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var url = "Hello World"; | |
var data = []; | |
for (var i = 0; i < url.length; i++){ | |
data.push(url.charCodeAt(i)); | |
} |
@Insidexa Good job !
@Insidexa Imo, these codes are used to convert the char codes from UTF-16 to UTF-8, because the default internal encoding of JS strings is UTF-16. However if all I need is a UTF-16 byte array, I don't have to do so many complex checks and bit operations.
also Array.from("111122222333344444555")
if you want to convert to array of numbers you could use
Array.from("1111222223333444445556", (x) => Number(x))
if you want to convert to array of numbers you could use
Array.from("1111222223333444445556", (x) => Number(x))
Array.from("\x00", (x) => Number(x))
results in [NaN]
!
If you handle raw bytes in a 0..255 space: Better use a slightly different version with charCodeAt
. I didnt test how it behaves with unicode chars.
Array.from("1111222223333444445556", , (x) => x.charCodeAt(0))
function unpack(str) { var bytes = []; for(var i = 0; i < str.length; i++) { var char = str.charCodeAt(i); bytes.push(char >>> 8); bytes.push(char & 0xFF); } return bytes; }
this is the correct way to extract the bytes a JavaScript string is made of
String.charCodeAt() returns a 16 bit unsigned integer, it must be split into two bytes if exceeds 0xff
@dinigo yes, works, equal to java
str.getBytes(Charsets.UTF_8)