The snippet says it all :-)
UTF8Encoding enc = new UTF8Encoding(true/*include Byte Order Mark*/);
byte[] data = enc.GetBytes("a");
// data has length 1.
// I expected the BOM to be included. What's up?
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You wouldn't want it to be used for every call to GetBytes, otherwise you'd have no way of (say) writing a file a line at a time. By exposing it with GetPreamble, callers can insert the preamble just at the appropriate point (i.e. at the start of their data). I agree that the documentation could be a lot clearer though. |
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Thank you both. The following works, and LINQ makes the combination simple :-)
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Because it is expected that
(only call it at the start of a sequence) and write that; this is where the BOM lives. |
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Note that in general, you don't need the Byte Order Mark for UTF-8 anyway. It's main purpose is to tell UTF16 BE and UTF16 LE apart. There is no such thing as UTF8 LE and UTF8 BE. |
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