Frédéric in java converted to Frédéric.
However i need to pass the proper string to my client.
How to achieve this in Java ?
Did tried
String a = "Frédéric";
String b = new String(a.getBytes(), "UTF-8");
However string b also contain same value as a.
I am expecting string should able to store value as : Frédéric
How to pass this value properly to client.
If I understand the question correctly, you're looking for a function that will repair strings that have been damaged by others' encoding mistakes?
Here's one that seems to work on the example you gave:
static String fix(String badInput) {
byte[] bytes = badInput.getBytes(Charset.forName("cp1252"));
return new String(bytes, Charset.forName("UTF-8"));
}
fix("Frédéric") == "Frédéric"
The answer is quite complicated. See http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/Unicode.html for basic understanding.
My first suggestion would be to save your Java file with utf-8. Default for Eclipse on Windows would be cp1252 which might be your problem. Hope I could help.
Find your language code here and use that.
String a = new String(yourString.getBytes(), YOUR_ENCODING);
You can also try:
String a = URLEncoder.encode(yourString, HTTP.YOUR_ENCODING);
If System.out.println("Frédéric") shows the garbled output on the console it is most likely that the encodings used in your sourcecode (seems to be UTF-8) is not the same as the one used by the compiler - which by default is the platform-encoding, so probably some flavor of ISO-8859. Try using javac -encoding UTF-8 to compile your source (or set the appropriate property of your build environment) and you should be OK.
If you are sending this to some other piece of client software it's most likely an encoding issue on the client-side.
Related
Using Jsoup to scrape URLS and one of the URLS I keep getting has this  symbol in it. I have tried decoding the URL:
url = URLDecoder.decode(url, "UTF-8" );
but it still remains in the code looking like this:
I cant find much online about this other than it is "The object replacement character, sometimes used to represent an embedded object in a document when it is converted to plain text."
But if this is the case I should be able to print the symbol if it is plain text but when I run
System.out.println("");
I get the following complication error:
and it reverts back to the last save.
Sample URL: https://www.breightgroup.com/job/hse-advisor-embedded-contract-roles%ef%bf%bc/
NOTE: If you decode the url then compare it to the decoded url it comes back as not the same e.g.:
String url = URLDecoder.decode("https://www.breightgroup.com/job/hse-advisor-embedded-contract-roles%ef%bf%bc/", "UTF-8");
if(url.contains("https://www.breightgroup.com/job/hse-advisor-embedded-contract-roles?/")){
System.out.println("The same");
}else {
System.out.println("Not the same");
}
That's not a compilation error. That's the eclipse code editor telling you it can't save the source code to a file, because you have told it to save the file in a cp1252 encoding, but that encoding can't express a .
Put differently, your development environment is currently configured to store source code in the cp1252 encoding, which doesn't support the character you want, so you either configure your development environment to store source code using a more flexible encoding (such as UTF-8 the error message suggests), or avoid having that character in your source code, for instance by using its unicode escape sequence instead:
System.out.println("\ufffc");
Note that as far as the Java language and runtime are concerned,  is a character like any other, so there may not be a particular need to "handle" it. Also, I am unsure why you'd expect URLDecoder to do anything if the URL hasn't been URL-encoded to begin with.
"ef bf bc" is a 3 bytes UTF-8 character so as the error says, there's no representation for that character in "CP1252" Windows page encoding.
An option could be to replace that percent encoding sequence with an ascii representation to make the filename for saving:
String url = URLDecoder.decode("https://www.breightgroup.com/job/hse-advisor-embedded-contract-roles%ef%bf%bc/".replace("%ef%bf%bc", "-xEFxBFxBC"), "UTF-8");
url ==> "https://www.breightgroup.com/job/hse-advisor-emb ... contract-roles-xEFxBFxBC/"
Another option using CharsetDecoder
String urlDec = URLDecoder.decode("https://www.breightgroup.com/job/hse-advisor-embedded-contract-roles%ef%bf%bc/", "UTF-8");
CharsetDecoder decoder = Charset.forName("CP1252").newDecoder().onMalformedInput(CodingErrorAction.REPLACE).onUnmappableCharacter(CodingErrorAction.REPLACE);
String urlDec = URLDecoder.decode("https://www.breightgroup.com/job/hse-advisor-embedded-contract-roles%ef%bf%bc/", "UTF-8");
ByteBuffer buffer = ByteBuffer.wrap(urlDec.getBytes(Charset.forName("UTF-8")));
decoder.decode(buffer).toString();
Result
"https://www.breightgroup.com/job/hse-advisor-embedded-contract-roles/"
I found the issue resolved by just replacing URLs with this symbol because there are other URLs with Unicode symbols that were invisible that couldnt be converted ect..
So I just compared the urls to the following regex if it returns false then I just bypass it. Hope this helps someone out:
boolean newURL = url.matches("^[a-zA-Z0-9_:;/.&|%!+=#?-]*$");
I have a Bytestring that I need to display to the console in java.
The Bytestring is of type com.google.protobuf.ByteString,
I am using:
System.out.println(myByteString);
however, when it is printed out in the terminal it is in this form:
\n\325\a\nk\b\003\032\v\b\312\371\336\343\005\020\254\200\307S\
How can I display the string in ASCII characters instead of this encoding?
I have tried using System.out.println(myByteString.toString());
Thanks
Try
System.out.println(myByteString.toString("UTF-8"));
or whatever encoding you are using.
Check out this link:
Google Developers: Class ByteString
If you are sure that you will be using UTF-8 then you can simply use
myByteString.toStringUtf8()
or
If you are not sure about the charset refer this page and use something similar to Luk's answer
myByteString.toString("US-ASCII")
you need call:
Base64.encodeToString(myByteString.toByteArray(), Base64.DEFAULT)
I'm using PDFBox 2.0.1.
I try to dynamically add some (user provided) UTF8 text to the form fields and show the result to the user. Unfortunately either the pdf library is not capable of properly encoding special characters such as "äöü"... or I was not able find any useful documentation that could help me with this issue.
Can someone tell me what is wrong with the given code sample?
try (PDDocument document = PDDocument.load(pdfTemplate)) {
PDDocumentCatalog catalog = document.getDocumentCatalog();
PDAcroForm form = catalog.getAcroForm();
List<PDField> fields = form.getFields();
for (PDField field : fields) {
switch (field.getPartialName()) {
case "devices":
// Frontend (JS): userInput = btoa('Gerät')
String userInput = ...
String name = new String(Base64.getDecoder().decode(base64devices), "UTF-8");
field.setReadOnly(true);
break;
}
}
form.flatten(fields, true);
document.save(bos);
}
And here the stacktrace of the error:
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: U+FFFD is not available in this font's encoding: WinAnsiEncoding
org.apache.pdfbox.pdmodel.font.PDTrueTypeFont.encode(PDTrueTypeFont.java:368)
org.apache.pdfbox.pdmodel.font.PDFont.encode(PDFont.java:286)
org.apache.pdfbox.pdmodel.font.PDFont.getStringWidth(PDFont.java:315)
org.apache.pdfbox.pdmodel.interactive.form.PlainText$Paragraph.getLines(PlainText.java:169)
org.apache.pdfbox.pdmodel.interactive.form.PlainTextFormatter.format(PlainTextFormatter.java:182)
org.apache.pdfbox.pdmodel.interactive.form.AppearanceGeneratorHelper.insertGeneratedAppearance(AppearanceGeneratorHelper.java:373)
org.apache.pdfbox.pdmodel.interactive.form.AppearanceGeneratorHelper.setAppearanceContent(AppearanceGeneratorHelper.java:237)
org.apache.pdfbox.pdmodel.interactive.form.AppearanceGeneratorHelper.setAppearanceValue(AppearanceGeneratorHelper.java:144)
org.apache.pdfbox.pdmodel.interactive.form.PDTextField.constructAppearances(PDTextField.java:263)
org.apache.pdfbox.pdmodel.interactive.form.PDAcroForm.refreshAppearances(PDAcroForm.java:324)
org.apache.pdfbox.pdmodel.interactive.form.PDAcroForm.flatten(PDAcroForm.java:213)
my.application.service.PDFService.generatePDF(PDFService.java:201)
I also found those (related) issues on SO:
pdfbox: ... is not available in this font's encoding
But that does not help me choose the right encoding or how. IIRC Java uses UTF16 internally for character encoding why is the default not enough though?
Is that an issue of the PDF-document itself or the code I use to set it?
PdfBox encode symbol currency euro
Well its dynamic user input, so there are way to many things I would have to replace myself.
Thus, if the PDFBox people decided to fix the broken PDFBox method, this seemingly clean work-around code here would start to fail as it would then feed the fixed method broken input data.
Admittedly, I doubt they will fix this bug before 2.0.0 (and in 2.0.0 the fixed method has a different name), but one never knows...
Unfortunately I was not able to find this other setter method, but it might also be a different scope it does apply to.
EDIT
Updated example code to better represent the problem.
U+FFFD is used to replace an incoming character whose value is unknown or unrepresentable in Unicode compare the use of U+001A as a control character to indicate the substitute function (source).
That said it is likely that that character gets messed up somewhere. Maybe the encoding of the file is not UTF-8 and that's why the character is messed up.
As a general rule you should only write ASCII characters in the source code. You can still represent the whole Unicode range using the escaped form \uXXXX. In this case ä -> \u00E4.
-- UPDATE --
Apparently the problem is in how the user input get encoded/decoded from client/server side using the JS function btoa. A solution to this problem can be found at this link:
Using Javascript's atob to decode base64 doesn't properly decode utf-8 strings
I want to send a URL request, but the parameter values in the URL can have french characters (eg. è). How do I convert from a Java String to Windows-1252 format (which supports the French characters)?
I am currently doing this:
String encodedURL = new String (unencodedUrl.getBytes("UTF-8"), "Windows-1252");
However, it makes:
param=Stationnement extèrieur into param=Stationnement extérieur .
How do I fix this? Any suggestions?
Edit for further clarification:
The user chooses values from a drop down. When the language is French, the values from the drop down sometimes include French characters, like 'è'. When I send this request to the server, it fails, saying it is unable to decipher the request. I have to figure out how to send the 'è' as a different format (preferably Windows-1252) that supports French characters. I have chosen to send as Windows-1252. The server will accept this format. I don't want to replace each character, because I could miss a special character, and then the server will throw an exception.
Use URLEncoder to encode parameter values as application/x-www-form-urlencoded data:
String param = "param="
+ URLEncoder.encode("Stationnement extr\u00e8ieur", "cp1252");
See here for an expanded explanation.
Try using
String encodedURL = new String (unencodedUrl.getBytes("UTF-8"), Charset.forName("Windows-1252"));
As per McDowell's suggestion, I tried encoding doing:
URLEncoder.encode("stringValueWithFrechCharacters", "cp1252") but it didn't work perfectly. I replayced "cp1252" with HTTP.ISO_8859_1 because I believe Android does not have the support for Windows-1252 yet. It does allow for ISO_8859_1, and after reading here, this supports MOST of the French characters, with the exception of 'Œ', 'œ', and 'Ÿ'.
So doing this made it work:
URLEncoder.encode(frenchString, HTTP.ISO_8859_1);
Works perfectly!
I am having some problems getting some French text to convert to UTF8 so that it can be displayed properly, either in a console, text file or in a GUI element.
The original string is
HANDICAP╔ES
which is supposed to be
HANDICAPÉES
Here is a code snippet that shows how I am using the jackcess Database driver to read in the Acccess MDB file in an Eclipse/Linux environment.
Database database = Database.open(new File(filepath));
Table table = database.getTable(tableName, true);
Iterator rowIter = table.iterator();
while (rowIter.hasNext()) {
Map<String, Object> row = this.rowIter.next();
// convert fields to UTF
Map<String, Object> rowUTF = new HashMap<String, Object>();
try {
for (String key : row.keySet()) {
Object o = row.get(key);
if (o != null) {
String valueCP850 = o.toString();
// String nameUTF8 = new String(valueCP850.getBytes("CP850"), "UTF8"); // does not work!
String valueISO = new String(valueCP850.getBytes("CP850"), "ISO-8859-1");
String valueUTF8 = new String(valueISO.getBytes(), "UTF-8"); // works!
rowUTF.put(key, valueUTF8);
}
}
} catch (UnsupportedEncodingException e) {
System.err.println("Encoding exception: " + e);
}
}
In the code you'll see where I want to convert directly to UTF8, which doesn't seem to work, so I have to do a double conversion. Also note that there doesn't seem to be a way to specify the encoding type when using the jackcess driver.
Thanks,
Cam
New analysis, based on new information.
It looks like your problem is with the encoding of the text before it was stored in the Access DB. It seems it had been encoded as ISO-8859-1 or windows-1252, but decoded as cp850, resulting in the string HANDICAP╔ES being stored in the DB.
Having correctly retrieved that string from the DB, you're now trying to reverse the original encoding error and recover the string as it should have been stored: HANDICAPÉES. And you're accomplishing that with this line:
String valueISO = new String(valueCP850.getBytes("CP850"), "ISO-8859-1");
getBytes("CP850") converts the character ╔ to the byte value 0xC9, and the String constructor decodes that according to ISO-8859-1, resulting in the character É. The next line:
String valueUTF8 = new String(valueISO.getBytes(), "UTF-8");
...does nothing. getBytes() encodes the string in the platform default encoding, which is UTF-8 on your Linux system. Then the String constructor decodes it with the same encoding. Delete that line and you should still get the same result.
More to the point, your attempt to create a "UTF-8 string" was misguided. You don't need to concern yourself with the encoding of Java's strings--they're always UTF-16. When bringing text into a Java app, you just need to make sure you decode it with the correct encoding.
And if my analysis is correct, your Access driver is decoding it correctly; the problem is at the other end, possibly before the DB even comes into the picture. That's what you need to fix, because that new String(getBytes()) hack can't be counted on to work in all cases.
Original analysis, based on no information. :-/
If you're seeing HANDICAP╔ES on the console, there's probably no problem. Given this code:
System.out.println("HANDICAPÉES");
The JVM converts the (Unicode) string to the platform default encoding, windows-1252, before sending it to the console. Then the console decodes that using its own default encoding, which happens to be cp850. So the console displays it wrong, but that's normal. If you want it to display correctly, you can change the console's encoding with this command:
CHCP 1252
To display the string in a GUI element, such as a JLabel, you don't have to do anything special. Just make sure you use a font that can display all the characters, but that shouldn't be problem for French.
As for writing to a file, just specify the desired encoding when you create the Writer:
OutputStreamWriter osw = new OutputStreamWriter(
new FileOutputStream("myFile.txt"), "UTF-8");
String s = "HANDICAP╔ES";
System.out.println(new String(s.getBytes("CP850"), "ISO-8859-1")); // HANDICAPÉES
This shows the correct string value. This means that it was originally encoded/decoded with ISO-8859-1 and then incorrectly encoded with CP850 (originally CP1252 a.k.a. Windows ANSI as pointed in a comment is indeed also possible since the É has the same codepoint there as in ISO-8859-1).
Align your environment and binary pipelines to use all the one and same character encoding. You can't and shouldn't convert between them. You would risk losing information in the non-ASCII range that way.
Note: do NOT use the above code snippet to "fix" the problem! That would not be the right solution.
Update: you are apparently still struggling with the problem. I'll repeat the important parts of the answer:
Align your environment and binary pipelines to use all the one and same character encoding.
You can not and should not convert between them. You would risk losing information in the non-ASCII range that way.
Do NOT use the above code snippet to "fix" the problem! That would not be the right solution.
To fix the problem you need to choose character encoding X which you'd like to use throughout the entire application. I suggest UTF-8. Update MS Access to use encoding X. Update your development environment to use encoding X. Update the java.io readers and writers in your code to use encoding X. Update your editor to read/write files with encoding X. Update the application's user interface to use encoding X. Do not use Y or Z or whatever at some step. If the characters are already corrupted in some datastore (MS Access, files, etc), then you need to fix it by manually replacing the characters right there in the datastore. Do not use Java for this.
If you're actually using the "command prompt" as user interface, then you're actually lost. It doesn't support UTF-8. As suggested in the comments and in the article linked in the comments, you need to create a Swing application instead of relying on the restricted command prompt environment.
You can specify encoding when establishing connection. This way was perfect and solve my encoding problem:
DatabaseImpl open = DatabaseImpl.open(new File("main.mdb"), true, null, Database.DEFAULT_AUTO_SYNC, java.nio.charset.Charset.availableCharsets().get("windows-1251"), null, null);
Table table = open.getTable("FolderInfo");
Using "ISO-8859-1" helped me deal with the French charactes.