Encoding.GetBytes Method
Definition
Important
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When overridden in a derived class, encodes a set of characters into a sequence of bytes.
Overloads
GetBytes(Char[]) |
When overridden in a derived class, encodes all the characters in the specified character array into a sequence of bytes. |
GetBytes(String) |
When overridden in a derived class, encodes all the characters in the specified string into a sequence of bytes. |
GetBytes(ReadOnlySpan<Char>, Span<Byte>) |
When overridden in a derived class, encodes into a span of bytes a set of characters from the specified read-only span. |
GetBytes(Char[], Int32, Int32) |
When overridden in a derived class, encodes a set of characters from the specified character array into a sequence of bytes. |
GetBytes(String, Int32, Int32) |
When overridden in a derived class, encodes into an array of bytes the number of characters specified by |
GetBytes(Char*, Int32, Byte*, Int32) |
When overridden in a derived class, encodes a set of characters starting at the specified character pointer into a sequence of bytes that are stored starting at the specified byte pointer. |
GetBytes(Char[], Int32, Int32, Byte[], Int32) |
When overridden in a derived class, encodes a set of characters from the specified character array into the specified byte array. |
GetBytes(String, Int32, Int32, Byte[], Int32) |
When overridden in a derived class, encodes a set of characters from the specified string into the specified byte array. |
GetBytes(Char[])
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
When overridden in a derived class, encodes all the characters in the specified character array into a sequence of bytes.
public:
virtual cli::array <System::Byte> ^ GetBytes(cli::array <char> ^ chars);
public virtual byte[] GetBytes (char[] chars);
abstract member GetBytes : char[] -> byte[]
override this.GetBytes : char[] -> byte[]
Public Overridable Function GetBytes (chars As Char()) As Byte()
Parameters
- chars
- Char[]
The character array containing the characters to encode.
Returns
A byte array containing the results of encoding the specified set of characters.
Exceptions
chars
is null
.
A fallback occurred (for more information, see Character Encoding in .NET)
-and-
EncoderFallback is set to EncoderExceptionFallback.
Examples
The following example determines the number of bytes required to encode a character array, encodes the characters, and displays the resulting bytes.
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Text;
void PrintCountsAndBytes( array<Char>^chars, Encoding^ enc );
void PrintHexBytes( array<Byte>^bytes );
int main()
{
// The characters to encode:
// Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
// Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
// Combining Breve (U+0306)
// Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
// Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
// a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
// a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
array<Char>^myChars = gcnew array<Char>{
L'z','a',L'\u0306',L'\u01FD',L'\u03B2',L'\xD8FF',L'\xDCFF'
};
// Get different encodings.
Encoding^ u7 = Encoding::UTF7;
Encoding^ u8 = Encoding::UTF8;
Encoding^ u16LE = Encoding::Unicode;
Encoding^ u16BE = Encoding::BigEndianUnicode;
Encoding^ u32 = Encoding::UTF32;
// Encode the entire array, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, u32 );
}
void PrintCountsAndBytes( array<Char>^chars, Encoding^ enc )
{
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console::Write( "{0,-30} :", enc );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc->GetByteCount( chars );
Console::Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc->GetMaxByteCount( chars->Length );
Console::Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode the array of chars.
array<Byte>^bytes = enc->GetBytes( chars );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
void PrintHexBytes( array<Byte>^bytes )
{
if ( (bytes == nullptr) || (bytes->Length == 0) )
Console::WriteLine( "<none>" );
else
{
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes->Length; i++ )
Console::Write( "{0:X2} ", bytes[ i ] );
Console::WriteLine();
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 18 23 :7A 61 2B 41 77 59 42 2F 51 4F 79 32 50 2F 63 2F 77 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 12 24 :7A 61 CC 86 C7 BD CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :7A 00 61 00 06 03 FD 01 B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :00 7A 00 61 03 06 01 FD 03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 24 32 :7A 00 00 00 61 00 00 00 06 03 00 00 FD 01 00 00 B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
*/
using System;
using System.Text;
public class SamplesEncoding {
public static void Main() {
// The characters to encode:
// Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
// Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
// Combining Breve (U+0306)
// Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
// Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
// a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
// a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
char[] myChars = new char[] { 'z', 'a', '\u0306', '\u01FD', '\u03B2', '\uD8FF', '\uDCFF' };
// Get different encodings.
Encoding u7 = Encoding.UTF7;
Encoding u8 = Encoding.UTF8;
Encoding u16LE = Encoding.Unicode;
Encoding u16BE = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode;
Encoding u32 = Encoding.UTF32;
// Encode the entire array, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, u32 );
}
public static void PrintCountsAndBytes( char[] chars, Encoding enc ) {
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write( "{0,-30} :", enc.ToString() );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc.GetByteCount( chars );
Console.Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc.GetMaxByteCount( chars.Length );
Console.Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode the array of chars.
byte[] bytes = enc.GetBytes( chars );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
public static void PrintHexBytes( byte[] bytes ) {
if (( bytes == null ) || ( bytes.Length == 0 ))
{
Console.WriteLine( "<none>" );
}
else {
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes.Length; i++ )
Console.Write( "{0:X2} ", bytes[i] );
Console.WriteLine();
}
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 18 23 :7A 61 2B 41 77 59 42 2F 51 4F 79 32 50 2F 63 2F 77 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 12 24 :7A 61 CC 86 C7 BD CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :7A 00 61 00 06 03 FD 01 B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :00 7A 00 61 03 06 01 FD 03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 24 32 :7A 00 00 00 61 00 00 00 06 03 00 00 FD 01 00 00 B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
*/
Imports System.Text
Public Class SamplesEncoding
Public Shared Sub Main()
' The characters to encode:
' Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
' Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
' Combining Breve (U+0306)
' Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
' Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
' a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
' a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
Dim myChars() As Char = {"z"c, "a"c, ChrW(&H0306), ChrW(&H01FD), ChrW(&H03B2), ChrW(&HD8FF), ChrW(&HDCFF)}
' Get different encodings.
Dim u7 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF7
Dim u8 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF8
Dim u16LE As Encoding = Encoding.Unicode
Dim u16BE As Encoding = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode
Dim u32 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF32
' Encode the entire array, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, u7)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, u8)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, u16LE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, u16BE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, u32)
End Sub
Public Shared Sub PrintCountsAndBytes(chars() As Char, enc As Encoding)
' Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write("{0,-30} :", enc.ToString())
' Display the exact byte count.
Dim iBC As Integer = enc.GetByteCount(chars)
Console.Write(" {0,-3}", iBC)
' Display the maximum byte count.
Dim iMBC As Integer = enc.GetMaxByteCount(chars.Length)
Console.Write(" {0,-3} :", iMBC)
' Encode the array of chars.
Dim bytes As Byte() = enc.GetBytes(chars)
' Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes(bytes)
End Sub
Public Shared Sub PrintHexBytes(bytes() As Byte)
If bytes Is Nothing OrElse bytes.Length = 0 Then
Console.WriteLine("<none>")
Else
Dim i As Integer
For i = 0 To bytes.Length - 1
Console.Write("{0:X2} ", bytes(i))
Next i
Console.WriteLine()
End If
End Sub
End Class
'This code produces the following output.
'
'System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 18 23 :7A 61 2B 41 77 59 42 2F 51 4F 79 32 50 2F 63 2F 77 2D
'System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 12 24 :7A 61 CC 86 C7 BD CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :7A 00 61 00 06 03 FD 01 B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :00 7A 00 61 03 06 01 FD 03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
'System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 24 32 :7A 00 00 00 61 00 00 00 06 03 00 00 FD 01 00 00 B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
Remarks
If the data to be converted is available only in sequential blocks (such as data read from a stream) or if the amount of data is so large that it needs to be divided into smaller blocks, you should use the Decoder or the Encoder provided by the GetDecoder method or the GetEncoder method, respectively, of a derived class.
The GetByteCount method determines how many bytes result in encoding a set of Unicode characters, and the GetBytes method performs the actual encoding. The GetBytes method expects discrete conversions, in contrast to the Encoder.GetBytes method, which handles multiple conversions on a single input stream.
Several versions of GetByteCount and GetBytes are supported. The following are some programming considerations for use of these methods:
Your app might need to encode many input characters to a code page and process the characters using multiple calls. In this case, you probably need to maintain state between calls, taking into account the state that is persisted by the Encoder object being used. (For example, a character sequence that includes surrogate pairs might end with a high surrogate. The Encoder will remember that high surrogate so that it can be combined with a low surrogate at the beginning of a following call. Encoding won't be able to maintain the state, so the character will be sent to the EncoderFallback.)
If your app handles string inputs, you should call the string version of the GetBytes method.
The Unicode character buffer version of GetBytes(Char*, Int32, Byte*, Int32) allows some fast techniques, particularly with multiple calls using the Encoder object or inserting into existing buffers. Bear in mind, however, that this method version is sometimes unsafe, since pointers are required.
If your app must convert a large amount of data, it should reuse the output buffer. In this case, the GetBytes version that supports byte arrays is the best choice.
Consider using the Encoder.Convert method instead of GetByteCount. The conversion method converts as much data as possible, and does throw an exception if the output buffer is too small. For continuous encoding of a stream, this method is often the best choice.
See also
Applies to
GetBytes(String)
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
When overridden in a derived class, encodes all the characters in the specified string into a sequence of bytes.
public:
virtual cli::array <System::Byte> ^ GetBytes(System::String ^ s);
public virtual byte[] GetBytes (string s);
abstract member GetBytes : string -> byte[]
override this.GetBytes : string -> byte[]
Public Overridable Function GetBytes (s As String) As Byte()
Parameters
- s
- String
The string containing the characters to encode.
Returns
A byte array containing the results of encoding the specified set of characters.
Exceptions
s
is null
.
A fallback occurred (for more information, see Character Encoding in .NET)
-and-
EncoderFallback is set to EncoderExceptionFallback.
Examples
The following example determines the number of bytes required to encode a string or a range in the string, encodes the characters, and displays the resulting bytes.
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Text;
void PrintCountsAndBytes( String^ s, Encoding^ enc );
void PrintCountsAndBytes( String^ s, int index, int count, Encoding^ enc );
void PrintHexBytes( array<Byte>^bytes );
int main()
{
// The characters to encode:
// Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
// Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
// Combining Breve (U+0306)
// Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
// Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
// a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
// a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
String^ myStr = L"za\u0306\u01FD\u03B2\xD8FF\xDCFF";
// Get different encodings.
Encoding^ u7 = Encoding::UTF7;
Encoding^ u8 = Encoding::UTF8;
Encoding^ u16LE = Encoding::Unicode;
Encoding^ u16BE = Encoding::BigEndianUnicode;
Encoding^ u32 = Encoding::UTF32;
// Encode the entire string, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console::WriteLine( "Encoding the entire string:" );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u32 );
Console::WriteLine();
// Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console::WriteLine( "Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:" );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u32 );
}
void PrintCountsAndBytes( String^ s, Encoding^ enc )
{
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console::Write( "{0,-30} :", enc );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc->GetByteCount( s );
Console::Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc->GetMaxByteCount( s->Length );
Console::Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode the entire string.
array<Byte>^bytes = enc->GetBytes( s );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
void PrintCountsAndBytes( String^ s, int index, int count, Encoding^ enc )
{
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console::Write( "{0,-30} :", enc );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc->GetByteCount( s->ToCharArray(), index, count );
Console::Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc->GetMaxByteCount( count );
Console::Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode a range of characters in the string.
array<Byte>^bytes = gcnew array<Byte>(iBC);
enc->GetBytes( s, index, count, bytes, bytes->GetLowerBound( 0 ) );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
void PrintHexBytes( array<Byte>^bytes )
{
if ( (bytes == nullptr) || (bytes->Length == 0) )
Console::WriteLine( "<none>" );
else
{
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes->Length; i++ )
Console::Write( "{0:X2} ", bytes[ i ] );
Console::WriteLine();
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
Encoding the entire string:
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 18 23 :7A 61 2B 41 77 59 42 2F 51 4F 79 32 50 2F 63 2F 77 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 12 24 :7A 61 CC 86 C7 BD CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :7A 00 61 00 06 03 FD 01 B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :00 7A 00 61 03 06 01 FD 03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 24 32 :7A 00 00 00 61 00 00 00 06 03 00 00 FD 01 00 00 B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
*/
using System;
using System.Text;
public class SamplesEncoding {
public static void Main() {
// The characters to encode:
// Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
// Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
// Combining Breve (U+0306)
// Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
// Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
// a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
// a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
String myStr = "za\u0306\u01FD\u03B2\uD8FF\uDCFF";
// Get different encodings.
Encoding u7 = Encoding.UTF7;
Encoding u8 = Encoding.UTF8;
Encoding u16LE = Encoding.Unicode;
Encoding u16BE = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode;
Encoding u32 = Encoding.UTF32;
// Encode the entire string, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console.WriteLine( "Encoding the entire string:" );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u32 );
Console.WriteLine();
// Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console.WriteLine( "Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:" );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u32 );
}
public static void PrintCountsAndBytes( String s, Encoding enc ) {
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write( "{0,-30} :", enc.ToString() );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc.GetByteCount( s );
Console.Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc.GetMaxByteCount( s.Length );
Console.Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode the entire string.
byte[] bytes = enc.GetBytes( s );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
public static void PrintCountsAndBytes( String s, int index, int count, Encoding enc ) {
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write( "{0,-30} :", enc.ToString() );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc.GetByteCount( s.ToCharArray(), index, count );
Console.Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc.GetMaxByteCount( count );
Console.Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode a range of characters in the string.
byte[] bytes = new byte[iBC];
enc.GetBytes( s, index, count, bytes, bytes.GetLowerBound(0) );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
public static void PrintHexBytes( byte[] bytes ) {
if (( bytes == null ) || ( bytes.Length == 0 ))
{
Console.WriteLine( "<none>" );
}
else {
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes.Length; i++ )
Console.Write( "{0:X2} ", bytes[i] );
Console.WriteLine();
}
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
Encoding the entire string:
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 18 23 :7A 61 2B 41 77 59 42 2F 51 4F 79 32 50 2F 63 2F 77 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 12 24 :7A 61 CC 86 C7 BD CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :7A 00 61 00 06 03 FD 01 B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :00 7A 00 61 03 06 01 FD 03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 24 32 :7A 00 00 00 61 00 00 00 06 03 00 00 FD 01 00 00 B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
*/
Imports System.Text
Public Class SamplesEncoding
Public Shared Sub Main()
' The characters to encode:
' Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
' Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
' Combining Breve (U+0306)
' Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
' Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
' a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
' a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
Dim myStr As String = "za" & ChrW(&H0306) & ChrW(&H01FD) & ChrW(&H03B2) & ChrW(&HD8FF) & ChrW(&HDCFF)
' Get different encodings.
Dim u7 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF7
Dim u8 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF8
Dim u16LE As Encoding = Encoding.Unicode
Dim u16BE As Encoding = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode
Dim u32 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF32
' Encode the entire string, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console.WriteLine("Encoding the entire string:")
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u7)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u8)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u16LE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u16BE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u32)
Console.WriteLine()
' Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console.WriteLine("Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:")
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u7)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u8)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u16LE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u16BE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u32)
End Sub
Overloads Public Shared Sub PrintCountsAndBytes(s As String, enc As Encoding)
' Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write("{0,-30} :", enc.ToString())
' Display the exact byte count.
Dim iBC As Integer = enc.GetByteCount(s)
Console.Write(" {0,-3}", iBC)
' Display the maximum byte count.
Dim iMBC As Integer = enc.GetMaxByteCount(s.Length)
Console.Write(" {0,-3} :", iMBC)
' Encode the entire string.
Dim bytes As Byte() = enc.GetBytes(s)
' Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes(bytes)
End Sub
Overloads Public Shared Sub PrintCountsAndBytes(s As String, index As Integer, count As Integer, enc As Encoding)
' Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write("{0,-30} :", enc.ToString())
' Display the exact byte count.
Dim iBC As Integer = enc.GetByteCount(s.ToCharArray(), index, count)
Console.Write(" {0,-3}", iBC)
' Display the maximum byte count.
Dim iMBC As Integer = enc.GetMaxByteCount(count)
Console.Write(" {0,-3} :", iMBC)
' Encode a range of characters in the string.
' NOTE: In VB.NET, arrays contain one extra element by default.
' The following line creates the array with the exact number of elements required.
Dim bytes(iBC - 1) As Byte
enc.GetBytes(s, index, count, bytes, bytes.GetLowerBound(0))
' Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes(bytes)
End Sub
Public Shared Sub PrintHexBytes(bytes() As Byte)
If bytes Is Nothing OrElse bytes.Length = 0 Then
Console.WriteLine("<none>")
Else
Dim i As Integer
For i = 0 To bytes.Length - 1
Console.Write("{0:X2} ", bytes(i))
Next i
Console.WriteLine()
End If
End Sub
End Class
'This code produces the following output.
'
'Encoding the entire string:
'System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 18 23 :7A 61 2B 41 77 59 42 2F 51 4F 79 32 50 2F 63 2F 77 2D
'System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 12 24 :7A 61 CC 86 C7 BD CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :7A 00 61 00 06 03 FD 01 B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :00 7A 00 61 03 06 01 FD 03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
'System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 24 32 :7A 00 00 00 61 00 00 00 06 03 00 00 FD 01 00 00 B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
'
'Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:
'System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
'System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
'System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
Remarks
If the data to be converted is available only in sequential blocks (such as data read from a stream) or if the amount of data is so large that it needs to be divided into smaller blocks, you should use the Decoder or the Encoder provided by the GetDecoder method or the GetEncoder method, respectively, of a derived class.
The GetByteCount method determines how many bytes result in encoding a set of Unicode characters, and the GetBytes method performs the actual encoding. The Encoding.GetBytes method expects discrete conversions, in contrast to the Encoder.GetBytes method, which handles multiple conversions on a single input stream.
Several versions of GetByteCount and GetBytes are supported. The following are some programming considerations for use of these methods:
Your app might need to encode many input characters to a code page and process the characters using multiple calls. In this case, you probably need to maintain state between calls, taking into account the state that is persisted by the Encoder object being used. (For example, a character sequence that includes surrogate pairs might end with a high surrogate. The Encoder will remember that high surrogate so that it can be combined with a low surrogate at the beginning of a following call. Encoding won't be able to maintain the state, so the character will be sent to the EncoderFallback.)
If your app handles string inputs, you should use the string version of GetBytes.
The Unicode character buffer version of GetBytes(Char*, Int32, Byte*, Int32) allows some fast techniques, particularly with multiple calls using the Encoder object or inserting into existing buffers. Bear in mind, however, that this method version is sometimes unsafe, since pointers are required.
If your app must convert a large amount of data, it should reuse the output buffer. In this case, the GetBytes version that supports byte arrays is the best choice.
Consider using the Encoder.Convert method instead of GetByteCount. The conversion method converts as much data as possible, and does throw an exception if the output buffer is too small. For continuous encoding of a stream, this method is often the best choice.
See also
Applies to
GetBytes(ReadOnlySpan<Char>, Span<Byte>)
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
When overridden in a derived class, encodes into a span of bytes a set of characters from the specified read-only span.
public:
virtual int GetBytes(ReadOnlySpan<char> chars, Span<System::Byte> bytes);
public virtual int GetBytes (ReadOnlySpan<char> chars, Span<byte> bytes);
abstract member GetBytes : ReadOnlySpan<char> * Span<byte> -> int
override this.GetBytes : ReadOnlySpan<char> * Span<byte> -> int
Public Overridable Function GetBytes (chars As ReadOnlySpan(Of Char), bytes As Span(Of Byte)) As Integer
Parameters
- chars
- ReadOnlySpan<Char>
The span containing the set of characters to encode.
Returns
The number of encoded bytes.
Remarks
If the data to be converted is available only in sequential blocks (such as data read from a stream) or if the amount of data is so large that it needs to be divided into smaller blocks, you should use the Decoder or the Encoder provided by the GetDecoder method or the GetEncoder method, respectively, of a derived class.
The GetByteCount method determines how many bytes result in encoding a set of Unicode characters, and the GetBytes method performs the actual encoding. The Encoding.GetBytes method expects discrete conversions, in contrast to the Encoder.GetBytes method, which handles multiple conversions on a single input stream.
Several versions of GetByteCount and GetBytes are supported. The following are some programming considerations for use of these methods:
Your app might need to encode many input characters to a code page and process the characters using multiple calls. In this case, you probably need to maintain state between calls, taking into account the state that is persisted by the Encoder object being used. (For example, a character sequence that includes surrogate pairs might end with a high surrogate. The Encoder will remember that high surrogate so that it can be combined with a low surrogate at the beginning of a following call. Encoding won't be able to maintain the state, so the character will be sent to the EncoderFallback.)
If your app handles string inputs, you should use the string version of GetBytes.
If your app must convert a large amount of data, it should reuse the output buffer. In this case, the GetBytes version that supports byte arrays is the best choice.
Consider using the Encoder.Convert method instead of GetByteCount. The conversion method converts as much data as possible, and does throw an exception if the output buffer is too small. For continuous encoding of a stream, this method is often the best choice.
Applies to
GetBytes(Char[], Int32, Int32)
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
When overridden in a derived class, encodes a set of characters from the specified character array into a sequence of bytes.
public:
virtual cli::array <System::Byte> ^ GetBytes(cli::array <char> ^ chars, int index, int count);
public virtual byte[] GetBytes (char[] chars, int index, int count);
abstract member GetBytes : char[] * int * int -> byte[]
override this.GetBytes : char[] * int * int -> byte[]
Public Overridable Function GetBytes (chars As Char(), index As Integer, count As Integer) As Byte()
Parameters
- chars
- Char[]
The character array containing the set of characters to encode.
- index
- Int32
The index of the first character to encode.
- count
- Int32
The number of characters to encode.
Returns
A byte array containing the results of encoding the specified set of characters.
Exceptions
chars
is null
.
index
or count
is less than zero.
-or-
index
and count
do not denote a valid range in chars
.
A fallback occurred (for more information, see Character Encoding in .NET)
-and-
EncoderFallback is set to EncoderExceptionFallback.
Examples
The following example determines the number of bytes required to encode three characters from a character array, encodes the characters, and displays the resulting bytes.
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Text;
void PrintCountsAndBytes( array<Char>^chars, int index, int count, Encoding^ enc );
void PrintHexBytes( array<Byte>^bytes );
int main()
{
// The characters to encode:
// Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
// Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
// Combining Breve (U+0306)
// Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
// Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
// a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
// a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
array<Char>^myChars = gcnew array<Char>{
L'z',L'a',L'\u0306',L'\u01FD',L'\u03B2',L'\xD8FF',L'\xDCFF'
};
// Get different encodings.
Encoding^ u7 = Encoding::UTF7;
Encoding^ u8 = Encoding::UTF8;
Encoding^ u16LE = Encoding::Unicode;
Encoding^ u16BE = Encoding::BigEndianUnicode;
Encoding^ u32 = Encoding::UTF32;
// Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u32 );
}
void PrintCountsAndBytes( array<Char>^chars, int index, int count, Encoding^ enc )
{
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console::Write( "{0,-30} :", enc );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc->GetByteCount( chars, index, count );
Console::Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc->GetMaxByteCount( count );
Console::Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode the array of chars.
array<Byte>^bytes = enc->GetBytes( chars, index, count );
// The following is an alternative way to encode the array of chars:
// byte[] bytes = new byte[iBC];
// enc.GetBytes( chars, index, count, bytes, bytes.GetLowerBound(0) );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
void PrintHexBytes( array<Byte>^bytes )
{
if ( (bytes == nullptr) || (bytes->Length == 0) )
Console::WriteLine( "<none>" );
else
{
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes->Length; i++ )
Console::Write( "{0:X2} ", bytes[ i ] );
Console::WriteLine();
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
*/
using System;
using System.Text;
public class SamplesEncoding {
public static void Main() {
// The characters to encode:
// Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
// Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
// Combining Breve (U+0306)
// Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
// Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
// a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
// a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
char[] myChars = new char[] { 'z', 'a', '\u0306', '\u01FD', '\u03B2', '\uD8FF', '\uDCFF' };
// Get different encodings.
Encoding u7 = Encoding.UTF7;
Encoding u8 = Encoding.UTF8;
Encoding u16LE = Encoding.Unicode;
Encoding u16BE = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode;
Encoding u32 = Encoding.UTF32;
// Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u32 );
}
public static void PrintCountsAndBytes( char[] chars, int index, int count, Encoding enc ) {
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write( "{0,-30} :", enc.ToString() );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc.GetByteCount( chars, index, count );
Console.Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc.GetMaxByteCount( count );
Console.Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode the array of chars.
byte[] bytes = enc.GetBytes( chars, index, count );
// The following is an alternative way to encode the array of chars:
// byte[] bytes = new byte[iBC];
// enc.GetBytes( chars, index, count, bytes, bytes.GetLowerBound(0) );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
public static void PrintHexBytes( byte[] bytes ) {
if (( bytes == null ) || ( bytes.Length == 0 ))
{
Console.WriteLine( "<none>" );
}
else {
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes.Length; i++ )
Console.Write( "{0:X2} ", bytes[i] );
Console.WriteLine();
}
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
*/
Imports System.Text
Public Class SamplesEncoding
Public Shared Sub Main()
' The characters to encode:
' Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
' Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
' Combining Breve (U+0306)
' Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
' Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
' a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
' a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
Dim myChars() As Char = {"z"c, "a"c, ChrW(&H0306), ChrW(&H01FD), ChrW(&H03B2), ChrW(&HD8FF), ChrW(&HDCFF) }
' Get different encodings.
Dim u7 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF7
Dim u8 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF8
Dim u16LE As Encoding = Encoding.Unicode
Dim u16BE As Encoding = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode
Dim u32 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF32
' Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, 4, 3, u7)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, 4, 3, u8)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, 4, 3, u16LE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, 4, 3, u16BE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, 4, 3, u32)
End Sub
Public Shared Sub PrintCountsAndBytes(chars() As Char, index As Integer, count As Integer, enc As Encoding)
' Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write("{0,-30} :", enc.ToString())
' Display the exact byte count.
Dim iBC As Integer = enc.GetByteCount(chars, index, count)
Console.Write(" {0,-3}", iBC)
' Display the maximum byte count.
Dim iMBC As Integer = enc.GetMaxByteCount(count)
Console.Write(" {0,-3} :", iMBC)
' Encode the array of chars.
Dim bytes As Byte() = enc.GetBytes(chars, index, count)
' The following is an alternative way to encode the array of chars:
' NOTE: In VB.NET, arrays contain one extra element by default.
' The following line creates the array with the exact number of elements required.
' Dim bytes(iBC - 1) As Byte
' enc.GetBytes( chars, index, count, bytes, bytes.GetLowerBound(0) )
' Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes(bytes)
End Sub
Public Shared Sub PrintHexBytes(bytes() As Byte)
If bytes Is Nothing OrElse bytes.Length = 0 Then
Console.WriteLine("<none>")
Else
Dim i As Integer
For i = 0 To bytes.Length - 1
Console.Write("{0:X2} ", bytes(i))
Next i
Console.WriteLine()
End If
End Sub
End Class
'This code produces the following output.
'
'System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
'System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
'System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
Remarks
If the data to be converted is available only in sequential blocks (such as data read from a stream) or if the amount of data is so large that it needs to be divided into smaller blocks, you should use the Decoder or the Encoder provided by the GetDecoder method or the GetEncoder method, respectively, of a derived class.
The GetByteCount method determines how many bytes result in encoding a set of Unicode characters, and the GetBytes method performs the actual encoding. The Encoding.GetBytes method expects discrete conversions, in contrast to the Encoder.GetBytes method, which handles multiple conversions on a single input stream.
Several versions of GetByteCount and GetBytes are supported. The following are some programming considerations for use of these methods:
Your app might need to encode many input characters to a code page and process the characters using multiple calls. In this case, you probably need to maintain state between calls, taking into account the state that is persisted by the Encoder object being used. (For example, a character sequence that includes surrogate pairs might end with a high surrogate. The Encoder will remember that high surrogate so that it can be combined with a low surrogate at the beginning of a following call. Encoding won't be able to maintain the state, so the character will be sent to the EncoderFallback.)
If your app handles string inputs, you should use the string version of GetBytes.
The Unicode character buffer version of GetBytes(Char*, Int32, Byte*, Int32) allows some fast techniques, particularly with multiple calls using the Encoder object or inserting into existing buffers. Bear in mind, however, that this method version is sometimes unsafe, since pointers are required.
If your app must convert a large amount of data, it should reuse the output buffer. In this case, the GetBytes version that supports byte arrays is the best choice.
Consider using the Encoder.Convert method instead of GetByteCount. The conversion method converts as much data as possible, and does throw an exception if the output buffer is too small. For continuous encoding of a stream, this method is often the best choice.
See also
Applies to
GetBytes(String, Int32, Int32)
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
When overridden in a derived class, encodes into an array of bytes the number of characters specified by count
in the specified string, starting from the specified index
.
public:
cli::array <System::Byte> ^ GetBytes(System::String ^ s, int index, int count);
public byte[] GetBytes (string s, int index, int count);
member this.GetBytes : string * int * int -> byte[]
Public Function GetBytes (s As String, index As Integer, count As Integer) As Byte()
Parameters
- s
- String
The string containing the characters to encode.
- index
- Int32
The index inside the string to start the encoding from.
- count
- Int32
The number of characters to encode.
Returns
A byte array containing the results of encoding the specified set of characters.
Examples
The following example determines the number of bytes required to encode a string or a range in the string, encodes the characters, and displays the resulting bytes.
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Text;
void PrintCountsAndBytes( String^ s, Encoding^ enc );
void PrintCountsAndBytes( String^ s, int index, int count, Encoding^ enc );
void PrintHexBytes( array<Byte>^bytes );
int main()
{
// The characters to encode:
// Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
// Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
// Combining Breve (U+0306)
// Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
// Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
// a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
// a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
String^ myStr = L"za\u0306\u01FD\u03B2\xD8FF\xDCFF";
// Get different encodings.
Encoding^ u7 = Encoding::UTF7;
Encoding^ u8 = Encoding::UTF8;
Encoding^ u16LE = Encoding::Unicode;
Encoding^ u16BE = Encoding::BigEndianUnicode;
Encoding^ u32 = Encoding::UTF32;
// Encode the entire string, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console::WriteLine( "Encoding the entire string:" );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u32 );
Console::WriteLine();
// Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console::WriteLine( "Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:" );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u32 );
}
void PrintCountsAndBytes( String^ s, Encoding^ enc )
{
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console::Write( "{0,-30} :", enc );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc->GetByteCount( s );
Console::Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc->GetMaxByteCount( s->Length );
Console::Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode the entire string.
array<Byte>^bytes = enc->GetBytes( s );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
void PrintCountsAndBytes( String^ s, int index, int count, Encoding^ enc )
{
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console::Write( "{0,-30} :", enc );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc->GetByteCount( s->ToCharArray(), index, count );
Console::Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc->GetMaxByteCount( count );
Console::Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode a range of characters in the string.
array<Byte>^bytes = gcnew array<Byte>(iBC);
enc->GetBytes( s, index, count, bytes, bytes->GetLowerBound( 0 ) );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
void PrintHexBytes( array<Byte>^bytes )
{
if ( (bytes == nullptr) || (bytes->Length == 0) )
Console::WriteLine( "<none>" );
else
{
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes->Length; i++ )
Console::Write( "{0:X2} ", bytes[ i ] );
Console::WriteLine();
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
Encoding the entire string:
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 18 23 :7A 61 2B 41 77 59 42 2F 51 4F 79 32 50 2F 63 2F 77 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 12 24 :7A 61 CC 86 C7 BD CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :7A 00 61 00 06 03 FD 01 B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :00 7A 00 61 03 06 01 FD 03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 24 32 :7A 00 00 00 61 00 00 00 06 03 00 00 FD 01 00 00 B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
*/
using System;
using System.Text;
public class SamplesEncoding {
public static void Main() {
// The characters to encode:
// Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
// Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
// Combining Breve (U+0306)
// Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
// Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
// a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
// a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
String myStr = "za\u0306\u01FD\u03B2\uD8FF\uDCFF";
// Get different encodings.
Encoding u7 = Encoding.UTF7;
Encoding u8 = Encoding.UTF8;
Encoding u16LE = Encoding.Unicode;
Encoding u16BE = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode;
Encoding u32 = Encoding.UTF32;
// Encode the entire string, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console.WriteLine( "Encoding the entire string:" );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u32 );
Console.WriteLine();
// Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console.WriteLine( "Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:" );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u32 );
}
public static void PrintCountsAndBytes( String s, Encoding enc ) {
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write( "{0,-30} :", enc.ToString() );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc.GetByteCount( s );
Console.Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc.GetMaxByteCount( s.Length );
Console.Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode the entire string.
byte[] bytes = enc.GetBytes( s );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
public static void PrintCountsAndBytes( String s, int index, int count, Encoding enc ) {
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write( "{0,-30} :", enc.ToString() );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc.GetByteCount( s.ToCharArray(), index, count );
Console.Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc.GetMaxByteCount( count );
Console.Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode a range of characters in the string.
byte[] bytes = new byte[iBC];
enc.GetBytes( s, index, count, bytes, bytes.GetLowerBound(0) );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
public static void PrintHexBytes( byte[] bytes ) {
if (( bytes == null ) || ( bytes.Length == 0 ))
{
Console.WriteLine( "<none>" );
}
else {
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes.Length; i++ )
Console.Write( "{0:X2} ", bytes[i] );
Console.WriteLine();
}
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
Encoding the entire string:
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 18 23 :7A 61 2B 41 77 59 42 2F 51 4F 79 32 50 2F 63 2F 77 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 12 24 :7A 61 CC 86 C7 BD CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :7A 00 61 00 06 03 FD 01 B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :00 7A 00 61 03 06 01 FD 03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 24 32 :7A 00 00 00 61 00 00 00 06 03 00 00 FD 01 00 00 B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
*/
Imports System.Text
Public Class SamplesEncoding
Public Shared Sub Main()
' The characters to encode:
' Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
' Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
' Combining Breve (U+0306)
' Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
' Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
' a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
' a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
Dim myStr As String = "za" & ChrW(&H0306) & ChrW(&H01FD) & ChrW(&H03B2) & ChrW(&HD8FF) & ChrW(&HDCFF)
' Get different encodings.
Dim u7 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF7
Dim u8 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF8
Dim u16LE As Encoding = Encoding.Unicode
Dim u16BE As Encoding = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode
Dim u32 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF32
' Encode the entire string, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console.WriteLine("Encoding the entire string:")
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u7)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u8)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u16LE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u16BE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u32)
Console.WriteLine()
' Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console.WriteLine("Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:")
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u7)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u8)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u16LE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u16BE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u32)
End Sub
Overloads Public Shared Sub PrintCountsAndBytes(s As String, enc As Encoding)
' Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write("{0,-30} :", enc.ToString())
' Display the exact byte count.
Dim iBC As Integer = enc.GetByteCount(s)
Console.Write(" {0,-3}", iBC)
' Display the maximum byte count.
Dim iMBC As Integer = enc.GetMaxByteCount(s.Length)
Console.Write(" {0,-3} :", iMBC)
' Encode the entire string.
Dim bytes As Byte() = enc.GetBytes(s)
' Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes(bytes)
End Sub
Overloads Public Shared Sub PrintCountsAndBytes(s As String, index As Integer, count As Integer, enc As Encoding)
' Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write("{0,-30} :", enc.ToString())
' Display the exact byte count.
Dim iBC As Integer = enc.GetByteCount(s.ToCharArray(), index, count)
Console.Write(" {0,-3}", iBC)
' Display the maximum byte count.
Dim iMBC As Integer = enc.GetMaxByteCount(count)
Console.Write(" {0,-3} :", iMBC)
' Encode a range of characters in the string.
' NOTE: In VB.NET, arrays contain one extra element by default.
' The following line creates the array with the exact number of elements required.
Dim bytes(iBC - 1) As Byte
enc.GetBytes(s, index, count, bytes, bytes.GetLowerBound(0))
' Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes(bytes)
End Sub
Public Shared Sub PrintHexBytes(bytes() As Byte)
If bytes Is Nothing OrElse bytes.Length = 0 Then
Console.WriteLine("<none>")
Else
Dim i As Integer
For i = 0 To bytes.Length - 1
Console.Write("{0:X2} ", bytes(i))
Next i
Console.WriteLine()
End If
End Sub
End Class
'This code produces the following output.
'
'Encoding the entire string:
'System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 18 23 :7A 61 2B 41 77 59 42 2F 51 4F 79 32 50 2F 63 2F 77 2D
'System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 12 24 :7A 61 CC 86 C7 BD CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :7A 00 61 00 06 03 FD 01 B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :00 7A 00 61 03 06 01 FD 03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
'System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 24 32 :7A 00 00 00 61 00 00 00 06 03 00 00 FD 01 00 00 B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
'
'Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:
'System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
'System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
'System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
Remarks
If the data to be converted is available only in sequential blocks (such as data read from a stream) or if the amount of data is so large that it needs to be divided into smaller blocks, you should use the Decoder or the Encoder provided by the GetDecoder method or the GetEncoder method, respectively, of a derived class.
The GetByteCount method determines how many bytes result in encoding a set of Unicode characters, and the GetBytes method performs the actual encoding. The Encoding.GetBytes method expects discrete conversions, in contrast to the Encoder.GetBytes method, which handles multiple conversions on a single input stream.
Several versions of GetByteCount and GetBytes are supported. The following are some programming considerations for use of these methods:
Your app might need to encode many input characters to a code page and process the characters using multiple calls. In this case, you probably need to maintain state between calls, taking into account the state that is persisted by the Encoder object being used. (For example, a character sequence that includes surrogate pairs might end with a high surrogate. The Encoder will remember that high surrogate so that it can be combined with a low surrogate at the beginning of a following call. Encoding won't be able to maintain the state, so the character will be sent to the EncoderFallback.)
If your app handles string inputs, you should use the string version of GetBytes.
The Unicode character buffer version of GetBytes(Char*, Int32, Byte*, Int32) allows some fast techniques, particularly with multiple calls using the Encoder object or inserting into existing buffers. Bear in mind, however, that this method version is sometimes unsafe, since pointers are required.
If your app must convert a large amount of data, it should reuse the output buffer. In this case, the GetBytes version that supports byte arrays is the best choice.
Consider using the Encoder.Convert method instead of GetByteCount. The conversion method converts as much data as possible, and does throw an exception if the output buffer is too small. For continuous encoding of a stream, this method is often the best choice.
Applies to
GetBytes(Char*, Int32, Byte*, Int32)
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
Important
This API is not CLS-compliant.
When overridden in a derived class, encodes a set of characters starting at the specified character pointer into a sequence of bytes that are stored starting at the specified byte pointer.
public:
virtual int GetBytes(char* chars, int charCount, System::Byte* bytes, int byteCount);
[System.CLSCompliant(false)]
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public virtual int GetBytes (char* chars, int charCount, byte* bytes, int byteCount);
[System.CLSCompliant(false)]
public virtual int GetBytes (char* chars, int charCount, byte* bytes, int byteCount);
[System.CLSCompliant(false)]
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.ComVisible(false)]
public virtual int GetBytes (char* chars, int charCount, byte* bytes, int byteCount);
[System.CLSCompliant(false)]
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
[System.Runtime.InteropServices.ComVisible(false)]
public virtual int GetBytes (char* chars, int charCount, byte* bytes, int byteCount);
[<System.CLSCompliant(false)>]
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
abstract member GetBytes : nativeptr<char> * int * nativeptr<byte> * int -> int
override this.GetBytes : nativeptr<char> * int * nativeptr<byte> * int -> int
[<System.CLSCompliant(false)>]
abstract member GetBytes : nativeptr<char> * int * nativeptr<byte> * int -> int
override this.GetBytes : nativeptr<char> * int * nativeptr<byte> * int -> int
[<System.CLSCompliant(false)>]
[<System.Runtime.InteropServices.ComVisible(false)>]
abstract member GetBytes : nativeptr<char> * int * nativeptr<byte> * int -> int
override this.GetBytes : nativeptr<char> * int * nativeptr<byte> * int -> int
[<System.CLSCompliant(false)>]
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
[<System.Runtime.InteropServices.ComVisible(false)>]
abstract member GetBytes : nativeptr<char> * int * nativeptr<byte> * int -> int
override this.GetBytes : nativeptr<char> * int * nativeptr<byte> * int -> int
Parameters
- chars
- Char*
A pointer to the first character to encode.
- charCount
- Int32
The number of characters to encode.
- bytes
- Byte*
A pointer to the location at which to start writing the resulting sequence of bytes.
- byteCount
- Int32
The maximum number of bytes to write.
Returns
The actual number of bytes written at the location indicated by the bytes
parameter.
- Attributes
Exceptions
charCount
or byteCount
is less than zero.
byteCount
is less than the resulting number of bytes.
A fallback occurred (for more information, see Character Encoding in .NET)
-and-
EncoderFallback is set to EncoderExceptionFallback.
Remarks
To calculate the exact array size that GetBytes requires to store the resulting bytes, call the GetByteCount method. To calculate the maximum array size, call the GetMaxByteCount method. The GetByteCount method generally allows allocation of less memory, while the GetMaxByteCount method generally executes faster.
If the data to be converted is available only in sequential blocks (such as data read from a stream) or if the amount of data is so large that it needs to be divided into smaller blocks, you should use the Decoder or the Encoder object provided by the GetDecoder or the GetEncoder method, respectively, of a derived class.
The GetByteCount method determines how many bytes result in encoding a set of Unicode characters, and the GetBytes method performs the actual encoding. The GetBytes method expects discrete conversions, in contrast to the Encoder.GetBytes method, which handles multiple conversions on a single input stream.
Several versions of GetByteCount and GetBytes are supported. The following are some programming considerations for use of these methods:
Your app might need to encode many input characters to a code page and process the characters using multiple calls. In this case, you probably need to maintain state between calls, taking into account the state that is persisted by the Encoder object being used. (For example, a character sequence that includes surrogate pairs might end with a high surrogate. The Encoder will remember that high surrogate so that it can be combined with a low surrogate at the beginning of a following call. Encoding won't be able to maintain the state, so the character will be sent to the EncoderFallback.)
If your app handles string inputs, you should use the string version of GetBytes.
The Unicode character buffer version of GetBytes(Char*, Int32, Byte*, Int32) allows some fast techniques, particularly with multiple calls using the Encoder object or inserting into existing buffers. Bear in mind, however, that this method version is sometimes unsafe, since pointers are required.
If your app must convert a large amount of data, it should reuse the output buffer. In this case, the GetBytes version that supports byte arrays is the best choice.
Consider using the Encoder.Convert method instead of GetByteCount. The conversion method converts as much data as possible, and does throw an exception if the output buffer is too small. For continuous encoding of a stream, this method is often the best choice.
See also
Applies to
GetBytes(Char[], Int32, Int32, Byte[], Int32)
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
When overridden in a derived class, encodes a set of characters from the specified character array into the specified byte array.
public:
abstract int GetBytes(cli::array <char> ^ chars, int charIndex, int charCount, cli::array <System::Byte> ^ bytes, int byteIndex);
public abstract int GetBytes (char[] chars, int charIndex, int charCount, byte[] bytes, int byteIndex);
abstract member GetBytes : char[] * int * int * byte[] * int -> int
Public MustOverride Function GetBytes (chars As Char(), charIndex As Integer, charCount As Integer, bytes As Byte(), byteIndex As Integer) As Integer
Parameters
- chars
- Char[]
The character array containing the set of characters to encode.
- charIndex
- Int32
The index of the first character to encode.
- charCount
- Int32
The number of characters to encode.
- bytes
- Byte[]
The byte array to contain the resulting sequence of bytes.
- byteIndex
- Int32
The index at which to start writing the resulting sequence of bytes.
Returns
The actual number of bytes written into bytes
.
Exceptions
charIndex
or charCount
or byteIndex
is less than zero.
-or-
charIndex
and charCount
do not denote a valid range in chars
.
-or-
byteIndex
is not a valid index in bytes
.
bytes
does not have enough capacity from byteIndex
to the end of the array to accommodate the resulting bytes.
A fallback occurred (for more information, see Character Encoding in .NET)
-and-
EncoderFallback is set to EncoderExceptionFallback.
Examples
The following example determines the number of bytes required to encode three characters from a character array, encodes the characters, and displays the resulting bytes.
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Text;
void PrintCountsAndBytes( array<Char>^chars, int index, int count, Encoding^ enc );
void PrintHexBytes( array<Byte>^bytes );
int main()
{
// The characters to encode:
// Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
// Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
// Combining Breve (U+0306)
// Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
// Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
// a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
// a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
array<Char>^myChars = gcnew array<Char>{
L'z',L'a',L'\u0306',L'\u01FD',L'\u03B2',L'\xD8FF',L'\xDCFF'
};
// Get different encodings.
Encoding^ u7 = Encoding::UTF7;
Encoding^ u8 = Encoding::UTF8;
Encoding^ u16LE = Encoding::Unicode;
Encoding^ u16BE = Encoding::BigEndianUnicode;
Encoding^ u32 = Encoding::UTF32;
// Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u32 );
}
void PrintCountsAndBytes( array<Char>^chars, int index, int count, Encoding^ enc )
{
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console::Write( "{0,-30} :", enc );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc->GetByteCount( chars, index, count );
Console::Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc->GetMaxByteCount( count );
Console::Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode the array of chars.
array<Byte>^bytes = enc->GetBytes( chars, index, count );
// The following is an alternative way to encode the array of chars:
// byte[] bytes = new byte[iBC];
// enc.GetBytes( chars, index, count, bytes, bytes.GetLowerBound(0) );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
void PrintHexBytes( array<Byte>^bytes )
{
if ( (bytes == nullptr) || (bytes->Length == 0) )
Console::WriteLine( "<none>" );
else
{
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes->Length; i++ )
Console::Write( "{0:X2} ", bytes[ i ] );
Console::WriteLine();
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
*/
using System;
using System.Text;
public class SamplesEncoding {
public static void Main() {
// The characters to encode:
// Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
// Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
// Combining Breve (U+0306)
// Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
// Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
// a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
// a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
char[] myChars = new char[] { 'z', 'a', '\u0306', '\u01FD', '\u03B2', '\uD8FF', '\uDCFF' };
// Get different encodings.
Encoding u7 = Encoding.UTF7;
Encoding u8 = Encoding.UTF8;
Encoding u16LE = Encoding.Unicode;
Encoding u16BE = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode;
Encoding u32 = Encoding.UTF32;
// Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myChars, 4, 3, u32 );
}
public static void PrintCountsAndBytes( char[] chars, int index, int count, Encoding enc ) {
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write( "{0,-30} :", enc.ToString() );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc.GetByteCount( chars, index, count );
Console.Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc.GetMaxByteCount( count );
Console.Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode the array of chars.
byte[] bytes = enc.GetBytes( chars, index, count );
// The following is an alternative way to encode the array of chars:
// byte[] bytes = new byte[iBC];
// enc.GetBytes( chars, index, count, bytes, bytes.GetLowerBound(0) );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
public static void PrintHexBytes( byte[] bytes ) {
if (( bytes == null ) || ( bytes.Length == 0 ))
{
Console.WriteLine( "<none>" );
}
else {
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes.Length; i++ )
Console.Write( "{0:X2} ", bytes[i] );
Console.WriteLine();
}
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
*/
Imports System.Text
Public Class SamplesEncoding
Public Shared Sub Main()
' The characters to encode:
' Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
' Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
' Combining Breve (U+0306)
' Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
' Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
' a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
' a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
Dim myChars() As Char = {"z"c, "a"c, ChrW(&H0306), ChrW(&H01FD), ChrW(&H03B2), ChrW(&HD8FF), ChrW(&HDCFF) }
' Get different encodings.
Dim u7 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF7
Dim u8 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF8
Dim u16LE As Encoding = Encoding.Unicode
Dim u16BE As Encoding = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode
Dim u32 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF32
' Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, 4, 3, u7)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, 4, 3, u8)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, 4, 3, u16LE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, 4, 3, u16BE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myChars, 4, 3, u32)
End Sub
Public Shared Sub PrintCountsAndBytes(chars() As Char, index As Integer, count As Integer, enc As Encoding)
' Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write("{0,-30} :", enc.ToString())
' Display the exact byte count.
Dim iBC As Integer = enc.GetByteCount(chars, index, count)
Console.Write(" {0,-3}", iBC)
' Display the maximum byte count.
Dim iMBC As Integer = enc.GetMaxByteCount(count)
Console.Write(" {0,-3} :", iMBC)
' Encode the array of chars.
Dim bytes As Byte() = enc.GetBytes(chars, index, count)
' The following is an alternative way to encode the array of chars:
' NOTE: In VB.NET, arrays contain one extra element by default.
' The following line creates the array with the exact number of elements required.
' Dim bytes(iBC - 1) As Byte
' enc.GetBytes( chars, index, count, bytes, bytes.GetLowerBound(0) )
' Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes(bytes)
End Sub
Public Shared Sub PrintHexBytes(bytes() As Byte)
If bytes Is Nothing OrElse bytes.Length = 0 Then
Console.WriteLine("<none>")
Else
Dim i As Integer
For i = 0 To bytes.Length - 1
Console.Write("{0:X2} ", bytes(i))
Next i
Console.WriteLine()
End If
End Sub
End Class
'This code produces the following output.
'
'System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
'System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
'System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
Remarks
To calculate the exact array size required by GetBytes to store the resulting bytes, you should call the GetByteCount method. To calculate the maximum array size, call the GetMaxByteCount method. The GetByteCount method generally allows allocation of less memory, while the GetMaxByteCount method generally executes faster.
If the data to be converted is available only in sequential blocks (such as data read from a stream) or if the amount of data is so large that it needs to be divided into smaller blocks, you should use the Decoder or the Encoder provided by the GetDecoder method or the GetEncoder method, respectively, of a derived class.
The GetByteCount method determines how many bytes result in encoding a set of Unicode characters, and the GetBytes method performs the actual encoding. The Encoding.GetBytes method expects discrete conversions, in contrast to the Encoder.GetBytes method, which handles multiple conversions on a single input stream.
Several versions of GetByteCount and GetBytes are supported. The following are some programming considerations for use of these methods:
Your app might need to encode many input characters to a code page and process the characters using multiple calls. In this case, you probably need to maintain state between calls, taking into account the state that is persisted by the Encoder object being used. (For example, a character sequence that includes surrogate pairs might end with a high surrogate. The Encoder will remember that high surrogate so that it can be combined with a low surrogate at the beginning of a following call. Encoding won't be able to maintain the state, so the character will be sent to the EncoderFallback.)
If your app handles string inputs, you should use the string version of GetBytes.
The Unicode character buffer version of GetBytes(Char*, Int32, Byte*, Int32) allows some fast techniques, particularly with multiple calls using the Encoder object or inserting into existing buffers. Bear in mind, however, that this method version is sometimes unsafe, since pointers are required.
If your app must convert a large amount of data, it should reuse the output buffer. In this case, the GetBytes version that supports byte arrays is the best choice.
Consider using the Encoder.Convert method instead of GetByteCount. The conversion method converts as much data as possible, and does throw an exception if the output buffer is too small. For continuous encoding of a stream, this method is often the best choice.
See also
Applies to
GetBytes(String, Int32, Int32, Byte[], Int32)
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
- Source:
- Encoding.cs
When overridden in a derived class, encodes a set of characters from the specified string into the specified byte array.
public:
virtual int GetBytes(System::String ^ s, int charIndex, int charCount, cli::array <System::Byte> ^ bytes, int byteIndex);
public virtual int GetBytes (string s, int charIndex, int charCount, byte[] bytes, int byteIndex);
abstract member GetBytes : string * int * int * byte[] * int -> int
override this.GetBytes : string * int * int * byte[] * int -> int
Public Overridable Function GetBytes (s As String, charIndex As Integer, charCount As Integer, bytes As Byte(), byteIndex As Integer) As Integer
Parameters
- s
- String
The string containing the set of characters to encode.
- charIndex
- Int32
The index of the first character to encode.
- charCount
- Int32
The number of characters to encode.
- bytes
- Byte[]
The byte array to contain the resulting sequence of bytes.
- byteIndex
- Int32
The index at which to start writing the resulting sequence of bytes.
Returns
The actual number of bytes written into bytes
.
Exceptions
charIndex
or charCount
or byteIndex
is less than zero.
-or-
charIndex
and charCount
do not denote a valid range in chars
.
-or-
byteIndex
is not a valid index in bytes
.
bytes
does not have enough capacity from byteIndex
to the end of the array to accommodate the resulting bytes.
A fallback occurred (for more information, see Character Encoding in .NET)
-and-
EncoderFallback is set to EncoderExceptionFallback.
Examples
The following example determines the number of bytes required to encode a string or a range in the string, encodes the characters, and displays the resulting bytes.
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Text;
void PrintCountsAndBytes( String^ s, Encoding^ enc );
void PrintCountsAndBytes( String^ s, int index, int count, Encoding^ enc );
void PrintHexBytes( array<Byte>^bytes );
int main()
{
// The characters to encode:
// Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
// Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
// Combining Breve (U+0306)
// Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
// Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
// a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
// a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
String^ myStr = L"za\u0306\u01FD\u03B2\xD8FF\xDCFF";
// Get different encodings.
Encoding^ u7 = Encoding::UTF7;
Encoding^ u8 = Encoding::UTF8;
Encoding^ u16LE = Encoding::Unicode;
Encoding^ u16BE = Encoding::BigEndianUnicode;
Encoding^ u32 = Encoding::UTF32;
// Encode the entire string, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console::WriteLine( "Encoding the entire string:" );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u32 );
Console::WriteLine();
// Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console::WriteLine( "Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:" );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u32 );
}
void PrintCountsAndBytes( String^ s, Encoding^ enc )
{
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console::Write( "{0,-30} :", enc );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc->GetByteCount( s );
Console::Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc->GetMaxByteCount( s->Length );
Console::Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode the entire string.
array<Byte>^bytes = enc->GetBytes( s );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
void PrintCountsAndBytes( String^ s, int index, int count, Encoding^ enc )
{
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console::Write( "{0,-30} :", enc );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc->GetByteCount( s->ToCharArray(), index, count );
Console::Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc->GetMaxByteCount( count );
Console::Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode a range of characters in the string.
array<Byte>^bytes = gcnew array<Byte>(iBC);
enc->GetBytes( s, index, count, bytes, bytes->GetLowerBound( 0 ) );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
void PrintHexBytes( array<Byte>^bytes )
{
if ( (bytes == nullptr) || (bytes->Length == 0) )
Console::WriteLine( "<none>" );
else
{
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes->Length; i++ )
Console::Write( "{0:X2} ", bytes[ i ] );
Console::WriteLine();
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
Encoding the entire string:
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 18 23 :7A 61 2B 41 77 59 42 2F 51 4F 79 32 50 2F 63 2F 77 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 12 24 :7A 61 CC 86 C7 BD CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :7A 00 61 00 06 03 FD 01 B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :00 7A 00 61 03 06 01 FD 03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 24 32 :7A 00 00 00 61 00 00 00 06 03 00 00 FD 01 00 00 B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
*/
using System;
using System.Text;
public class SamplesEncoding {
public static void Main() {
// The characters to encode:
// Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
// Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
// Combining Breve (U+0306)
// Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
// Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
// a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
// a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
String myStr = "za\u0306\u01FD\u03B2\uD8FF\uDCFF";
// Get different encodings.
Encoding u7 = Encoding.UTF7;
Encoding u8 = Encoding.UTF8;
Encoding u16LE = Encoding.Unicode;
Encoding u16BE = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode;
Encoding u32 = Encoding.UTF32;
// Encode the entire string, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console.WriteLine( "Encoding the entire string:" );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, u32 );
Console.WriteLine();
// Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console.WriteLine( "Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:" );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u7 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u8 );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u16LE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u16BE );
PrintCountsAndBytes( myStr, 4, 3, u32 );
}
public static void PrintCountsAndBytes( String s, Encoding enc ) {
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write( "{0,-30} :", enc.ToString() );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc.GetByteCount( s );
Console.Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc.GetMaxByteCount( s.Length );
Console.Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode the entire string.
byte[] bytes = enc.GetBytes( s );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
public static void PrintCountsAndBytes( String s, int index, int count, Encoding enc ) {
// Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write( "{0,-30} :", enc.ToString() );
// Display the exact byte count.
int iBC = enc.GetByteCount( s.ToCharArray(), index, count );
Console.Write( " {0,-3}", iBC );
// Display the maximum byte count.
int iMBC = enc.GetMaxByteCount( count );
Console.Write( " {0,-3} :", iMBC );
// Encode a range of characters in the string.
byte[] bytes = new byte[iBC];
enc.GetBytes( s, index, count, bytes, bytes.GetLowerBound(0) );
// Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes( bytes );
}
public static void PrintHexBytes( byte[] bytes ) {
if (( bytes == null ) || ( bytes.Length == 0 ))
{
Console.WriteLine( "<none>" );
}
else {
for ( int i = 0; i < bytes.Length; i++ )
Console.Write( "{0:X2} ", bytes[i] );
Console.WriteLine();
}
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
Encoding the entire string:
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 18 23 :7A 61 2B 41 77 59 42 2F 51 4F 79 32 50 2F 63 2F 77 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 12 24 :7A 61 CC 86 C7 BD CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :7A 00 61 00 06 03 FD 01 B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :00 7A 00 61 03 06 01 FD 03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 24 32 :7A 00 00 00 61 00 00 00 06 03 00 00 FD 01 00 00 B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:
System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
*/
Imports System.Text
Public Class SamplesEncoding
Public Shared Sub Main()
' The characters to encode:
' Latin Small Letter Z (U+007A)
' Latin Small Letter A (U+0061)
' Combining Breve (U+0306)
' Latin Small Letter AE With Acute (U+01FD)
' Greek Small Letter Beta (U+03B2)
' a high-surrogate value (U+D8FF)
' a low-surrogate value (U+DCFF)
Dim myStr As String = "za" & ChrW(&H0306) & ChrW(&H01FD) & ChrW(&H03B2) & ChrW(&HD8FF) & ChrW(&HDCFF)
' Get different encodings.
Dim u7 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF7
Dim u8 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF8
Dim u16LE As Encoding = Encoding.Unicode
Dim u16BE As Encoding = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode
Dim u32 As Encoding = Encoding.UTF32
' Encode the entire string, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console.WriteLine("Encoding the entire string:")
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u7)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u8)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u16LE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u16BE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, u32)
Console.WriteLine()
' Encode three characters starting at index 4, and print out the counts and the resulting bytes.
Console.WriteLine("Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:")
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u7)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u8)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u16LE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u16BE)
PrintCountsAndBytes(myStr, 4, 3, u32)
End Sub
Overloads Public Shared Sub PrintCountsAndBytes(s As String, enc As Encoding)
' Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write("{0,-30} :", enc.ToString())
' Display the exact byte count.
Dim iBC As Integer = enc.GetByteCount(s)
Console.Write(" {0,-3}", iBC)
' Display the maximum byte count.
Dim iMBC As Integer = enc.GetMaxByteCount(s.Length)
Console.Write(" {0,-3} :", iMBC)
' Encode the entire string.
Dim bytes As Byte() = enc.GetBytes(s)
' Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes(bytes)
End Sub
Overloads Public Shared Sub PrintCountsAndBytes(s As String, index As Integer, count As Integer, enc As Encoding)
' Display the name of the encoding used.
Console.Write("{0,-30} :", enc.ToString())
' Display the exact byte count.
Dim iBC As Integer = enc.GetByteCount(s.ToCharArray(), index, count)
Console.Write(" {0,-3}", iBC)
' Display the maximum byte count.
Dim iMBC As Integer = enc.GetMaxByteCount(count)
Console.Write(" {0,-3} :", iMBC)
' Encode a range of characters in the string.
' NOTE: In VB.NET, arrays contain one extra element by default.
' The following line creates the array with the exact number of elements required.
Dim bytes(iBC - 1) As Byte
enc.GetBytes(s, index, count, bytes, bytes.GetLowerBound(0))
' Display all the encoded bytes.
PrintHexBytes(bytes)
End Sub
Public Shared Sub PrintHexBytes(bytes() As Byte)
If bytes Is Nothing OrElse bytes.Length = 0 Then
Console.WriteLine("<none>")
Else
Dim i As Integer
For i = 0 To bytes.Length - 1
Console.Write("{0:X2} ", bytes(i))
Next i
Console.WriteLine()
End If
End Sub
End Class
'This code produces the following output.
'
'Encoding the entire string:
'System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 18 23 :7A 61 2B 41 77 59 42 2F 51 4F 79 32 50 2F 63 2F 77 2D
'System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 12 24 :7A 61 CC 86 C7 BD CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :7A 00 61 00 06 03 FD 01 B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 14 16 :00 7A 00 61 03 06 01 FD 03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
'System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 24 32 :7A 00 00 00 61 00 00 00 06 03 00 00 FD 01 00 00 B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
'
'Encoding the characters from index 4 through 6:
'System.Text.UTF7Encoding : 10 11 :2B 41 37 4C 59 2F 39 7A 2F 2D
'System.Text.UTF8Encoding : 6 12 :CE B2 F1 8F B3 BF
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :B2 03 FF D8 FF DC
'System.Text.UnicodeEncoding : 6 8 :03 B2 D8 FF DC FF
'System.Text.UTF32Encoding : 8 16 :B2 03 00 00 FF FC 04 00
Remarks
To calculate the exact array size required by GetBytes to store the resulting bytes, you should call the GetByteCount method. To calculate the maximum array size, call the GetMaxByteCount method. The GetByteCount method generally allows allocation of less memory, while the GetMaxByteCount method generally executes faster.
If the data to be converted is available only in sequential blocks (such as data read from a stream) or if the amount of data is so large that it needs to be divided into smaller blocks, you should use the Decoder or the Encoder provided by the GetDecoder method or the GetEncoder method, respectively, of a derived class.
The GetByteCount method determines how many bytes result in encoding a set of Unicode characters, and the GetBytes method performs the actual encoding. The Encoding.GetBytes method expects discrete conversions, in contrast to the Encoder.GetBytes method, which handles multiple conversions on a single input stream.
Several versions of GetByteCount and GetBytes are supported. The following are some programming considerations for use of these methods:
Your app might need to encode many input characters to a code page and process the characters using multiple calls. In this case, you probably need to maintain state between calls, taking into account the state that is persisted by the Encoder object being used. (For example, a character sequence that includes surrogate pairs might end with a high surrogate. The Encoder will remember that high surrogate so that it can be combined with a low surrogate at the beginning of a following call. Encoding won't be able to maintain the state, so the character will be sent to the EncoderFallback.)
If your app handles string inputs, you should use the string version of GetBytes.
The Unicode character buffer version of GetBytes(Char*, Int32, Byte*, Int32) allows some fast techniques, particularly with multiple calls using the Encoder object or inserting into existing buffers. Bear in mind, however, that this method version is sometimes unsafe, since pointers are required.
If your app must convert a large amount of data, it should reuse the output buffer. In this case, the GetBytes version that supports byte arrays is the best choice.
Consider using the Encoder.Convert method instead of GetByteCount. The conversion method converts as much data as possible, and does throw an exception if the output buffer is too small. For continuous encoding of a stream, this method is often the best choice.