Pergunta

I'm having issues with QByteArray and QString.

I'm reading a file and stores its information in a QByteArray. The file is in unicode, so it contains something like: t\0 e\0 s\0 t\0 \0 \0

I'm trying to compare this value to my specified value, but it fails, because in the debugger I see it's not an unicode string.

The code will explain everything:

QByteArray Data; //contains unicode string "t\0 e\0 s\0 t\0 \0 \0"
QString myValue = "test"; //value to compare.
if(Data.contains(myValue))
    //do some stuff.
else
    //do other stuff.

In the debugger, it shows me that the variable Data has the value "t\0 e\0 s\0 t\0 \0 \0" and myValue has the value "test". How can I fix it?

Foi útil?

Solução 2

You can use QTextCodec to convert the bytearray to a string:

QString DataAsString = QTextCodec::codecForMib(1015)->toUnicode(Data);

(1015 is UTF-16, 1014 UTF-16LE, 1013 UTF-16BE, 106 UTF-8)

From your example we can see that the string "test" is encoded as "t\0 e\0 s\0 t\0 \0 \0" in your encoding, i.e. every ascii character is followed by a \0-byte, or resp. every ascii character is encoded as 2 bytes. The only unicode encoding in which ascii letters are encoded in this way, are UTF-16 or UCS-2 (which is a restricted version of UTF-16), so in your case the 1015 mib is needed (assuming your local endianess is the same as the input endianess).

Outras dicas

You can use this QString constructor for conversion from QByteArray to QString:

QString(const QByteArray &ba)

QByteArray data;
QString DataAsString = QString(data);

You can use:

QString::fromStdString(byteArray.toStdString())

you can use QString::fromAscii()

QByteArray data = entity->getData();
QString s_data = QString::fromAscii(data.data());

with data() returning a char*

for QT5, you should use fromCString() instead, as fromAscii() is deprecated, see https://bugreports.qt-project.org/browse/QTBUG-21872 https://bugreports.qt.io/browse/QTBUG-21872

You may find QString::fromUtf8() also useful.

For QByteArray input of "\010" and "\000",

QString::fromLocal8Bit(input, 1) returns "\010" and ""

QString::fromUtf8(input, 1) correctly returns "\010" and "\000".

Use QString::fromUtf16((ushort *)Data.data()), as shown in the following code example:

#include <QCoreApplication>
#include <QDebug>

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    QCoreApplication a(argc, argv);

    // QByteArray to QString
    // =====================

    const char c_test[10] = {'t', '\0', 'e', '\0', 's', '\0', 't', '\0', '\0', '\0'};
    QByteArray qba_test(QByteArray::fromRawData(c_test, 10));
    qDebug().nospace().noquote() << "qba_test[" << qba_test << "]"; // Should see: qba_test[t

    QString qstr_test = QString::fromUtf16((ushort *)qba_test.data());
    qDebug().nospace().noquote() << "qstr_test[" << qstr_test << "]"; // Should see: qstr_test[test]

    return a.exec();
}

This is an alternative solution to the one using QTextCodec. The code has been tested using Qt 5.4.

Qt 5.12 and up:

QString::fromStdString(byteArray.toStdString());
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