim Sauer

Reputation: 308001

You can not do this with DataOutputStream, which always uses big endian.

You can use a ByteBuffer on which you can call order() to influence how it reads and writes data.

You can use the ByteBuffer either to prepare a byte[] that you'll write with a classical OutputStream later on or go entirely to NIO and use any WritableByteChannel for the writing

Upvotes: 13

njzk2
njzk2

Reputation: 39386

It outputs the data in a fashion that is readable by DataInputStream.

If you have to worry about the endianness, you should not be using a Data*Stream.

Upvotes: -1

Thilo
Thilo

Reputation: 262474

You cannot:

Writes a short to the underlying output stream as two bytes, high byte first.

All the "multi-byte" methods work like that. If you need it the other way around, you need to write bytes yourself.

Upvotes: 0

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