This is example of converting String to a Buffer and back to String:
let bufferOne = Buffer.from('This is a buffer example.');
console.log(bufferOne);
// Output: <Buffer 54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 61 20 62 75 66 66 65 72 20 65 78 61 6d 70 6c 65 2e>
let json = JSON.stringify(bufferOne);
let bufferOriginal = Buffer.from(JSON.parse(json).data);
console.log(bufferOriginal.toString('utf8'));
// Output: This is a buffer example.
Now imagine someone just give you only this string as a starting point:<Buffer 54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 61 20 62 75 66 66 65 72 20 65 78 61 6d 70 6c 65 2e>
- how would you convert it to regular value of this 'buffer' string?
I tried with:
let buffer = '<Buffer 54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 61 20 62 75 66 66 65 72 20 65 78 61 6d 70 6c 65 2e>'
json = JSON.stringify(buffer);
console.log(json);
Gives output:
"<Buffer 54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 61 20 62 75 66 66 65 72 20 65 78 61 6d 70 6c 65 2e>"
Automatically converted when concatenated with an empty string:
console.log('' + bufferOne)
No native way for that, but I wrote a sample method for you:
function bufferFromBufferString(bufferStr) {
return Buffer.from(
bufferStr
.replace(/[<>]/g, '') // remove < > symbols from str
.split(' ') // create an array splitting it by space
.slice(1) // remove Buffer word from an array
.reduce((acc, val) =>
acc.concat(parseInt(val, 16)), []) // convert all strings of numbers to hex numbers
)
}
result:
const newBuffer = bufferFromBufferString('<Buffer 54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 61 20 62 75 66 66 65 72 20 65 78 61 6d 70 6c 65 2e>')
> newBuffer
<Buffer 54 68 69 73 20 69 73 20 61 20 62 75 66 66 65 72 20 65 78 61 6d 70 6c 65 2e>
> newBuffer.toString()
'This is a buffer example.'
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