Java – String getBytes() Method

Description:

This method has following two forms:

  • getBytes(String charsetName): Encodes this String into a sequence of bytes using the named charset, storing the result into a new byte array.

  • getBytes(): Encodes this String into a sequence of bytes using the platform’s default charset, storing the result into a new byte array.

Syntax:

Here is the syntax of this method:

public byte[] getBytes(String charsetName)
       throws UnsupportedEncodingException

or

public byte[] getBytes()

Parameters:

Here is the detail of parameters:

  • charsetName — the name of a supported charset.

Return Value :

This method returns the resultant byte array

Example:

import java.io.*;

public class Test{

   public static void main(String args[]){
      String Str1 = new String("Welcome to dineshonjava.com");

      try{
         byte[] Str2 = Str1.getBytes();
         System.out.println("Returned  Value " + Str2 );

         Str2 = Str1.getBytes( "UTF-8" );
         System.out.println("Returned  Value " + Str2 );

         Str2 = Str1.getBytes( "ISO-8859-1" );
         System.out.println("Returned  Value " + Str2 );
      }catch( UnsupportedEncodingException e){
         System.out.println("Unsupported character set");
      }
   }
}

This produces following result:

output:
Returned Value [B@192d342
Returned Value [B@15ff48b
Returned Value [B@1b90b39
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Dinesh Rajput

Dinesh Rajput is the chief editor of a website Dineshonjava, a technical blog dedicated to the Spring and Java technologies. It has a series of articles related to Java technologies. Dinesh has been a Spring enthusiast since 2008 and is a Pivotal Certified Spring Professional, an author of a book Spring 5 Design Pattern, and a blogger. He has more than 10 years of experience with different aspects of Spring and Java design and development. His core expertise lies in the latest version of Spring Framework, Spring Boot, Spring Security, creating REST APIs, Microservice Architecture, Reactive Pattern, Spring AOP, Design Patterns, Struts, Hibernate, Web Services, Spring Batch, Cassandra, MongoDB, and Web Application Design and Architecture. He is currently working as a technology manager at a leading product and web development company. He worked as a developer and tech lead at the Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd and was the first developer in his previous company, Paytm. Dinesh is passionate about the latest Java technologies and loves to write technical blogs related to it. He is a very active member of the Java and Spring community on different forums. When it comes to the Spring Framework and Java, Dinesh tops the list!

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