Saving byte array using SharedPreferences

You could try to save it has a String:

Storing the array:

SharedPreferences settings = getSharedPreferences(PREFS_NAME, 0);
SharedPreferences.Editor editor = settings.edit();
editor.putString("myByteArray", Arrays.toString(array));

Retrieving the array:

SharedPreferences settings = getSharedPreferences(PREFS_NAME, 0);
String stringArray = settings.getString("myByteArray", null);

if (stringArray != null) {
    String[] split = stringArray.substring(1, stringArray.length()-1).split(", ");
    byte[] array = new byte[split.length];
    for (int i = 0; i < split.length; i++) {
      array[i] = Byte.parseByte(split[i]);
    }
}

I couldn't upvote Ariel Yust's answer but it worked perfectly.

Other answers (like Base64 encoder) were not available for my minimum API version or did not preserve the original value (that can be problematic when encrypting / decrypting data)

As an addition I advise to use extensions in kotlin :

val String.toPreservedByteArray: ByteArray
get() {
    return this.toByteArray(Charsets.ISO_8859_1)
}

val ByteArray.toPreservedString: String
get() {
    return String(this, Charsets.ISO_8859_1)
}

Then you simply call it on your string :

val string = getSharedPreferences("MyPrefs", Context.MODE_PRIVATE).getString("string", "") ?: ""
val byteArray = string.toPreservedByteArray

You can save a byte array in SharedPreferences by using android.util.Base64.

For saving:

String saveThis = Base64.encodeToString(array, Base64.DEFAULT);

For loading:

byte[] array = Base64.decode(stringFromSharedPrefs, Base64.DEFAULT);

You actually enlarge the size of a data when you convert it to a Base64 String.

the final size of Base64-encoded binary data is equal to 1.37 times the original data size + 814 bytes (for headers).

It's faster and memory efficient to save a byte[] in the SharedPreferences using Charsets.ISO_8859_1

private static final String PREF_NAME = "SharedPreferences_Name";
private static final String DATA_NAME = "BytesData_Name";

public static byte[] getBytes(Context ctx) {
    SharedPreferences prefs = ctx.getSharedPreferences(PREF_NAME, Context.MODE_PRIVATE);
    String str = prefs.getString(DATA_NAME, null);
    if (str != null) {
        return str.getBytes(Charsets.ISO_8859_1);
    }
    return null;
}

public static void setBytes(Context ctx, byte[] bytes) {
    SharedPreferences prefs = ctx.getSharedPreferences(PREF_NAME, Context.MODE_PRIVATE);
    SharedPreferences.Editor e = prefs.edit();
    e.putString(DATA_NAME, new String(bytes, Charsets.ISO_8859_1));
    e.commit();
}
  • ISO_8859_1 Preserves your data (unlike UTF-8 and UTF-16)
  • If you are going to transfer these bytes outside the app, using a JSON for example, then you will have to convert the byte[] to Base64 before serializing them.
  • JSON won't be able to understand the weird characters ISO_8859_1 will be using.

TIP : if you want to save on more space (in case your saving huge byte[]) compress the byte[] before you convert it to any format (ISO or Base64)