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Character Encoding in the .NET Framework

Characters are abstract entities that can be represented in many different ways. A character encoding is a system that pairs each character in a supported character set with some value that represents that character. For example, Morse code is a character encoding that pairs each character in the Roman alphabet with a pattern of dots and dashes that are suitable for transmission over telegraph lines. A character encoding for computers pairs each character in a supported character set with a numeric value that represents that character. A character encoding has two distinct components:

  • An encoder, which translates a sequence of characters into a sequence of numeric values (bytes).

  • A decoder, which translates a sequence of bytes into a sequence of characters.

Character encoding describes the rules by which an encoder and a decoder operate. For example, the UTF8Encoding class describes the rules for encoding to, and decoding from, 8-bit Unicode Transformation Format (UTF-8), which uses one to four bytes to represent a single Unicode character. Encoding and decoding can also include validation. For example, the UnicodeEncoding class checks all surrogates to make sure they constitute valid surrogate pairs. (A surrogate pair consists of a character with a code point that ranges from U+D800 to U+DBFF followed by a character with a code point that ranges from U+DC00 to U+DFFF.) A fallback strategy determines how an encoder handles invalid characters or how a decoder handles invalid bytes.

Caution noteCaution

The .NET Framework encoding classes provide a way to store and convert character data. They should not be used to store binary data in string form. Depending on the encoding used, converting binary data to string format with the encoding classes can introduce unexpected behavior and produce inaccurate or corrupted data. To convert binary data to a string form, use the Convert.ToBase64String(Byte[]) method.

Applications that target the common language runtime use encoders to map Unicode character representations supported by the common language runtime to other encoding schemes. They use decoders to map characters from non-Unicode encodings to Unicode.

This topic consists of the following sections:

Encodings in the .NET Framework

All character encoding classes in the .NET Framework inherit from the System.Text.Encoding class, which is an abstract class that defines the functionality common to all character encodings. To access the individual encoding objects implemented in the .NET Framework, do the following:

  • Use the static properties of the Encoding class, which return objects that represent the standard character encodings available in the .NET Framework (ASCII, UTF-7, UTF-8, UTF-16, and UTF-32). For example, the Encoding.Unicode property returns a UnicodeEncoding object. Each object uses replacement fallback to handle strings that it cannot encode and bytes that it cannot decode. (For more information, see the Replacement Fallback section.)

  • Call the encoding's class constructor. Objects for the ASCII, UTF-7, UTF-8, UTF-16, and UTF-32 encodings can be instantiated in this way. By default, each object uses replacement fallback to handle strings that it cannot encode and bytes that it cannot decode, but you can specify that an exception should be thrown instead. (For more information, see the Replacement Fallback and Exception Fallback sections.)

  • Call the Encoding.Encoding(Int32) constructor and pass it an integer that represents the encoding. Standard encoding objects use replacement fallback, and code page and double-byte character set (DBCS) encoding objects use best-fit fallback to handle strings that they cannot encode and bytes that they cannot decode. (For more information, see the Best-Fit Fallback section.)

  • Call the Encoding.GetEncoding method, which returns any standard, code page, or DBCS encoding available in the .NET Framework. Overloads let you specify a fallback object for both the encoder and the decoder.

Note

The Unicode Standard assigns a code point (a number) and a name to each character in every supported script. For example, the character "A" is represented by the code point U+0041 and the name "LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A". The Unicode Transformation Format (UTF) encodings define ways to encode that code point into a sequence of one or more bytes. A Unicode encoding scheme simplifies world-ready application development because it allows characters from any character set to be represented in a single encoding. Application developers no longer have to keep track of the encoding scheme that was used to produce characters for a specific language or writing system, and data can be shared among systems internationally without being corrupted.

The .NET Framework supports three encodings defined by the Unicode standard: UTF-8, UTF-16, and UTF-32. For more information, see The Unicode Standard at the Unicode home page.

You can retrieve information about all the encodings available in the .NET Framework by calling the Encoding.GetEncodings method. The .NET Framework supports the character encoding systems listed in the following table.

Encoding

Class

Description

Advantages/disadvantages

ASCII

ASCIIEncoding

Encodes a limited range of characters by using the lower seven bits of a byte.

Because this encoding only supports character values from U+0000 through U+007F, in most cases it is inadequate for internationalized applications.

UTF-7

UTF7Encoding

Represents characters as sequences of 7-bit ASCII characters. Non-ASCII Unicode characters are represented by an escape sequence of ASCII characters.

UTF-7 supports protocols such as e-mail and newsgroup protocols. However, UTF-7 is not particularly secure or robust. In some cases, changing one bit can radically alter the interpretation of an entire UTF-7 string. In other cases, different UTF-7 strings can encode the same text. For sequences that include non-ASCII characters, UTF-7 requires more space than UTF-8, and encoding/decoding is slower. Consequently, you should use UTF-8 instead of UTF-7 if possible.

UTF-8

UTF8Encoding

Represents each Unicode code point as a sequence of one to four bytes.

UTF-8 supports 8-bit data sizes and works well with many existing operating systems. For the ASCII range of characters, UTF-8 is identical to ASCII encoding and allows a broader set of characters. However, for Chinese-Japanese-Korean (CJK) scripts, UTF-8 can require three bytes for each character, and can potentially cause larger data sizes than UTF-16. Note that sometimes the amount of ASCII data, such as HTML tags, justifies the increased size for the CJK range.

UTF-16

UnicodeEncoding

Represents each Unicode code point as a sequence of one or two 16-bit integers. Most common Unicode characters require only one UTF-16 code point, although Unicode supplementary characters (U+10000 and greater) require two UTF-16 surrogate code points. Both little-endian and big-endian byte orders are supported.

UTF-16 encoding is used by the common language runtime to represent Char and String values, and it is used by the Windows operating system to represent WCHAR values.

UTF-32

UTF32Encoding

Represents each Unicode code point as a 32-bit integer. Both little-endian and big-endian byte orders are supported.

UTF-32 encoding is used when applications want to avoid the surrogate code point behavior of UTF-16 encoding on operating systems for which encoded space is too important. Single glyphs rendered on a display can still be encoded with more than one UTF-32 character.

ANSI/ISO encodings

Provides support for a variety of code pages. On Windows operating systems, code pages are used to support a specific language or group of languages. For a table that lists the code pages supported by the .NET Framework, see the Encoding class. You can retrieve an encoding object for a particular code page by calling the Encoding.GetEncoding(Int32) method.

A code page contains 256 code points and is zero-based. In most code pages, code points 0 through 127 represent the ASCII character set, and code points 128 through 255 differ significantly between code pages. For example, code page 1252 provides the characters for Latin writing systems, including English, German, and French. The last 128 code points in code page 1252 contain the accent characters. Code page 1253 provides character codes that are required in the Greek writing system. The last 128 code points in code page 1253 contain the Greek characters. As a result, an application that relies on ANSI code pages cannot store Greek and German in the same text stream unless it includes an identifier that indicates the referenced code page.

Double-byte character set (DBCS) encodings

Supports languages, such as Chinese, Japanese, and Korean, that contain more than 256 characters. In a DBCS, a pair of code points (a double byte) represents each character. The Encoding.IsSingleByte property returns false for DBCS encodings. You can retrieve an encoding object for a particular DBCS by calling the Encoding.GetEncoding(Int32) method.

In a DBCS, a pair of code points (a double byte) represents each character. When an application handles DBCS data, the first byte of a DBCS character (the lead byte) is processed in combination with the trail byte that immediately follows it. Because a single pair of double-byte code points can represent different characters depending on the code page, this scheme still does not allow for the combination of two languages, such as Japanese and Chinese, in the same data stream.

These encodings enable you to work with Unicode characters as well as with encodings that are most commonly used in legacy applications. In addition, you can create a custom encoding by defining a class that derives from Encoding and overriding its members.

Selecting an Encoding Class

If you have the opportunity to choose the encoding to be used by your application, you should use a Unicode encoding, preferably either UTF8Encoding or UnicodeEncoding. (The .NET Framework also supports a third Unicode encoding, UTF32Encoding.)

If you are planning to use an ASCII encoding (ASCIIEncoding), choose UTF8Encoding instead. The two encodings are identical for the ASCII character set, but UTF8Encoding has the following advantages:

  • It can represent every Unicode character, whereas ASCIIEncoding supports only the Unicode character values between U+0000 and U+007F.

  • It provides error detection and better security.

  • It has been tuned to be as fast as possible and should be faster than any other encoding. Even for content that is entirely ASCII, operations performed with UTF8Encoding are faster than operations performed with ASCIIEncoding.

You should consider using ASCIIEncoding only for legacy applications. However, even for legacy applications, UTF8Encoding might be a better choice for the following reasons (assuming default settings):

  • If your application has content that is not strictly ASCII and encodes it with ASCIIEncoding, each non-ASCII character encodes as a question mark (?). If the application then decodes this data, the information is lost.

  • If your application has content that is not strictly ASCII and encodes it with UTF8Encoding, the result seems unintelligible if interpreted as ASCII. However, if the application then uses a UTF-8 decoder to decode this data, the data performs a round trip successfully.

In a web application, characters sent to the client in response to a web request should reflect the encoding used on the client. In most cases, you should set the HttpResponse.ContentEncoding property to the value returned by the HttpRequest.ContentEncoding property to display text in the encoding that the user expects.

Using an Encoding Object

An encoder converts a string of characters (most commonly, Unicode characters) to its numeric (byte) equivalent. For example, you might use an ASCII encoder to convert Unicode characters to ASCII so that they can be displayed at the console. To perform the conversion, you call the Encoding.GetBytes method. If you want to determine how many bytes are needed to store the encoded characters before performing the encoding, you can call the GetByteCount method.

The following example uses a single byte array to encode strings in two separate operations. It maintains an index that indicates the starting position in the byte array for the next set of ASCII-encoded bytes. It calls the ASCIIEncoding.GetByteCount(String) method to ensure that the byte array is large enough to accommodate the encoded string. It then calls the ASCIIEncoding.GetBytes(String, Int32, Int32, Byte[], Int32) method to encode the characters in the string.

Imports System.Text

Module Example
   Public Sub Main()
      Dim strings() As String = { "This is the first sentence. ", 
                                  "This is the second sentence. " }
      Dim asciiEncoding As Encoding = Encoding.ASCII

      ' Create array of adequate size.
      Dim bytes(50) As Byte
      ' Create index for current position of array.
      Dim index As Integer = 0

      Console.WriteLine("Strings to encode:")
      For Each stringValue In strings
         Console.WriteLine("   {0}", stringValue)

         Dim count As Integer = asciiEncoding.GetByteCount(stringValue)
         If count + index >=  bytes.Length Then
            Array.Resize(bytes, bytes.Length + 50)
         End If
         Dim written As Integer = asciiEncoding.GetBytes(stringValue, 0, 
                                                         stringValue.Length, 
                                                         bytes, index)    

         index = index + written 
      Next 
      Console.WriteLine()
      Console.WriteLine("Encoded bytes:")
      Console.WriteLine("{0}", ShowByteValues(bytes, index))
      Console.WriteLine()

      ' Decode Unicode byte array to a string.
      Dim newString As String = asciiEncoding.GetString(bytes, 0, index)
      Console.WriteLine("Decoded: {0}", newString)
   End Sub

   Private Function ShowByteValues(bytes As Byte(), last As Integer) As String
      Dim returnString As String = "   "
      For ctr As Integer = 0 To last - 1
         If ctr Mod 20 = 0 Then returnString += vbCrLf + "   "
         returnString += String.Format("{0:X2} ", bytes(ctr))
      Next
      Return returnString
   End Function
End Module
' The example displays the following output:
'       Strings to encode:
'          This is the first sentence.
'          This is the second sentence.
'       
'       Encoded bytes:
'       
'          54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 74 68 65 20 66 69 72 73 74 20 73 65
'          6E 74 65 6E 63 65 2E 20 54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 74 68 65 20
'          73 65 63 6F 6E 64 20 73 65 6E 74 65 6E 63 65 2E 20
'       
'       Decoded: This is the first sentence. This is the second sentence.
using System;
using System.Text;

public class Example
{
   public static void Main()
   {
      string[] strings= { "This is the first sentence. ", 
                          "This is the second sentence. " };
      Encoding asciiEncoding = Encoding.ASCII;

      // Create array of adequate size.
      byte[] bytes = new byte[49];
      // Create index for current position of array.
      int index = 0;

      Console.WriteLine("Strings to encode:");
      foreach (var stringValue in strings) {
         Console.WriteLine("   {0}", stringValue);

         int count = asciiEncoding.GetByteCount(stringValue);
         if (count + index >=  bytes.Length)
            Array.Resize(ref bytes, bytes.Length + 50);

         int written = asciiEncoding.GetBytes(stringValue, 0, 
                                              stringValue.Length, 
                                              bytes, index);    

         index = index + written; 
      } 
      Console.WriteLine("\nEncoded bytes:");
      Console.WriteLine("{0}", ShowByteValues(bytes, index));
      Console.WriteLine();

      // Decode Unicode byte array to a string.
      string newString = asciiEncoding.GetString(bytes, 0, index);
      Console.WriteLine("Decoded: {0}", newString);
   }

   private static string ShowByteValues(byte[] bytes, int last ) 
   {
      string returnString = "   ";
      for (int ctr = 0; ctr <= last - 1; ctr++) {
         if (ctr % 20 == 0)
            returnString += "\n   ";
         returnString += String.Format("{0:X2} ", bytes[ctr]);
      }
      return returnString;
   }
}
// The example displays the following output:
//       Strings to encode:
//          This is the first sentence.
//          This is the second sentence.
//       
//       Encoded bytes:
//       
//          54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 74 68 65 20 66 69 72 73 74 20 73 65
//          6E 74 65 6E 63 65 2E 20 54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 74 68 65 20
//          73 65 63 6F 6E 64 20 73 65 6E 74 65 6E 63 65 2E 20
//       
//       Decoded: This is the first sentence. This is the second sentence.

A decoder converts a byte array that reflects a particular character encoding into a set of characters, either in a character array or in a string. To decode a byte array into a character array, you call the Encoding.GetChars method. To decode a byte array into a string, you call the GetString method. If you want to determine how many characters are needed to store the decoded bytes before performing the decoding, you can call the GetCharCount method.

The following example encodes three strings and then decodes them into a single array of characters. It maintains an index that indicates the starting position in the character array for the next set of decoded characters. It calls the GetCharCount method to ensure that the character array is large enough to accommodate all the decoded characters. It then calls the ASCIIEncoding.GetChars(Byte[], Int32, Int32, Char[], Int32) method to decode the byte array.

Imports System.Text

Module Example
   Public Sub Main()
      Dim strings() As String = { "This is the first sentence. ", 
                                  "This is the second sentence. ",
                                  "This is the third sentence. " }
      Dim asciiEncoding As Encoding = Encoding.ASCII
      ' Array to hold encoded bytes.
      Dim bytes() As Byte
      ' Array to hold decoded characters.
      Dim chars(50) As Char
      ' Create index for current position of character array.
      Dim index As Integer     

      For Each stringValue In strings
         Console.WriteLine("String to Encode: {0}", stringValue)
         ' Encode the string to a byte array.
         bytes = asciiEncoding.GetBytes(stringValue)
         ' Display the encoded bytes.
         Console.Write("Encoded bytes: ")
         For ctr As Integer = 0 To bytes.Length - 1
            Console.Write(" {0}{1:X2}", If(ctr Mod 20 = 0, vbCrLf, ""), 
                                        bytes(ctr))
         Next         
         Console.WriteLine()

         ' Decode the bytes to a single character array.
         Dim count As Integer = asciiEncoding.GetCharCount(bytes)
         If count + index >=  chars.Length Then
            Array.Resize(chars, chars.Length + 50)
         End If
         Dim written As Integer = asciiEncoding.GetChars(bytes, 0, 
                                                         bytes.Length, 
                                                         chars, index)              
         index = index + written
         Console.WriteLine()       
      Next

      ' Instantiate a single string containing the characters.
      Dim decodedString As New String(chars, 0, index - 1)
      Console.WriteLine("Decoded string: ")
      Console.WriteLine(decodedString)
   End Sub
End Module
' The example displays the following output:
'    String to Encode: This is the first sentence.
'    Encoded bytes:
'    54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 74 68 65 20 66 69 72 73 74 20 73 65
'    6E 74 65 6E 63 65 2E 20
'    
'    String to Encode: This is the second sentence.
'    Encoded bytes:
'    54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 74 68 65 20 73 65 63 6F 6E 64 20 73
'    65 6E 74 65 6E 63 65 2E 20
'    
'    String to Encode: This is the third sentence.
'    Encoded bytes:
'    54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 74 68 65 20 74 68 69 72 64 20 73 65
'    6E 74 65 6E 63 65 2E 20
'    
'    Decoded string:
'    This is the first sentence. This is the second sentence. This is the third sentence.
using System;
using System.Text;

public class Example
{
   public static void Main()
   {
      string[] strings = { "This is the first sentence. ", 
                           "This is the second sentence. ",
                           "This is the third sentence. " };
      Encoding asciiEncoding = Encoding.ASCII;
      // Array to hold encoded bytes.
      byte[] bytes;
      // Array to hold decoded characters.
      char[] chars = new char[50];
      // Create index for current position of character array.
      int index = 0;     

      foreach (var stringValue in strings) {
         Console.WriteLine("String to Encode: {0}", stringValue);
         // Encode the string to a byte array.
         bytes = asciiEncoding.GetBytes(stringValue);
         // Display the encoded bytes.
         Console.Write("Encoded bytes: ");
         for (int ctr = 0; ctr < bytes.Length; ctr++)
            Console.Write(" {0}{1:X2}", 
                          ctr % 20 == 0 ? Environment.NewLine : "", 
                          bytes[ctr]);
         Console.WriteLine();

         // Decode the bytes to a single character array.
         int count = asciiEncoding.GetCharCount(bytes);
         if (count + index >=  chars.Length)
            Array.Resize(ref chars, chars.Length + 50);

         int written = asciiEncoding.GetChars(bytes, 0, 
                                              bytes.Length, 
                                              chars, index);              
         index = index + written;
         Console.WriteLine();       
      }

      // Instantiate a single string containing the characters.
      string decodedString = new string(chars, 0, index - 1);
      Console.WriteLine("Decoded string: ");
      Console.WriteLine(decodedString);
   }
}
// The example displays the following output:
//    String to Encode: This is the first sentence.
//    Encoded bytes:
//    54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 74 68 65 20 66 69 72 73 74 20 73 65
//    6E 74 65 6E 63 65 2E 20
//    
//    String to Encode: This is the second sentence.
//    Encoded bytes:
//    54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 74 68 65 20 73 65 63 6F 6E 64 20 73
//    65 6E 74 65 6E 63 65 2E 20
//    
//    String to Encode: This is the third sentence.
//    Encoded bytes:
//    54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 74 68 65 20 74 68 69 72 64 20 73 65
//    6E 74 65 6E 63 65 2E 20
//    
//    Decoded string:
//    This is the first sentence. This is the second sentence. This is the third sentence.

The encoding and decoding methods of a class derived from Encoding are designed to work on a complete set of data; that is, all the data to be encoded or decoded is supplied in a single method call. However, in some cases, data is available in a stream, and the data to be encoded or decoded may be available only from separate read operations. This requires the encoding or decoding operation to remember any saved state from its previous invocation. Methods of classes derived from Encoder and Decoder are able to handle encoding and decoding operations that span multiple method calls.

An Encoder object for a particular encoding is available from that encoding's Encoding.GetEncoder property. A Decoder object for a particular encoding is available from that encoding's Encoding.GetDecoder property. For decoding operations, note that classes derived from Decoder include a Decoder.GetChars method, but they do not have a method that corresponds to Encoding.GetString.

The following example illustrates the difference between using the Encoding.GetChars and Decoder.GetChars methods for decoding a Unicode byte array. The example encodes a string that contains some Unicode characters to a file, and then uses the two decoding methods to decode them ten bytes at a time. Because a surrogate pair occurs in the tenth and eleventh bytes, it is decoded in separate method calls. As the output shows, the Encoding.GetChars method is not able to correctly decode the bytes and instead replaces them with U+FFFD (REPLACEMENT CHARACTER). On the other hand, the Decoder.GetChars method is able to successfully decode the byte array to get the original string.

Imports System.IO
Imports System.Text

Module Example
   Public Sub Main()
      ' Use default replacement fallback for invalid encoding.
      Dim enc As New UnicodeEncoding(True, False, False)

      ' Define a string with various Unicode characters.
      Dim str1 As String = String.Format("AB YZ 19 {0}{1} {2}", 
                                         ChrW(&hD800), ChrW(&hDC05), ChrW(&h00e4))
      str1 += String.Format("Unicode characters. {0} {1} s {2}{3}", 
                            ChrW(&h00a9), ChrW(&h010C), ChrW(&h0062), ChrW(&h0308))
      Console.WriteLine("Created original string...")
      Console.WriteLine()

      ' Convert string to byte array.                     
      Dim bytes() As Byte = enc.GetBytes(str1)

      Dim fs As FileStream = File.Create(".\characters.bin")
      Dim bw As New BinaryWriter(fs)
      bw.Write(bytes)
      bw.Close()

      ' Read bytes from file.
      Dim fsIn As FileStream = File.OpenRead(".\characters.bin")
      Dim br As New BinaryReader(fsIn)

      Const count As Integer = 10      ' Number of bytes to read at a time. 
      Dim bytesRead(9) As Byte         ' Buffer (byte array).
      Dim read As Integer              ' Number of bytes actually read. 
      Dim str2 As String = ""          ' Decoded string.

      ' Try using Encoding object for all operations.
      Do 
         read = br.Read(bytesRead, 0, count)
         str2 += enc.GetString(bytesRead, 0, read) 
      Loop While read = count
      br.Close()
      Console.WriteLine("Decoded string using UnicodeEncoding.GetString()...")
      CompareForEquality(str1, str2)
      Console.WriteLine()

      ' Use Decoder for all operations.
      fsIn = File.OpenRead(".\characters.bin")
      br = New BinaryReader(fsIn)
      Dim decoder As Decoder = enc.GetDecoder()
      Dim chars(50) As Char
      Dim index As Integer = 0         ' Next character to write in array.
      Dim written As Integer = 0       ' Number of chars written to array.
      Do 
         read = br.Read(bytesRead, 0, count)
         If index + decoder.GetCharCount(bytesRead, 0, read) - 1 >= chars.Length Then 
            Array.Resize(chars, chars.Length + 50)
         End If   
         written = decoder.GetChars(bytesRead, 0, read, chars, index)
         index += written                          
      Loop While read = count
      br.Close()            
      ' Instantiate a string with the decoded characters.
      Dim str3 As New String(chars, 0, index) 
      Console.WriteLine("Decoded string using UnicodeEncoding.Decoder.GetString()...")
      CompareForEquality(str1, str3) 
   End Sub

   Private Sub CompareForEquality(original As String, decoded As String)
      Dim result As Boolean = original.Equals(decoded)
      Console.WriteLine("original = decoded: {0}", 
                        original.Equals(decoded, StringComparison.Ordinal))
      If Not result Then
         Console.WriteLine("Code points in original string:")
         For Each ch In original
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
         Next
         Console.WriteLine()

         Console.WriteLine("Code points in decoded string:")
         For Each ch In decoded
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
         Next
         Console.WriteLine()
      End If
   End Sub
End Module
' The example displays the following output:
'    Created original string...
'    
'    Decoded string using UnicodeEncoding.GetString()...
'    original = decoded: False
'    Code points in original string:
'    0041 0042 0020 0059 005A 0020 0031 0039 0020 D800 DC05 0020 00E4 0055 006E 0069 0063 006F
'    0064 0065 0020 0063 0068 0061 0072 0061 0063 0074 0065 0072 0073 002E 0020 00A9 0020 010C
'    0020 0073 0020 0062 0308
'    Code points in decoded string:
'    0041 0042 0020 0059 005A 0020 0031 0039 0020 FFFD FFFD 0020 00E4 0055 006E 0069 0063 006F
'    0064 0065 0020 0063 0068 0061 0072 0061 0063 0074 0065 0072 0073 002E 0020 00A9 0020 010C
'    0020 0073 0020 0062 0308
'    
'    Decoded string using UnicodeEncoding.Decoder.GetString()...
'    original = decoded: True
using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Text;

public class Example
{
   public static void Main()
   {
      // Use default replacement fallback for invalid encoding.
      UnicodeEncoding enc = new UnicodeEncoding(true, false, false);

      // Define a string with various Unicode characters.
      string str1 = "AB YZ 19 \uD800\udc05 \u00e4"; 
      str1 += "Unicode characters. \u00a9 \u010C s \u0062\u0308"; 
      Console.WriteLine("Created original string...\n");

      // Convert string to byte array.                     
      byte[] bytes = enc.GetBytes(str1);

      FileStream fs = File.Create(@".\characters.bin");
      BinaryWriter bw = new BinaryWriter(fs);
      bw.Write(bytes);
      bw.Close();

      // Read bytes from file.
      FileStream fsIn = File.OpenRead(@".\characters.bin");
      BinaryReader br = new BinaryReader(fsIn);

      const int count = 10;            // Number of bytes to read at a time. 
      byte[] bytesRead = new byte[10]; // Buffer (byte array).
      int read;                        // Number of bytes actually read. 
      string str2 = String.Empty;      // Decoded string.

      // Try using Encoding object for all operations.
      do { 
         read = br.Read(bytesRead, 0, count);
         str2 += enc.GetString(bytesRead, 0, read); 
      } while (read == count);
      br.Close();
      Console.WriteLine("Decoded string using UnicodeEncoding.GetString()...");
      CompareForEquality(str1, str2);
      Console.WriteLine();

      // Use Decoder for all operations.
      fsIn = File.OpenRead(@".\characters.bin");
      br = new BinaryReader(fsIn);
      Decoder decoder = enc.GetDecoder();
      char[] chars = new char[50];
      int index = 0;                   // Next character to write in array.
      int written = 0;                 // Number of chars written to array.
      do { 
         read = br.Read(bytesRead, 0, count);
         if (index + decoder.GetCharCount(bytesRead, 0, read) - 1 >= chars.Length) 
            Array.Resize(ref chars, chars.Length + 50);

         written = decoder.GetChars(bytesRead, 0, read, chars, index);
         index += written;                          
      } while (read == count);
      br.Close();            
      // Instantiate a string with the decoded characters.
      string str3 = new String(chars, 0, index); 
      Console.WriteLine("Decoded string using UnicodeEncoding.Decoder.GetString()...");
      CompareForEquality(str1, str3); 
   }

   private static void CompareForEquality(string original, string decoded)
   {
      bool result = original.Equals(decoded);
      Console.WriteLine("original = decoded: {0}", 
                        original.Equals(decoded, StringComparison.Ordinal));
      if (! result) {
         Console.WriteLine("Code points in original string:");
         foreach (var ch in original)
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));
         Console.WriteLine();

         Console.WriteLine("Code points in decoded string:");
         foreach (var ch in decoded)
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));
         Console.WriteLine();
      }
   }
}
// The example displays the following output:
//    Created original string...
//    
//    Decoded string using UnicodeEncoding.GetString()...
//    original = decoded: False
//    Code points in original string:
//    0041 0042 0020 0059 005A 0020 0031 0039 0020 D800 DC05 0020 00E4 0055 006E 0069 0063 006F
//    0064 0065 0020 0063 0068 0061 0072 0061 0063 0074 0065 0072 0073 002E 0020 00A9 0020 010C
//    0020 0073 0020 0062 0308
//    Code points in decoded string:
//    0041 0042 0020 0059 005A 0020 0031 0039 0020 FFFD FFFD 0020 00E4 0055 006E 0069 0063 006F
//    0064 0065 0020 0063 0068 0061 0072 0061 0063 0074 0065 0072 0073 002E 0020 00A9 0020 010C
//    0020 0073 0020 0062 0308
//    
//    Decoded string using UnicodeEncoding.Decoder.GetString()...
//    original = decoded: True

Choosing a Fallback Strategy

When a method tries to encode or decode a character but no mapping exists, it must implement a fallback strategy that determines how the failed mapping should be handled. There are three types of fallback strategies:

  • Best-fit fallback

  • Replacement fallback

  • Exception fallback

Important noteImportant

The most common problems in encoding operations occur when a Unicode character cannot be mapped to a particular code page encoding. The most common problems in decoding operations occur when invalid byte sequences cannot be translated into valid Unicode characters. For these reasons, you should know which fallback strategy a particular encoding object uses. Whenever possible, you should specify the fallback strategy used by an encoding object when you instantiate the object.

Best-Fit Fallback

When a character does not have an exact match in the target encoding, the encoder can try to map it to a similar character. (Best-fit fallback is mostly an encoding rather than a decoding issue. There are very few code pages that contain characters that cannot be successfully mapped to Unicode.) Best-fit fallback is the default for code page and double-byte character set encodings that are retrieved by the Encoding.GetEncoding(Int32) and Encoding.GetEncoding(String) overloads.

Note

In theory, the Unicode encoding classes provided in the .NET Framework (UTF8Encoding, UnicodeEncoding, and UTF32Encoding) support every character in every character set, so they can be used to eliminate best-fit fallback issues.

Best-fit strategies vary for different code pages, and they are not documented in detail. For example, for some code pages, full-width Latin characters map to the more common half-width Latin characters. For other code pages, this mapping is not made. Even under an aggressive best-fit strategy, there is no imaginable fit for some characters in some encodings. For example, a Chinese ideograph has no reasonable mapping to code page 1252. In this case, a replacement string is used. By default, this string is just a single QUESTION MARK (U+003F).

The following example uses code page 1252 (the Windows code page for Western European languages) to illustrate best-fit mapping and its drawbacks. The Encoding.GetEncoding(Int32) method is used to retrieve an encoding object for code page 1252. By default, it uses a best-fit mapping for Unicode characters that it does not support. The example instantiates a string that contains three non-ASCII characters - CIRCLED LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S (U+24C8), SUPERSCRIPT FIVE (U+2075), and INFINITY (U+221E) - separated by spaces. As the output from the example shows, when the string is encoded, the three original non-space characters are replaced by QUESTION MARK (U+003F), DIGIT FIVE (U+0035), and DIGIT EIGHT (U+0038). DIGIT EIGHT is a particularly poor replacement for the unsupported INFINITY character, and QUESTION MARK indicates that no mapping was available for the original character.

Imports System.Text

Module Example
   Public Sub Main()
      ' Get an encoding for code page 1252 (Western Europe character set).
      Dim cp1252 As Encoding = Encoding.GetEncoding(1252)

      ' Define and display a string.
      Dim str As String = String.Format("{0} {1} {2}", ChrW(&h24c8), ChrW(&H2075), ChrW(&h221E))
      Console.WriteLine("Original string: " + str)
      Console.Write("Code points in string: ")
      For Each ch In str
         Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
      Next
      Console.WriteLine()   
      Console.WriteLine()

      ' Encode a Unicode string.
      Dim bytes() As Byte = cp1252.GetBytes(str)
      Console.Write("Encoded bytes: ")
      For Each byt In bytes
         Console.Write("{0:X2} ", byt)
      Next
      Console.WriteLine()
      Console.WriteLine()

      ' Decode the string.
      Dim str2 As String = cp1252.GetString(bytes)
      Console.WriteLine("String round-tripped: {0}", str.Equals(str2))
      If Not str.Equals(str2) Then
         Console.WriteLine(str2)
         For Each ch In str2
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
         Next
      End If
   End Sub
End Module
' The example displays the following output:
'       Original string: Ⓢ ⁵ ∞
'       Code points in string: 24C8 0020 2075 0020 221E
'       
'       Encoded bytes: 3F 20 35 20 38
'       
'       String round-tripped: False
'       ? 5 8
'       003F 0020 0035 0020 0038
using System;
using System.Text;

public class Example
{
   public static void Main()
   {
      // Get an encoding for code page 1252 (Western Europe character set).
      Encoding cp1252 = Encoding.GetEncoding(1252);

      // Define and display a string.
      string str = "\u24c8 \u2075 \u221e";
      Console.WriteLine("Original string: " + str);
      Console.Write("Code points in string: ");
      foreach (var ch in str)
         Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));

      Console.WriteLine("\n");   

      // Encode a Unicode string.
      Byte[] bytes = cp1252.GetBytes(str);
      Console.Write("Encoded bytes: ");
      foreach (byte byt in bytes)
         Console.Write("{0:X2} ", byt);
      Console.WriteLine("\n");

      // Decode the string.
      string str2 = cp1252.GetString(bytes);
      Console.WriteLine("String round-tripped: {0}", str.Equals(str2));
      if (! str.Equals(str2)) {
         Console.WriteLine(str2);
         foreach (var ch in str2)
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));
      }
   }
}
// The example displays the following output:
//       Original string: Ⓢ ⁵ ∞
//       Code points in string: 24C8 0020 2075 0020 221E
//       
//       Encoded bytes: 3F 20 35 20 38
//       
//       String round-tripped: False
//       ? 5 8
//       003F 0020 0035 0020 0038

Best-fit mapping is the default behavior for an Encoding object that encodes Unicode data into code page data, and there are legacy applications that rely on this behavior. However, most new applications should avoid best-fit behavior for security reasons. For example, applications should not put a domain name through a best-fit encoding.

Note

You can also implement a custom best-fit fallback mapping for an encoding. For more information, see the Implementing a Custom Fallback Strategy section.

If best-fit fallback is the default for an encoding object, you can choose another fallback strategy when you retrieve an Encoding object by calling the Encoding.GetEncoding(Int32, EncoderFallback, DecoderFallback) or Encoding.GetEncoding(String, EncoderFallback, DecoderFallback) overload. The following section includes an example that replaces each character that cannot be mapped to code page 1252 with an asterisk (*).

Imports System.Text

Module Example
   Public Sub Main()
      Dim cp1252r As Encoding = Encoding.GetEncoding(1252, 
                                         New EncoderReplacementFallback("*"),
                                         New DecoderReplacementFallback("*"))

      Dim str1 As String = String.Format("{0} {1} {2}", ChrW(&h24C8), ChrW(&h2075), ChrW(&h221E))
      Console.WriteLine(str1)
      For Each ch In str1
         Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
      Next    
      Console.WriteLine()

      Dim bytes() As Byte = cp1252r.GetBytes(str1)
      Dim str2 As String = cp1252r.GetString(bytes)
      Console.WriteLine("Round-trip: {0}", str1.Equals(str2))
      If Not str1.Equals(str2) Then
         Console.WriteLine(str2)
         For Each ch In str2
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
         Next    
         Console.WriteLine()
      End If 
   End Sub
End Module
' The example displays the following output:
'       Ⓢ ⁵ ∞
'       24C8 0020 2075 0020 221E
'       Round-trip: False
'       * * *
'       002A 0020 002A 0020 002A
using System;
using System.Text;

public class Example
{
   public static void Main()
   {
      Encoding cp1252r = Encoding.GetEncoding(1252, 
                                  new EncoderReplacementFallback("*"),
                                  new DecoderReplacementFallback("*"));

      string str1 = "\u24C8 \u2075 \u221E";
      Console.WriteLine(str1);
      foreach (var ch in str1)
         Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));

      Console.WriteLine();

      byte[] bytes = cp1252r.GetBytes(str1);
      string str2 = cp1252r.GetString(bytes);
      Console.WriteLine("Round-trip: {0}", str1.Equals(str2));
      if (! str1.Equals(str2)) {
         Console.WriteLine(str2);
         foreach (var ch in str2)
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));

         Console.WriteLine();
      } 
   }
}
// The example displays the following output:
//       Ⓢ ⁵ ∞
//       24C8 0020 2075 0020 221E
//       Round-trip: False
//       * * *
//       002A 0020 002A 0020 002A

Replacement Fallback

When a character does not have an exact match in the target scheme, but there is no appropriate character that it can be mapped to, the application can specify a replacement character or string. This is the default behavior for the Unicode decoder, which replaces any two-byte sequence that it cannot decode with REPLACEMENT_CHARACTER (U+FFFD). It is also the default behavior of the ASCIIEncoding class, which replaces each character that it cannot encode or decode with a question mark. The following example illustrates character replacement for the Unicode string from the previous example. As the output shows, each character that cannot be decoded into an ASCII byte value is replaced by 0x3F, which is the ASCII code for a question mark.

Imports System.Text

Module Example
   Public Sub Main()
      Dim enc As Encoding = Encoding.Ascii

      Dim str1 As String = String.Format("{0} {1} {2}", ChrW(&h24C8), ChrW(&h2075), ChrW(&h221E))
      Console.WriteLine(str1)
      For Each ch In str1
         Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
      Next    
      Console.WriteLine()
      Console.WriteLine() 

      ' Encode the original string using the ASCII encoder.
      Dim bytes() As Byte = enc.GetBytes(str1)
      Console.Write("Encoded bytes: ")
      For Each byt In bytes
         Console.Write("{0:X2} ", byt)
      Next
      Console.WriteLine()
      Console.WriteLine()

      ' Decode the ASCII bytes.
      Dim str2 As String = enc.GetString(bytes)
      Console.WriteLine("Round-trip: {0}", str1.Equals(str2))
      If Not str1.Equals(str2) Then
         Console.WriteLine(str2)
         For Each ch In str2
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
         Next    
         Console.WriteLine()
      End If 
   End Sub
End Module
' The example displays the following output:
'       Ⓢ ⁵ ∞
'       24C8 0020 2075 0020 221E
'       
'       Encoded bytes: 3F 20 3F 20 3F
'       
'       Round-trip: False
'       ? ? ?
'       003F 0020 003F 0020 003F
using System;
using System.Text;

public class Example
{
   public static void Main()
   {
      Encoding enc = Encoding.ASCII;

      string str1 = "\u24C8 \u2075 \u221E";
      Console.WriteLine(str1);
      foreach (var ch in str1)
         Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));

      Console.WriteLine("\n");

      // Encode the original string using the ASCII encoder.
      byte[] bytes = enc.GetBytes(str1);
      Console.Write("Encoded bytes: ");
      foreach (var byt in bytes)
         Console.Write("{0:X2} ", byt);
      Console.WriteLine("\n");

      // Decode the ASCII bytes.
      string str2 = enc.GetString(bytes);
      Console.WriteLine("Round-trip: {0}", str1.Equals(str2));
      if (! str1.Equals(str2)) {
         Console.WriteLine(str2);
         foreach (var ch in str2)
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));

         Console.WriteLine();
      } 
   }
}
// The example displays the following output:
//       Ⓢ ⁵ ∞
//       24C8 0020 2075 0020 221E
//       
//       Encoded bytes: 3F 20 3F 20 3F
//       
//       Round-trip: False
//       ? ? ?
//       003F 0020 003F 0020 003F

The .NET Framework includes the EncoderReplacementFallback and DecoderReplacementFallback classes, which substitute a replacement string if a character does not map exactly in an encoding or decoding operation. By default, this replacement string is a question mark, but you can call a class constructor overload to choose a different string. Typically, the replacement string is a single character, although this is not a requirement. The following example changes the behavior of the code page 1252 encoder by instantiating an EncoderReplacementFallback object that uses an asterisk (*) as a replacement string.

Imports System.Text

Module Example
   Public Sub Main()
      Dim cp1252r As Encoding = Encoding.GetEncoding(1252, 
                                         New EncoderReplacementFallback("*"),
                                         New DecoderReplacementFallback("*"))

      Dim str1 As String = String.Format("{0} {1} {2}", ChrW(&h24C8), ChrW(&h2075), ChrW(&h221E))
      Console.WriteLine(str1)
      For Each ch In str1
         Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
      Next    
      Console.WriteLine()

      Dim bytes() As Byte = cp1252r.GetBytes(str1)
      Dim str2 As String = cp1252r.GetString(bytes)
      Console.WriteLine("Round-trip: {0}", str1.Equals(str2))
      If Not str1.Equals(str2) Then
         Console.WriteLine(str2)
         For Each ch In str2
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
         Next    
         Console.WriteLine()
      End If 
   End Sub
End Module
' The example displays the following output:
'       Ⓢ ⁵ ∞
'       24C8 0020 2075 0020 221E
'       Round-trip: False
'       * * *
'       002A 0020 002A 0020 002A
using System;
using System.Text;

public class Example
{
   public static void Main()
   {
      Encoding cp1252r = Encoding.GetEncoding(1252, 
                                  new EncoderReplacementFallback("*"),
                                  new DecoderReplacementFallback("*"));

      string str1 = "\u24C8 \u2075 \u221E";
      Console.WriteLine(str1);
      foreach (var ch in str1)
         Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));

      Console.WriteLine();

      byte[] bytes = cp1252r.GetBytes(str1);
      string str2 = cp1252r.GetString(bytes);
      Console.WriteLine("Round-trip: {0}", str1.Equals(str2));
      if (! str1.Equals(str2)) {
         Console.WriteLine(str2);
         foreach (var ch in str2)
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));

         Console.WriteLine();
      } 
   }
}
// The example displays the following output:
//       Ⓢ ⁵ ∞
//       24C8 0020 2075 0020 221E
//       Round-trip: False
//       * * *
//       002A 0020 002A 0020 002A

Note

You can also implement a replacement class for an encoding. For more information, see the Implementing a Custom Fallback Strategy section.

In addition to QUESTION MARK (U+003F), the Unicode REPLACEMENT CHARACTER (U+FFFD) is commonly used as a replacement string, particularly when decoding byte sequences that cannot be successfully translated into Unicode characters. However, you are free to choose any replacement string, and it can contain multiple characters.

Exception Fallback

Instead of providing a best-fit fallback or a replacement string, an encoder can throw an EncoderFallbackException if it is unable to encode a set of characters, and a decoder can throw a DecoderFallbackException if it is unable to decode a byte array. To throw an exception in encoding and decoding operations, you supply an EncoderExceptionFallback object and a DecoderExceptionFallback object, respectively, to the Encoding.GetEncoding(String, EncoderFallback, DecoderFallback) method. The following example illustrates exception fallback with the ASCIIEncoding class.

Imports System.Text

Module Example
   Public Sub Main()
      Dim enc As Encoding = Encoding.GetEncoding("us-ascii", 
                                                 New EncoderExceptionFallback(), 
                                                 New DecoderExceptionFallback())

      Dim str1 As String = String.Format("{0} {1} {2}", ChrW(&h24C8), ChrW(&h2075), ChrW(&h221E))
      Console.WriteLine(str1)
      For Each ch In str1
         Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
      Next    
      Console.WriteLine()
      Console.WriteLine() 

      ' Encode the original string using the ASCII encoder.
      Dim bytes() As Byte = {}
      Try
         bytes = enc.GetBytes(str1)
         Console.Write("Encoded bytes: ")
         For Each byt In bytes
            Console.Write("{0:X2} ", byt)
         Next
         Console.WriteLine()
      Catch e As EncoderFallbackException
         Console.Write("Exception: ")
         If e.IsUnknownSurrogate() Then
            Console.WriteLine("Unable to encode surrogate pair 0x{0:X4} 0x{1:X3} at index {2}.", 
                              Convert.ToUInt16(e.CharUnknownHigh), 
                              Convert.ToUInt16(e.CharUnknownLow), 
                              e.Index)
         Else
            Console.WriteLine("Unable to encode 0x{0:X4} at index {1}.", 
                              Convert.ToUInt16(e.CharUnknown), 
                              e.Index)
         End If                              
         Exit Sub
      End Try
      Console.WriteLine()

      ' Decode the ASCII bytes.
      Try
         Dim str2 As String = enc.GetString(bytes)
         Console.WriteLine("Round-trip: {0}", str1.Equals(str2))
         If Not str1.Equals(str2) Then
            Console.WriteLine(str2)
            For Each ch In str2
               Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
            Next    
            Console.WriteLine()
         End If 
      Catch e As DecoderFallbackException
         Console.Write("Unable to decode byte(s) ")
         For Each unknown As Byte In e.BytesUnknown
            Console.Write("0x{0:X2} ")
         Next
         Console.WriteLine("at index {0}", e.Index)
      End Try
   End Sub
End Module
' The example displays the following output:
'       Ⓢ ⁵ ∞
'       24C8 0020 2075 0020 221E
'       
'       Exception: Unable to encode 0x24C8 at index 0.
using System;
using System.Text;

public class Example
{
   public static void Main()
   {
      Encoding enc = Encoding.GetEncoding("us-ascii", 
                                          new EncoderExceptionFallback(), 
                                          new DecoderExceptionFallback());

      string str1 = "\u24C8 \u2075 \u221E";
      Console.WriteLine(str1);
      foreach (var ch in str1)
         Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));

      Console.WriteLine("\n");

      // Encode the original string using the ASCII encoder.
      byte[] bytes = {};
      try {
         bytes = enc.GetBytes(str1);
         Console.Write("Encoded bytes: ");
         foreach (var byt in bytes)
            Console.Write("{0:X2} ", byt);

         Console.WriteLine();
      }
      catch (EncoderFallbackException e) {
         Console.Write("Exception: ");
         if (e.IsUnknownSurrogate())
            Console.WriteLine("Unable to encode surrogate pair 0x{0:X4} 0x{1:X3} at index {2}.", 
                              Convert.ToUInt16(e.CharUnknownHigh), 
                              Convert.ToUInt16(e.CharUnknownLow), 
                              e.Index);
         else
            Console.WriteLine("Unable to encode 0x{0:X4} at index {1}.", 
                              Convert.ToUInt16(e.CharUnknown), 
                              e.Index);
         return;
      }
      Console.WriteLine();

      // Decode the ASCII bytes.
      try {
         string str2 = enc.GetString(bytes);
         Console.WriteLine("Round-trip: {0}", str1.Equals(str2));
         if (! str1.Equals(str2)) {
            Console.WriteLine(str2);
            foreach (var ch in str2)
               Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));

            Console.WriteLine();
         } 
      }
      catch (DecoderFallbackException e) {
         Console.Write("Unable to decode byte(s) ");
         foreach (byte unknown in e.BytesUnknown)
            Console.Write("0x{0:X2} ");

         Console.WriteLine("at index {0}", e.Index);
      }
   }
}
// The example displays the following output:
//       Ⓢ ⁵ ∞
//       24C8 0020 2075 0020 221E
//       
//       Exception: Unable to encode 0x24C8 at index 0.

Note

You can also implement a custom exception handler for an encoding operation. For more information, see the Implementing a Custom Fallback Strategy section.

The EncoderFallbackException and DecoderFallbackException objects provide the following information about the condition that caused the exception:

Although the EncoderFallbackException and DecoderFallbackException objects provide adequate diagnostic information about the exception, they do not provide access to the encoding or decoding buffer. Therefore, they do not allow invalid data to be replaced or corrected within the encoding or decoding method.

Implementing a Custom Fallback Strategy

In addition to the best-fit mapping that is implemented internally by code pages, the .NET Framework includes the following classes for implementing a fallback strategy:

In addition, you can implement a custom solution that uses best-fit fallback, replacement fallback, or exception fallback, by following these steps:

  1. Derive a class from EncoderFallback for encoding operations, and from DecoderFallback for decoding operations.

  2. Derive a class from EncoderFallbackBuffer for encoding operations, and from DecoderFallbackBuffer for decoding operations.

  3. For exception fallback, if the predefined EncoderFallbackException and DecoderFallbackException classes do not meet your needs, derive a class from an exception object such as Exception or ArgumentException.

Deriving from EncoderFallback or DecoderFallback

To implement a custom fallback solution, you must create a class that inherits from EncoderFallback for encoding operations, and from DecoderFallback for decoding operations. Instances of these classes are passed to the Encoding.GetEncoding(String, EncoderFallback, DecoderFallback) method and serve as the intermediary between the encoding class and the fallback implementation.

When you create a custom fallback solution for an encoder or decoder, you must implement the following members:

Deriving from EncoderFallbackBuffer or DecoderFallbackBuffer

To implement a custom fallback solution, you must also create a class that inherits from EncoderFallbackBuffer for encoding operations, and from DecoderFallbackBuffer for decoding operations. Instances of these classes are returned by the CreateFallbackBuffer method of the EncoderFallback and DecoderFallback classes. The EncoderFallback.CreateFallbackBuffer method is called by the encoder when it encounters the first character that it is not able to encode, and the DecoderFallback.CreateFallbackBuffer method is called by the decoder when it encounters one or more bytes that it is not able to decode. The EncoderFallbackBuffer and DecoderFallbackBuffer classes provide the fallback implementation. Each instance represents a buffer that contains the fallback characters that will replace the character that cannot be encoded or the byte sequence that cannot be decoded.

When you create a custom fallback solution for an encoder or decoder, you must implement the following members:

If the fallback implementation is a best-fit fallback or a replacement fallback, the classes derived from EncoderFallbackBuffer and DecoderFallbackBuffer also maintain two private instance fields: the exact number of characters in the buffer; and the index of the next character in the buffer to return.

An EncoderFallback Example

An earlier example used replacement fallback to replace Unicode characters that did not correspond to ASCII characters with an asterisk (*). The following example uses a custom best-fit fallback implementation instead to provide a better mapping of non-ASCII characters.

The following code defines a class named CustomMapper that is derived from EncoderFallback to handle the best-fit mapping of non-ASCII characters. Its CreateFallbackBuffer method returns a CustomMapperFallbackBuffer object, which provides the EncoderFallbackBuffer implementation. The CustomMapper class uses a Dictionary<TKey, TValue> object to store the mappings of unsupported Unicode characters (the key value) and their corresponding 8-bit characters (which are stored in two consecutive bytes in a 64-bit integer). To make this mapping available to the fallback buffer, the CustomMapper instance is passed as a parameter to the CustomMapperFallbackBuffer class constructor. Because the longest mapping is the string "INF" for the Unicode character U+221E, the MaxCharCount property returns 3.

Public Class CustomMapper : Inherits EncoderFallback
   Public DefaultString As String
   Friend mapping As Dictionary(Of UShort, ULong)

   Public Sub New()
      Me.New("?")
   End Sub

   Public Sub New(ByVal defaultString As String)
      Me.DefaultString = defaultString

      ' Create table of mappings
      mapping = New Dictionary(Of UShort, ULong)
      mapping.Add(&H24C8, &H53)
      mapping.Add(&H2075, &H35)
      mapping.Add(&H221E, &H49004E0046)
   End Sub

   Public Overrides Function CreateFallbackBuffer() As System.Text.EncoderFallbackBuffer
      Return New CustomMapperFallbackBuffer(Me)
   End Function

   Public Overrides ReadOnly Property MaxCharCount As Integer
      Get
         Return 3
      End Get
   End Property
End Class
public class CustomMapper : EncoderFallback
{
   public string DefaultString;
   internal Dictionary<ushort, ulong> mapping;

   public CustomMapper() : this("*")
   {   
   }

   public CustomMapper(string defaultString)
   {
      this.DefaultString = defaultString;

      // Create table of mappings
      mapping = new Dictionary<ushort, ulong>();
      mapping.Add(0x24C8, 0x53);
      mapping.Add(0x2075, 0x35);
      mapping.Add(0x221E, 0x49004E0046);
   }

   public override EncoderFallbackBuffer CreateFallbackBuffer()
   {
      return new CustomMapperFallbackBuffer(this);
   }

   public override int MaxCharCount
   {
      get { return 3; }
   } 
}

The following code defines the CustomMapperFallbackBuffer class, which is derived from EncoderFallbackBuffer. The dictionary that contains best-fit mappings and that is defined in the CustomMapper instance is available from its class constructor. Its Fallback method returns true if any of the Unicode characters that the ASCII encoder cannot encode are defined in the mapping dictionary; otherwise, it returns false. For each fallback, the private count variable indicates the number of characters that remain to be returned, and the private index variable indicates the position in the string buffer, charsToReturn, of the next character to return.

Public Class CustomMapperFallbackBuffer : Inherits EncoderFallbackBuffer

   Dim count As Integer = -1        ' Number of characters to return
   Dim index As Integer = -1        ' Index of character to return
   Dim fb As CustomMapper
   Dim charsToReturn As String

   Public Sub New(ByVal fallback As CustomMapper)
      MyBase.New()
      Me.fb = fallback
   End Sub

   Public Overloads Overrides Function Fallback(ByVal charUnknownHigh As Char, ByVal charUnknownLow As Char, ByVal index As Integer) As Boolean
      ' Do not try to map surrogates to ASCII.
      Return False
   End Function

   Public Overloads Overrides Function Fallback(ByVal charUnknown As Char, ByVal index As Integer) As Boolean
      ' Return false if there are already characters to map.
      If count >= 1 Then Return False

      ' Determine number of characters to return.
      charsToReturn = String.Empty

      Dim key As UShort = Convert.ToUInt16(charUnknown)
      If fb.mapping.ContainsKey(key) Then
         Dim bytes() As Byte = BitConverter.GetBytes(fb.mapping.Item(key))
         Dim ctr As Integer
         For Each byt In bytes
            If byt > 0 Then
               ctr += 1
               charsToReturn += Chr(byt)
            End If
         Next
         count = ctr
      Else
         ' Return default.
         charsToReturn = fb.DefaultString
         count = 1
      End If
      Me.index = charsToReturn.Length - 1

      Return True
   End Function

   Public Overrides Function GetNextChar() As Char
      ' We'll return a character if possible, so subtract from the count of chars to return.
      count -= 1
      ' If count is less than zero, we've returned all characters.
      If count < 0 Then Return ChrW(0)

      Me.index -= 1
      Return charsToReturn(Me.index + 1)
   End Function

   Public Overrides Function MovePrevious() As Boolean
      ' Original: if count >= -1 and pos >= 0
      If count >= -1 Then
         count += 1
         Return True
      Else
         Return False
      End If
   End Function

   Public Overrides ReadOnly Property Remaining As Integer
      Get
         Return If(count < 0, 0, count)
      End Get
   End Property

   Public Overrides Sub Reset()
      count = -1
      index = -1
   End Sub
End Class
public class CustomMapperFallbackBuffer : EncoderFallbackBuffer
{
   int count = -1;                   // Number of characters to return
   int index = -1;                   // Index of character to return
   CustomMapper fb; 
   string charsToReturn; 

   public CustomMapperFallbackBuffer(CustomMapper fallback)
   {
      this.fb = fallback;
   }

   public override bool Fallback(char charUnknownHigh, char charUnknownLow, int index)
   {
      // Do not try to map surrogates to ASCII.
      return false;
   }

   public override bool Fallback(char charUnknown, int index)
   {
      // Return false if there are already characters to map.
      if (count >= 1) return false;

      // Determine number of characters to return.
      charsToReturn = String.Empty;

      ushort key = Convert.ToUInt16(charUnknown);
      if (fb.mapping.ContainsKey(key)) {
         byte[] bytes = BitConverter.GetBytes(fb.mapping[key]);
         int ctr = 0;
         foreach (var byt in bytes) {
            if (byt > 0) {
               ctr++;
               charsToReturn += (char) byt;
            }
         }
         count = ctr;
      }
      else {
         // Return default.
         charsToReturn = fb.DefaultString;
         count = 1;
      }
      this.index = charsToReturn.Length - 1;

      return true;
   }

   public override char GetNextChar()
   {
      // We'll return a character if possible, so subtract from the count of chars to return.
      count--;
      // If count is less than zero, we've returned all characters.
      if (count < 0) 
         return '\u0000';

      this.index--;
      return charsToReturn[this.index + 1];
   }

   public override bool MovePrevious()
   {
      // Original: if count >= -1 and pos >= 0
      if (count >= -1) {
         count++;
         return true;
      }
      else {
         return false;
      }
   }

   public override int Remaining 
   {
      get { return count < 0 ? 0 : count; }
   }

   public override void Reset()
   {
      count = -1;
      index = -1;
   }
}

The following code then instantiates the CustomMapper object and passes an instance of it to the Encoding.GetEncoding(String, EncoderFallback, DecoderFallback) method. The output indicates that the best-fit fallback implementation successfully handles the three non-ASCII characters in the original string.

Imports System.Text
Imports System.Collections.Generic

Module Module1

   Sub Main()
      Dim enc As Encoding = Encoding.GetEncoding("us-ascii", New CustomMapper(), New DecoderExceptionFallback())

      Dim str1 As String = String.Format("{0} {1} {2}", ChrW(&H24C8), ChrW(&H2075), ChrW(&H221E))
      Console.WriteLine(str1)
      For ctr As Integer = 0 To str1.Length - 1
         Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(str1(ctr)).ToString("X4"))
         If ctr = str1.Length - 1 Then Console.WriteLine()
      Next
      Console.WriteLine()

      ' Encode the original string using the ASCII encoder.
      Dim bytes() As Byte = enc.GetBytes(str1)
      Console.Write("Encoded bytes: ")
      For Each byt In bytes
         Console.Write("{0:X2} ", byt)
      Next
      Console.WriteLine()
      Console.WriteLine()

      ' Decode the ASCII bytes.
      Dim str2 As String = enc.GetString(bytes)
      Console.WriteLine("Round-trip: {0}", str1.Equals(str2))
      If Not str1.Equals(str2) Then
         Console.WriteLine(str2)
         For Each ch In str2
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"))
         Next
         Console.WriteLine()
      End If
   End Sub
End Module
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;

class Program
{
   static void Main()
   {
      Encoding enc = Encoding.GetEncoding("us-ascii", new CustomMapper(), new DecoderExceptionFallback());

      string str1 = "\u24C8 \u2075 \u221E";
      Console.WriteLine(str1);
      for (int ctr = 0; ctr <= str1.Length - 1; ctr++) {
         Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(str1[ctr]).ToString("X4"));
         if (ctr == str1.Length - 1) 
            Console.WriteLine();
      }
      Console.WriteLine();

      // Encode the original string using the ASCII encoder.
      byte[] bytes = enc.GetBytes(str1);
      Console.Write("Encoded bytes: ");
      foreach (var byt in bytes)
         Console.Write("{0:X2} ", byt);

      Console.WriteLine("\n");

      // Decode the ASCII bytes.
      string str2 = enc.GetString(bytes);
      Console.WriteLine("Round-trip: {0}", str1.Equals(str2));
      if (! str1.Equals(str2)) {
         Console.WriteLine(str2);
         foreach (var ch in str2)
            Console.Write("{0} ", Convert.ToUInt16(ch).ToString("X4"));

         Console.WriteLine();
      }
   }
}

See Also

Reference

Encoder

Decoder

DecoderFallback

Encoding

EncoderFallback

Other Resources

Encoding and Localization