Encoding as Base64 in Java

Use Java 8's never-too-late-to-join-in-the-fun class: java.util.Base64

new String(Base64.getEncoder().encode(bytes));

You need to change the import of your class:

import org.apache.commons.codec.binary.Base64;

And then change your class to use the Base64 class.

Here's some example code:

byte[] encodedBytes = Base64.encodeBase64("Test".getBytes());
System.out.println("encodedBytes " + new String(encodedBytes));
byte[] decodedBytes = Base64.decodeBase64(encodedBytes);
System.out.println("decodedBytes " + new String(decodedBytes));

Then read why you shouldn't use sun.* packages.


Update (2016-12-16)

You can now use java.util.Base64 with Java 8. First, import it as you normally do:

import java.util.Base64;

Then use the Base64 static methods as follows:

byte[] encodedBytes = Base64.getEncoder().encode("Test".getBytes());
System.out.println("encodedBytes " + new String(encodedBytes));
byte[] decodedBytes = Base64.getDecoder().decode(encodedBytes);
System.out.println("decodedBytes " + new String(decodedBytes));

If you directly want to encode string and get the result as encoded string, you can use this:

String encodeBytes = Base64.getEncoder().encodeToString((userName + ":" + password).getBytes());

See Java documentation for Base64 for more.

Tags:

Java

Base64