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Home/ Questions/Q 8904331
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 15, 20262026-06-15T02:06:10+00:00 2026-06-15T02:06:10+00:00

Following is a sample class showing how I put String into ByteBuffer. I am

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Following is a sample class showing how I put String into ByteBuffer. I am able to write String to a file like this, but I am not sure how can I know the size of byte array to read the title back again when deserializing.

public class TestClass {

 private Long id;
 private String title;

 public void write (final ByteBuffer byteBuffer) {
  byteBuffer.putInt(title.length());
  byteBuffer.put(title.getBytes());
 }

 public static UpdateFeed read (final ByteBuffer byteBuffer) {

 final long id = byteBuffer.getLong();

 final int titleLength = byteBuffer.getInt();
 byte[] titleArr = new byte[titleLength];
 byteBuffer.get(titleArr);
 String title = new String(titleArr);
 System.out.println("Title :"+title);


  ????????????????
 return new TestClass(id,title);
 }

}
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-15T02:06:12+00:00Added an answer on June 15, 2026 at 2:06 am

    I suggest you write the length first, then you can read back exactly that many bytes. You should always write you write method to write out what you need to read in your “read” method, in the same order and format.

    Unless you have good reason to do so, its simpler to use DataInput/DataOutputStream which support writeUTF/readUTF.

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