(java) Writing in file little endian
Asked Answered
T

3

19

I'm trying to write TIFF IFDs, and I'm looking for a simple way to do the following (this code obviously is wrong but it gets the idea across of what I want):

out.writeChar(12) (bytes 0-1)
out.writeChar(259) (bytes 2-3)
out.writeChar(3) (bytes 4-5)
out.writeInt(1) (bytes 6-9)
out.writeInt(1) (bytes 10-13)

Would write:

0c00 0301 0300 0100 0000 0100 0000

I know how to get the writing method to take up the correct number of bytes (writeInt, writeChar, etc) but I don't know how to get it to write in little endian. Anyone know?

Tottering answered 8/9, 2009 at 15:43 Comment(0)
F
34

Maybe you should try something like this:

ByteBuffer buffer = ByteBuffer.allocate(1000); 
buffer.order(ByteOrder.LITTLE_ENDIAN);         
buffer.putChar((char) 12);                     
buffer.putChar((char) 259);                    
buffer.putChar((char) 3);                      
buffer.putInt(1);                              
buffer.putInt(1);                              
byte[] bytes = buffer.array();     
Fassett answered 8/9, 2009 at 16:1 Comment(0)
A
9

ByteBuffer is apparently the better choice. You can also write some convenience functions like this,

public static void writeShortLE(DataOutputStream out, short value) {
  out.writeByte(value & 0xFF);
  out.writeByte((value >> 8) & 0xFF);
}

public static void writeIntLE(DataOutputStream out, int value) {
  out.writeByte(value & 0xFF);
  out.writeByte((value >> 8) & 0xFF);
  out.writeByte((value >> 16) & 0xFF);
  out.writeByte((value >> 24) & 0xFF);
}
Angleaangler answered 8/9, 2009 at 16:5 Comment(0)
C
7

Check out ByteBuffer, specifically the 'order' method. ByteBuffer is a blessing for those of us who need to interface with anything not Java.

Charry answered 8/9, 2009 at 15:53 Comment(0)

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