CHAPTER 22
Input and output in Java is organized around the concept of streams. A stream is a sequence of items, usually 8-bit bytes, read or written over the course of time.
In the java.io
package, all input is done through subclasses of the abstract class InputStream
, and all output is done through subclasses of the abstract class OutputStream
. The one exception to this rule is the class RandomAccessFile
, which handles files that allow random access and perhaps intermixed reading and writing of the file.
For an input stream, the source of data might be a file, a String
, an array of bytes, or bytes written to an output stream (typically by another thread). There are also "filter input streams" that take data from another input stream and transform or augment the data before delivering it as input. For example, a LineNumberInputStream
passes bytes through verbatim but counts line terminators as they are read.
For an output stream, the sink of data might be a file, an array of bytes, or a buffer to be read as an input stream (typically by another thread). There are also "filter output streams" that transform or augment data before writing it to some other output stream.
An instance of class File
represents a path name (a string) that might identify a particular file within a file system. Certain operations on the file system, such as renaming and deleting files, are done by this class rather than through streams.
An instance of class FileDescriptor
represents an abstract indication of a particular file within a file system; such file descriptors are created internally by the Java I/O system.
There are two interfaces, DataInput
and DataOutput
, that support the transfer of data other than bytes or characters, such as long integers, floating-point numbers and strings. The class DataInputStream
implements DataInput
; the class DataOutputStream
implements DataOutput
; and RandomAccessFile
implements both DataInput
and DataOutput
.
The class StreamTokenizer
provides some simple support for parsing bytes or characters from an input stream into tokens such as identifiers, numbers, and strings, optionally ignoring comments and optionally recognizing or ignoring line terminators.
The hierarchy of classes defined in package java.io
is as follows. (Classes whose names are shown here in boldface
are in package java.io
; the others are in package java.lang
and are shown here to clarify subclass relationships.)
Object§20.1
interfaceDataInput §22.1
interfaceDataOutput §22.2
InputStream §22.3
FileInputStream §22.4
PipedInputStream §22.5
ByteArrayInputStream §22.6
StringBufferInputStream §22.7
SequenceInputStream §22.8
FilterInputStream §22.9
BufferedInputStream §22.10
DataInputStream §22.11
LineNumberInputStream §22.12
PushBackInputStream §22.13
StreamTokenizer §22.14
OutputStream §22.15
FileOutputStream §22.16
PipedOutputStream §22.17
ByteArrayOutputStream §22.18
FilterOutputStream §22.19
BufferedOutputStream §22.20
DataOutputStream §22.21
PrintStream §22.22
RandomAccessFile §22.23
File §22.24
interfaceFileNameFilter §22.25
FileDescriptor §22.26
Throwable §20.22 Exception §20.22IOException §22.27
EOFException §22.28
FileNotFoundException §22.29
InterruptedIOException §22.30
UTFDataFormatException §22.31
java.io.DataInput
DataInput
interface provides for reading bytes from a binary stream and
reconstructing from them data in any of the Java primitive types. There is also a
facility for reconstructing a String
from data in Java modified UTF-8 format.
The DataOutput
interface (§22.2) supports the creation of binary output data suitable for reading back in through the DataInput
interface.
The DataInput
interface is implemented by classes DataInputStream
(§22.11) and RandomAccessFile
(§22.23).
public interfaceIt is generally true of all the reading routines in this interface that if end of file is reached before the desired number of bytes has been read, anDataInput
{ public voidreadFully
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public voidreadFully
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public intskipBytes
(int n) throws IOException; public booleanreadBoolean
() throws IOException; public bytereadByte
() throws IOException; public intreadUnsignedByte
() throws IOException; public shortreadShort
() throws IOException; public intreadUnsignedShort
() throws IOException; public charreadChar
() throws IOException; public intreadInt
() throws IOException; public longreadLong
() throws IOException; public floatreadFloat
() throws IOException; public doublereadDouble
() throws IOException; public StringreadLine
() throws IOException; public StringreadUTF
() throws IOException; }
EOFException
(which is a kind of IOException
) is thrown. If any byte cannot be read for any reason other than end of file, an IOException
other than EOFException
is thrown. In particular, an IOException
may be thrown if the input stream has been closed (§22.3.6).22.1.1 public void
readFully
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
;
The general contract of readFully(b)
is that it reads some bytes from an input
stream and stores them into the buffer array b
. The number of bytes read is equal
to the length of b
.
This method blocks until one of the following conditions occurs:
b.length
bytes of input data are available, in which case a normal return is made.
EOFException
is thrown.
IOException
other than EOFException
is thrown.
b
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
If b.length
is zero, then no bytes are read. Otherwise, the first byte read is stored into element b[0]
, the next one into b[1]
, and so on.
If an exception is thrown from this method, then it may be that some but not all bytes of b
have been updated with data from the input stream.
22.1.2 public void
readFully
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
,
IndexOutOfBoundsException
The general contract of readFully(b, off, len)
is that it reads len
bytes from
an input stream.
This method blocks until one of the following conditions occurs:
len
bytes of input data are available, in which case a normal return is made.
EOFException
is thrown.
IOException
other than EOFException
is thrown.
b
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
If off
is negative, or len
is negative, or off+len
is greater than the length of the array b
, then an IndexOutOfBoundsException
is thrown.
If len
is zero, then no bytes are read. Otherwise, the first byte read is stored into element b[off]
, the next one into b[off+1]
, and so on. The number of bytes read is, at most, equal to len
.
If an exception is thrown from this method, then it may be that some but not all bytes of b
in positions off
through off+len-1
have been updated with data from the input stream.
22.1.3 public int
skipBytes
(int n) throws IOException
The general contract of skipBytes
is that it makes an attempt to skip over n
bytes
of data from the input stream, discarding the skipped bytes. However, it may skip
over some smaller number of bytes, possibly zero. This may result from any of a
number of conditions; reaching end of file before n
bytes have been skipped is
only one possibility. This method never throws an EOFException
. The actual
number of bytes skipped is returned.
22.1.4 public boolean
readBoolean
() throws IOException;
The general contract of readBoolean
is that it reads one input byte and returns
true
if that byte is nonzero, false
if that byte is zero.
This method is suitable for reading the byte written by the writeBoolean
method of interface DataOutput
(§22.2.4).
22.1.5 public byte
readByte
() throws IOException
The general contract of readByte
is that it reads and returns one input byte. The
byte is treated as a signed value in the range -128
through 127
, inclusive.
This method is suitable for reading the byte written by the writeByte
method of interface DataOutput
(§22.2.5).
22.1.6 public int
readUnsignedByte
() throws IOException
The general contract of readUnsignedByte
is that it reads one input byte, zero-
extends it to type int
, and returns the result, which is therefore in the range 0
through 255
.
This method is suitable for reading the byte written by the writeByte
method of interface DataOutput
(§22.2.5) if the argument to writeByte
was intended to be a value in the range 0
through 255
.
22.1.7 public short
readShort
() throws IOException
The general contract of readShort
is that it reads two input bytes and returns a
short
value. Let a
be the first byte read and b
be the second byte. The value
returned is:
(short)((a << 8) | (b & 0xff))
This method is suitable for reading the bytes written by the writeShort
method of interface DataOutput
(§22.2.6).22.1.8 public int
readUnsignedShort
() throws IOException
The general contract of readUnsignedShort
is that it reads two input bytes and
returns an int
value in the range 0
through 65535
. Let a
be the first byte read and
b
be the second byte. The value returned is:
(((a & 0xff) << 8) | (b & 0xff))
This method is suitable for reading the bytes written by the writeShort
method of interface DataOutput
(§22.2.6) if the argument to writeShort
was intended to be a value in the range 0
through 65535
.22.1.9 public char
readChar
() throws IOException
The general contract of readChar
is that it reads two input bytes and returns a
char
value. Let a
be the first byte read and b
be the second byte. The value
returned is:
(char)((a << 8) | (b & 0xff))
This method is suitable for reading bytes written by the writeChar
method of interface DataOutput
(§22.2.7).22.1.10 public int
readInt
() throws IOException
The general contract of readInt
is that it reads four input bytes and returns an
int
value. Let a
be the first byte read, b
be the second byte, c
be the third byte,
and d
be the fourth byte. The value returned is:
This method is suitable for reading bytes written by the(((a & 0xff) << 24) | ((b & 0xff) << 16) |
((c & 0xff) << 8) | (d & 0xff))
writeInt
method of interface DataOutput
(§22.2.8).22.1.11 public long
readLong
() throws IOException
The general contract of readLong
is that it reads eight input bytes and returns a
long
value. Let a
be the first byte read, b
be the second byte, c
be the third byte, d
be the fourth byte, e
be the fifth byte, f
be the sixth byte, g
be the seventh byte,
and h
be the eighth byte. The value returned is:
This method is suitable for reading bytes written by the(((long)(a & 0xff) << 56) |
((long)(b & 0xff) << 48) |
((long)(c & 0xff) << 40) |
((long)(d & 0xff) << 32) |
((long)(e & 0xff) << 24) |
((long)(f & 0xff) << 16) |
((long)(g & 0xff) << 8) |
((long)(h & 0xff)))
writeLong
method of interface DataOutput
(§22.2.9).22.1.12 public float
readFloat
() throws IOException
The general contract of readFloat
is that it reads four input bytes and returns a
float
value. It does this by first constructing an int
value in exactly the manner
of the readInt
method (§22.1.10), then converting this int
value to a float
in
exactly the manner of the method Float.intBitsToFloat
(§20.9.23).
This method is suitable for reading bytes written by the writeFloat
method of interface DataOutput
(§22.2.10).
22.1.13 public double
readDouble
() throws IOException
The general contract of readDouble
is that it reads eight input bytes and returns a
double
value. It does this by first constructing a long
value in exactly the manner
of the readlong
method (§22.1.11), then converting this long
value to a double
in exactly the manner of the method Double.longBitsToDouble
(§20.10.22).
This method is suitable for reading bytes written by the writeDouble
method of interface DataOutput
(§22.2.11).
22.1.14 public String
readLine
() throws IOException
The general contract of readLine
is that it reads successive bytes, converting
each byte separately into a character, until it encounters a line terminator or end of
file; the characters read are then returned as a String
. Note that because this
method processes bytes, it does not support input of the full Unicode character set.
If end of file is encountered before even one byte can be read, then null
is returned. Otherwise, each byte that is read is converted to type char
by zero-extension. If the character '\n'
is encountered, it is discarded and reading ceases. If the character '\r'
is encountered, it is discarded and, if the following byte converts to the character '\n'
, then that is discarded also; reading then ceases. If end of file is encountered before either of the characters '\n'
and '\r'
is encountered, reading ceases. Once reading has ceased, a String
is returned that contains all the characters read and not discarded, taken in order. Note that every character in this string will have a value less than \u0100
, that is, (char)256
.
22.1.15 public String
readUTF
() throws IOException
The general contract of readUTF
is that it reads a representation of a Unicode
character string encoded in Java modified UTF-8 format; this string of characters
is then returned as a String
.
First, two bytes are read and used to construct an unsigned 16-bit integer in exactly the manner of the readUnsignedShort
method (§22.1.8). This integer value is called the UTF length and specifies the number of additional bytes to be read. These bytes are then converted to characters by considering them in groups. The length of each group is computed from the value of the first byte of the group. The byte following a group, if any, is the first byte of the next group.
If the first byte of a group matches the bit pattern 0xxxxxxx
(where x
means "may be 0
or 1
"), then the group consists of just that byte. The byte is zero-extended to form a character.
If the first byte of a group matches the bit pattern 110xxxxx
, then the group consists of that byte a
and a second byte b
. If there is no byte b
(because byte a
was the last of the bytes to be read), or if byte b
does not match the bit pattern 10xxxxxx
, then a UTFDataFormatException
is thrown. Otherwise, the group is converted to the character:
(char)(((a & 0x1F) << 6) | (b & 0x3F))
If the first byte of a group matches the bit pattern 1110xxxx
, then the group consists of that byte a
and two more bytes b
and c
. If there is no byte c
(because byte a
was one of the last two of the bytes to be read), or either byte b
or byte c
does not match the bit pattern 10xxxxxx
, then a UTFDataFormatException
is thrown. Otherwise, the group is converted to the character:
(char)(((a & 0x0F) << 12) | ((b & 0x3F) << 6) | (c & 0x3F))
If the first byte of a group matches the pattern 1111xxxx
or the pattern 10xxxxxx
, then a UTFDataFormatException
is thrown.
If end of file is encountered at any time during this entire process, then an EOFException
is thrown.
After every group has been converted to a character by this process, the characters are gathered, in the same order in which their corresponding groups were read from the input stream, to form a String
, which is returned.
The writeUTF
method of interface DataOutput
(§22.2.14) may be used to write data that is suitable for reading by this method.
java.io.DataOutput
DataOutput
interface provides for converting data from any of the Java primitive types to a series of bytes and writing these bytes to a binary stream. There is
also a facility for converting a String
into Java modified UTF-8 format and writing the resulting series of bytes.
The DataInput
interface (§22.1) can be used to read in and reconstruct Java data from the binary output data produced by the DataOutput
interface.
The DataOutput
interface is implemented by classes DataOutputStream
(§22.21) and RandomAccessFile
(§22.23).
public interfaceFor all the methods in this interface that write bytes, it is generally true that if a byte cannot be written for any reason, anDataOutput
{ public voidwrite
(int b) throws IOException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public voidwriteBoolean
(boolean v) throws IOException; public voidwriteByte
(int v) throws IOException; public voidwriteShort
(int v) throws IOException; public voidwriteChar
(int v) throws IOException; public voidwriteInt
(int v) throws IOException; public voidwriteLong
(long v) throws IOException; public voidwriteFloat
(float v) throws IOException; public voidwriteDouble
(double v) throws IOException; public voidwriteBytes
(String s) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public voidwriteChars
(String s) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public voidwriteUTF
(String s) throws IOException, NullPointerException; }
IOException
is thrown.22.2.1 public void
write
(int b) throws IOException
The general contract for write
is that one byte is written to the output stream. The
byte to be written is the eight low-order bits of the argument b
. The 24 high-order
bits of b
are ignored.
22.2.2 public void
write
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
The general contract for write
is that all the bytes in array b
are written, in order,
to the output stream.
If b
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
If b.length
is zero, then no bytes are written. Otherwise, the byte b[0]
is written first, then b[1]
, and so on; the last byte written is b[b.length-1]
.
22.2.3 public void
write
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
The general contract for write
is that len
bytes from array b
are written, in order,
to the output stream.
If b
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
If off
is negative, or len
is negative, or off+len
is greater than the length of the array b
, then an IndexOutOfBoundsException
is thrown.
If len
is zero, then no bytes are written. Otherwise, the byte b[off]
is written first, then b[off+1]
, and so on; the last byte written is b[off+len-1]
.
22.2.4 public void
writeBoolean
(boolean v) throws IOException
The general contract for writeBoolean
is that one byte is written to the output
stream. If the argument v
is true
, the value (byte)1
is written; if v
is false
, the
value (byte)0
is written.
The byte written by this method may be read by the readBoolean
method of interface DataInput
(§22.1.4), which will then return a boolean
equal to v
.
22.2.5 public void
writeByte
(int v) throws IOException
The general contract for writeByte
is that one byte is written to the output stream
to represent the value of the argument. The byte to be written is the eight low-
order bits of the argument b
. The 24 high-order bits of b
are ignored. (This means
that writeByte
does exactly the same thing as write
for an integer argument.)
The byte written by this method may be read by the readByte
method of interface DataInput
(§22.1.5), which will then return a byte
equal to (byte)v
.
22.2.6 public void
writeShort
(int v) throws IOException
The general contract for writeShort
is that two bytes are written to the output
stream to represent the value of the argument. The byte values to be written, in the
order shown, are:
(byte)(0xff & (v >> 8)) (byte)(0xff & v)The bytes written by this method may be read by the
readShort
method of interface DataInput
(§22.1.7), which will then return a short
equal to (short)v
.22.2.7 public void
writeChar
(int v) throws IOException
The general contract for writeChar
is that two bytes are written to the output
stream to represent the value of the argument. The byte values to be written, in the
order shown, are:
(byte)(0xff & (v >> 8)) (byte)(0xff & v)The bytes written by this method may be read by the
readChar
method of interface DataInput
(§22.1.9), which will then return a char
equal to (char)v
.22.2.8 public void
writeInt
(int v) throws IOException
The general contract for writeInt
is that four bytes are written to the output
stream to represent the value of the argument. The byte values to be written, in the
order shown, are:
(byte)(0xff & (v >> 24)) (byte)(0xff & (v >> 16)) (byte)(0xff & (v >> 8)) (byte)(0xff & v)The bytes written by this method may be read by the
readInt
method of interface DataInput
(§22.1.10), which will then return an int
equal to v
.22.2.9 public void
writeLong
(long v) throws IOException
The general contract for writeLong
is that four bytes are written to the output
stream to represent the value of the argument. The byte values to be written, in the
order shown, are:
(byte)(0xff & (v >> 56)) (byte)(0xff & (v >> 48)) (byte)(0xff & (v >> 40)) (byte)(0xff & (v >> 32)) (byte)(0xff & (v >> 24)) (byte)(0xff & (v >> 16)) (byte)(0xff & (v >> 8)) (byte)(0xff & v)The bytes written by this method may be read by the
readLong
method of interface DataInput
(§22.1.11), which will then return a long
equal to v
.22.2.10 public void
writeFloat
(float v) throws IOException
The general contract for writeFloat
is that four bytes are written to the output
stream to represent the value of the argument. It does this as if it first converts this
float
value to an int
in exactly the manner of the Float.floatToIntBits
method (§20.9.22) and then writes the int
value in exactly the manner of the
writeInt
method (§22.2.8).
The bytes written by this method may be read by the readFloat
method of interface DataInput
(§22.1.12), which will then return a float
equal to v
.
22.2.11 public void
writeDouble
(double v) throws IOException
The general contract for writeDouble
is that eight bytes are written to the output
stream to represent the value of the argument. It does this as if it first converts this
double
value to a long
in exactly the manner of the Double.doubleToLongBits
method (§20.10.21) and then writes the long
value in exactly the manner of the
writeLong
method (§22.2.9).
The bytes written by this method may be read by the readDouble
method of interface DataInput
(§22.1.13), which will then return a double
equal to v
.
22.2.12 public void
writeBytes
(String s)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
The general contract for writeBytes
is that for every character in the string s
,
taken in order, one byte is written to the output stream.
If s
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
If s.length
is zero, then no bytes are written. Otherwise, the character s[0]
is written first, then s[1]
, and so on; the last character written is s[s.length-1]
. For each character, one byte is written, the low-order byte, in exactly the manner of the writeByte
method (§22.2.5). The high-order eight bits of each character in the string are ignored.
22.2.13 public void
writeChars
(String s)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
The general contract for writeChars
is that every character in the string s
is written, in order, to the output stream, two bytes per character.
If s
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
If s.length
is zero, then no characters are written. Otherwise, the character s[0]
is written first, then s[1]
, and so on; the last character written is s[s.length-1]
. For each character, two bytes are actually written, high-order byte first, in exactly the manner of the writeChar
method (§22.2.7).
22.2.14 public void
writeUTF
(String s)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
The general contract for writeUTF
is that two bytes of length information are
written to the output stream, followed by the Java modified UTF representation of
every character in the string s
.
If s
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
Each character in the string s
is converted to a group of one, two, or three bytes, depending on the value of the character.
If a character c
is in the range '\u0001'
through '\u007f'
, it is represented by one byte:
(byte)cIf a character
c
is '\u0000'
or is in the range '\u0080'
through '\u07ff'
, then it is represented by two bytes, to be written in the order shown:
(byte)(0xc0 | (0x1f & (c >> 6))) (byte)(0x80 | (0x3f & c))If a character
c
is in the range '\u0800'
through '\uffff'
, then it is represented by three bytes, to be written in the order shown:
(byte)(0xc0 | (0x0f & (c >> 12))) (byte)(0x80 | (0x3f & (c >> 6))) (byte)(0x80 | (0x3f & c))First, the total number of bytes needed to represent all the characters of
s
is calculated. If this number is larger than 65535
, then a UTFDataFormatError
is thrown. Otherwise, this length is written to the output stream in exactly the manner of the writeShort
method (§22.2.6); after this, the one-, two-, or three-byte representation of each character in the string s
is written.
The bytes written by this method may be read by the readUTF
method of interface DataInput
(§22.1.15), which will then return a String
equal to s
.
java.io.InputStream
public abstract classInputStream
{ public abstract intread
() throws IOException; public intread
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public intread
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public longskip
(long n) throws IOException; public intavailable
() throws IOException; public voidclose
() throws IOException; public voidmark
(int readlimit); public voidreset
() throws IOException; public booleanmarkSupported
(); }
22.3.1 public abstract int
read
() throws IOException
The general contract of read
is that it reads one byte from the input stream. The
byte is returned as an integer in the range 0
to 255
(0x00
-0xff
). If no byte is
available because the stream is at end of file, the value -1
is returned.
This method blocks until input data is available, end of file is detected, or an exception is thrown.
If the byte cannot be read for any reason other than end of file, an IOException
is thrown. In particular, an IOException
is thrown if the input stream has been closed (§22.3.6).
22.3.2 public int
read
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
The general contract of read(b)
is that it reads some number of bytes from the
input stream and stores them into the buffer array b
. The number of bytes actually
read is returned as an integer.
This method blocks until input data is available, end of file is detected, or an exception is thrown.
If b
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
If the length of b
is zero, then no bytes are read and 0
is returned; otherwise, there is an attempt to read at least one byte. If no byte is available because the stream is at end of file, the value -1
is returned; otherwise, at least one byte is read and stored into b
.
The first byte read is stored into element b[0]
, the next one into b[1]
, and so on. The number of bytes read is, at most, equal to the length of b
. Let k be the number of bytes actually read; these bytes will be stored in elements b[0]
through b[
k-1]
, leaving elements b[
k]
through b[b.length-1]
unaffected.
If the first byte cannot be read for any reason other than end of file, then an IOException
is thrown. In particular, an IOException
is thrown if the input stream has been closed (§22.15.5).
The read(b)
method for class InputStream
has the same effect as:
read(b, 0, b.length)
22.3.3 public int
read
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
,
IndexOutOfBoundsException
The general contract of read(b, off, len)
is that it reads some number of
bytes from the input stream and stores them into the buffer array b
. An attempt is
made to read as many as len
bytes, but a smaller number may be read, possibly
zero. The number of bytes actually read is returned as an integer.
This method blocks until input data is available, end of file is detected, or an exception is thrown.
If b
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
If off
is negative, or len
is negative, or off+len
is greater than the length of the array b
, then an IndexOutOfBoundsException
is thrown.
If len
is zero, then no bytes are read and 0
is returned; otherwise, there is an attempt to read at least one byte. If no byte is available because the stream is at end of file, the value -1
is returned; otherwise, at least one byte is read and stored into b
.
The first byte read is stored into element b[off]
, the next one into b[off+1]
, and so on. The number of bytes read is, at most, equal to len
. Let k be the number of bytes actually read; these bytes will be stored in elements b[off]
through b[off+
k-1]
, leaving elements b[off+
k]
through b[off+len-1]
unaffected.
In every case, elements b[0]
through b[off]
and elements b[off+len]
through b[b.length-1]
are unaffected.
If the first byte cannot be read for any reason other than end of file, then an IOException
is thrown. In particular, an IOException
is thrown if the input stream has been closed (§22.15.5).
The read(b,
off,
len)
method for class InputStream
simple calls the method read()
repeatedly. If the first such call results in an IOException
, that exception is returned from the call to the read(b,
off,
len)
method. If any subsequent call to read()
results in a IOException
, the exception is caught and treated as if it were end of file; the bytes read up to that point are stored into b
and the number of bytes read before the exception occurred is returned.
22.3.4 public long
skip
(long n) throws IOException
The general contract of skip
is that it makes an attempt to skip over n
bytes of
data from the input stream, discarding the skipped bytes. However, it may skip
over some smaller number of bytes, possibly zero. This may result from any of a
number of conditions; reaching end of file before n
bytes have been skipped is
only one possibility. The actual number of bytes skipped is returned.
22.3.5 public int
available
() throws IOException
The general contract of available
is that it returns an integer k
; the next caller of
a method for this input stream, which might be the same thread or another thread,
can then expect to be able to read or skip up to k
bytes without blocking (waiting
for input data to arrive).
The available
method for class InputStream
always returns 0
.
22.3.6 public int
close
() throws IOException
The general contract of close
is that it closes the input stream. A closed stream
cannot perform input operations and cannot be reopened.
The close
method for class InputStream
does nothing and simply returns.
22.3.7 public void
mark
(int readlimit)
The general contract of mark
is that, if the method markSupported
returns true
,
the stream somehow remembers all the bytes read after the call to mark
and stands
ready to supply those same bytes again if and whenever the method reset
is
called. However, the stream is not required to remember any data at all if more
than readlimit
bytes are read from the stream before reset
is called.
The mark
method for class InputStream
does nothing.
22.3.8 public void
reset
() throws IOException
The general contract of reset
is:
markSupported
returns true
, then:
mark
has not been called since the stream was created, or the number of bytes read from the stream since mark
was last called is larger than the argument to mark
at that last call, then an IOException
might be thrown.
IOException
is not thrown, then the stream is reset to a state such that all the bytes read since the most recent call to mark
(or since the start of the file, if mark
has not been called) will be resupplied to subsequent callers of the read
method, followed by any bytes that otherwise would have been the next input data as of the time of the call to reset
.
markSupported
returns false
, then:
reset
may throw an IOException
.
IOException
is not thrown, then the stream is reset to a fixed state that depends on the particular type of the input stream and how it was created. The bytes that will be supplied to subsequent callers of the read
method depend on the particular type of the input stream.
reset
for class InputStream
always throws an IOException
.22.3.9 public boolean
markSupported
()
The general contract of markSupported
is that if it returns true
, then the stream
supports the mark
(§22.3.7) and reset
(§22.3.8) operations. For any given
instance of InputStream
, this method should consistently return the same truth
value whenever it is called.
The markSupported
method for class InputStream
returns false
.
java.io.FileInputStream
public classFileInputStream
extends InputStream { publicFileInputStream
(String path) throws SecurityException, FileNotFoundException; publicFileInputStream
(File file) throws SecurityException, FileNotFoundException; publicFileInputStream
(FileDescriptor fdObj) throws SecurityException; public native intread
() throws IOException; public intread
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public intread
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public native longskip
(long n) throws IOException; public native intavailable
() throws IOException; public native voidclose
() throws IOException; public final FileDescriptorgetFD
() throws IOException; protected voidfinalize
() throws IOException; }
22.4.1 public
FileInputStream
(String path)
throws SecurityException, FileNotFoundException
This constructor initializes a newly created FileInputStream
by opening a connection to an actual file, the file named by the path name path
in the file system.
A new FileDescriptor
object is created to represent this file connection.
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called with the path
argument as its argument.
If the actual file cannot be opened, a FileNotFoundException
is thrown.
22.4.2 public
FileInputStream
(File file)
throws SecurityException, FileNotFoundException
This constructor initializes a newly created FileInputStream
by opening a connection to an actual file, the file named by the File
object file
in the file system.
A new FileDescriptor
object is created to represent this file connection.
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called with the path represented by the file
argument as its argument.
If the actual file cannot be opened, a FileNotFoundException
is thrown.
22.4.3 public
FileInputStream
(FileDescriptor fdObj)
throws SecurityException
This constructor initializes a newly created FileInputStream
by using the file
descriptor fdObj
, which represents an existing connection to an actual file in the
file system.
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.18) is called with the file descriptor fdObj
as its argument.
22.4.4 public final FileDescriptor
getFD
() throws IOException
This method returns the FileDescriptor
object (§22.26) that represents the connection to the actual file in the file system being used by this FileInputStream
.
22.4.5 public int
read
() throws IOException;
The byte for this operation is read from the actual file with which this file input stream is connected.
Implements the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.1).
22.4.6 public int
read
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
Bytes for this operation are read from the actual file with which this file input stream is connected.
Overrides the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.2).
22.4.7 public int
read
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
Bytes for this operation are read from the actual file with which this file input stream is connected.
Overrides the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.3).
22.4.8 public long
skip
(long n) throws IOException
Bytes for this operation are read from the actual file with which this file input stream is connected.
Overrides the skip
method of InputStream
(§22.3.4).
22.4.9 public int
available
() throws IOException
Overrides the available
method of InputStream
(§22.3.5).
22.4.10 public void
close
() throws IOException
This file input stream is closed and may no longer be used for reading bytes.
Overrides the close
method of InputStream
(§22.3.6).
22.4.11 protected void
finalize
() throws IOException
A FileInputStream
uses finalization to clean up the connection to the actual
file.
java.io.PipedInputStream
PipedInputStream
object by one thread
and data is written to the corresponding PipedOutputStream
(§22.17) by some
other thread. Attempting to use both objects from a single thread is not recommended, as it may deadlock the thread. The piped input stream contains a buffer,
decoupling read operations from write operations, within limits.
public classPipedInputStream
extends InputStream { publicPipedInputStream
(PipedOutputStream src) throws IOException; publicPipedInputStream
(); public voidconnect
(PipedOutputStream src) throws IOException; public intread
() throws IOException; public intread
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public voidclose
() throws IOException; }
22.5.1 public
PipedInputStream
(PipedOutputStream src)
throws IOException
This constructor initializes a newly created PipedInputStream
so that it is connected to the piped output stream src
. Data bytes written to src
will then be
available as input from this stream.
22.5.2 public
PipedInputStream
()
This constructor initializes a newly created PipedInputStream
so that it is not
yet connected. It must be connected to a PipedOutputStream
before being used.
22.5.3 public void
connect
(PipedOutputStream src)
throws IOException
The connect
method causes this piped input stream to be connected to the piped
output stream src
. If this object is already connected to some other piped output
stream, an IOException
is thrown.
If src
is an unconnected piped output stream and snk
is an unconnected piped input stream, they may be connected by either the call:
snk.connect(src)or the call:
src.connect(snk)The two calls have the same effect.
22.5.4 public int
read
() throws IOException
If a thread was providing data bytes to the connected piped output stream, but the
thread is no longer alive, then an IOException
is thrown.
Implements the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.1).
22.5.5 public int
read
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
If a thread was providing data bytes to the connected piped output stream, but the
thread is no longer alive, then an IOException
is thrown.
Overrides the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.3).
22.5.6 public void
close
() throws IOException
This piped input stream is closed and may no longer be used for reading bytes.
Overrides the close
method of InputStream
(§22.3.6).
java.io.ByteArrayInputStream
ByteArrayInputStream
contains an internal buffer that contains bytes that
may be read from the stream. An internal counter keeps track of the next byte to
be supplied by the read
method. See also StringBufferInputStream
(§22.7).
public classByteArrayInputStream
extends InputStream { protected byte[]buf
; protected intpos
; protected intcount
; publicByteArrayInputStream
(byte[] buf); publicByteArrayInputStream
(byte[] buf, int offset, int length); public intread
() throws NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public intread
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public longskip
(long n); public intavailable
(); public voidreset
(); }
22.6.1 protected byte[]
buf
;
An array of bytes that was provided by the creator of the stream. Elements buf[0]
through buf[count-1]
are the only bytes that can ever be read from the stream;
element buf[pos]
is the next byte to be read.
22.6.2 protected int
pos
;
This value should always be nonnegative and not larger than the value of count
.
The next byte to be read from this stream will be buf[pos]
.
22.6.3 protected int
count
;
This value should always be nonnegative and not larger than the length of buf
. It
is one greater than the position of the last byte within buf
that can ever be read
from this stream.
22.6.4 public
ByteArrayInputStream
(byte[] buf)
This constructor initializes a newly created ByteArrayInputStream
so that it
uses buf
as its buffer array. The initial value of pos
is 0
and the initial value of
count
is the length of buf
.
22.6.5 public
ByteArrayInputStream
(byte[] buf,
int offset, int length)
This constructor initializes a newly created ByteArrayInputStream
so that it
uses buf
as its buffer array. The initial value of pos
is offset
and the initial value
of count
is offset+len
.
Note that if bytes are simply read from the resulting input stream, elements buf[pos]
through buf[pos+len-1]
will be read; however, if a reset
operation (§22.6.10) is performed, then bytes buf[0]
through buf[pos-1]
will then become available for input.
22.6.6 public int
read
()
throws NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
If pos
equals count
, then -1
is returned to indicate end of file. Otherwise, the
value buf[pos]&0xff
is returned; just before the return, pos
is incremented by 1
.
Implements the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.1).
22.6.7 public int
read
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
If pos
equals count
, then -1
is returned to indicate end of file. Otherwise, the
number k
of bytes read is equal to the smaller of len
and count-pos
. If k
is positive, then bytes buf[pos]
through buf[pos+k-1]
are copied into b[off]
through b[off+k-1]
in the manner performed by System.arraycopy
(§20.18.16). The value k
is added into pos
and k
is returned.
Overrides the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.3).
22.6.8 public long
skip
(long n)
The actual number k
of bytes to be skipped is equal to the smaller of n
and
count-pos
. The value k
is added into pos
and k
is returned.
Overrides the skip
method of InputStream
(§22.3.4).
22.6.9 public int
available
()
The quantity count-pos
is returned.
Overrides the available
method of InputStream
(§22.3.5).
22.6.10 public void
reset
()
Overrides the reset
method of InputStream
(§22.3.8).
java.io.StringBufferInputStream
StringBufferInputStream
contains an internal buffer that contains bytes that
may be read from the stream. An internal counter keeps track of the next byte to
be supplied by the read
method. See also ByteArrayInputStream
(§22.6).
public classNote that bytes read from aStringBufferInputStream
extends InputStream { protected Stringbuffer
; protected intpos
; protected intcount
; publicStringBufferInputStream
(String s) throws NullPointerException; public intread
(); public intread
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public longskip
(long n); public intavailable
(); public voidreset
(); }
StringBufferInputStream
are the low-order eight bits of each character in the string; the high-order eight bits of each character are ignored.22.7.1 protected String
buffer
;
A String
that was provided by the creator of the stream. Elements buffer[0]
through buffer[count-1]
are the only bytes that can ever be read from this
stream; element buffer[pos]
is the next byte to be read.
22.7.2 protected int
pos
;
This value should always be nonnegative and not larger than the value of count
.
The next byte to be read from this stream will be buffer[pos]
.
22.7.3 protected int
count
;
This value equals the length of buffer
. It is the number of bytes of data in
buffer
that can ever be read from this stream.
22.7.4 public
StringBufferInputStream
(String s)
throws NullPointerException
This constructor initializes a newly created StringBufferInputStream
so that it
uses s
as its buffer array. The initial value of pos
is 0
and the initial value of
count
is the length of buffer
.
22.7.5 public int
read
()
If pos
equals count
, then -1
is returned to indicate end of file. Otherwise, the
value buffer[pos]&0xff
is returned; just before the return, 1
is added to pos
.
Implements the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.1).
22.7.6 public int
read
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
If pos
equals count
, then -1
is returned to indicate end of file. Otherwise, the
number k
of bytes read is equal to the smaller of len
and count-pos
. If k
is positive, then bytes buffer[pos]
through buffer[pos+k-1]
are copied into b[off]
through b[off+k-1]
in the manner performed by System.arraycopy
(§20.18.16). The value k
is added into pos
and k
is returned.
Overrides the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.3).
22.7.7 public long
skip
(long n)
The actual number k
of bytes to be skipped is equal to the smaller of n
and
count-pos
. The value k
is added into pos
and k
is returned.
Overrides the skip
method of InputStream
(§22.3.4).
22.7.8 public int
available
()
The quantity count-pos
is returned.
Overrides the available
method of InputStream
(§22.3.5).
22.7.9 public void
reset
()
Overrides the reset
method of InputStream
(§22.3.8).
java.io.SequenceInputStream
SequenceInputStream
represents the logical concatenation of other input
streams. It starts out with an ordered collection of input streams and reads from
the first one until end of file is reached, whereupon it reads from the second one,
and so on, until end of file is reached on the last of the contained input streams.
public classSequenceInputStream
extends InputStream { publicSequenceInputStream
(Enumeration e); publicSequenceInputStream
(InputStream s1, InputStream s2); public intread
() throws IOException; public intread
(byte[] buf, int pos, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public voidclose
() throws IOException; }
22.8.1 public
SequenceInputStream
(Enumeration e)
This constructor initializes a newly created SequenceInputStream
by remembering the argument, which must be an Enumeration
(§21.1) that produces
objects whose run-time type is InputStream
(§22.3). The input streams that are
produced by the enumeration will be read, in order, to provide the bytes to be read
from this SequenceInputStream
. After each input stream from the enumeration
is exhausted, it is closed by calling its close
method.
22.8.2 public
SequenceInputStream
(InputStream s1,
InputStream s2)
This constructor initializes a newly created SequenceInputStream
by remembering the two arguments, which will be read in order, first s1
and then s2
, to provide the bytes to be read from this SequenceInputStream
.
22.8.3 public int
read
() throws IOException
Implements the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.1).
22.8.4 public int
read
(byte[] buf, int pos, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
Overrides the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.3).
22.8.5 public void
close
() throws IOException
This SequenceInputStream
is closed. A closed SequenceInputStream
cannot
perform input operations and cannot be reopened.
If this stream was created from an enumeration, all remaining elements are requested from the enumeration and closed before the close
method returns.
Overrides the close
method of InputStream
(§22.3.6).
java.io.FilterInputStream
FilterInputStream
contains some other input stream, which it uses as its
basic source of data, possibly transforming the data along the way or providing
additional functionality. The class FilterInputStream
itself simply overrides all
methods of InputStream
with versions that pass all requests to the contained
input stream. Subclasses of FilterInputStream
may further override some of
these methods and may also provide additional methods and fields.
public classFilterInputStream
extends InputStream { protected InputStreamin
; protectedFilterInputStream
(InputStream in); public intread
() throws IOException; public intread
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public intread
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public longskip
(long n) throws IOException; public intavailable
() throws IOException; public voidclose
() throws IOException; public voidmark
(int readlimit); public voidreset
() throws IOException; public booleanmarkSupported
(); }
22.9.1 protected InputStream
in
;
The input stream to be filtered.
22.9.2 protected
FilterInputStream
(InputStream in)
This constructor initializes a newly created FilterInputStream
by assigning the
argument in
to the field this.in
so as to remember it for later use.
22.9.3 public int
read
() throws IOException
This method simply performs in.read()
and returns the result.
Implements the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.1).
22.9.4 public int
read
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
This method simply performs the call read(b, 0, b.length)
and returns the
result. It is important that it does not do in.read(b)
instead; certain subclasses of
FilterInputStream
depend on the implementation strategy actually used.
Overrides the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.2).
22.9.5 public int
read
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
This method simply performs in.read(b, off, len)
and returns the result.
Overrides the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.3).
22.9.6 public long
skip
(long n) throws IOException
This method simply performs in.skip()
and returns the result.
Overrides the skip
method of InputStream
(§22.3.4).
22.9.7 public int
available
() throws IOException
This method simply performs in.available()
and returns the result.
Overrides the available
method of InputStream
(§22.3.5).
22.9.8 public void
close
() throws IOException
This method simply performs in.close()
.
Overrides the close
method of InputStream
(§22.3.6).
22.9.9 public void
mark
(int readlimit)
This method simply performs in.mark()
.
Overrides the mark
method of InputStream
(§22.3.7).
22.9.10 public void
reset
() throws IOException
This method simply performs in.reset()
.
Overrides the reset
method of InputStream
(§22.3.8).
22.9.11 public boolean
markSupported
()
This method simply performs in.markSupported()
and returns whatever value
is returned from that invocation.
Overrides the markSupported
method of InputStream
(§22.3.9).
java.io.BufferedInputStream
BufferedInputStream
adds functionality to another input stream-namely,
the ability to buffer the input and to support the mark
and reset
methods. When
the BufferedInputStream
is created, an internal buffer array is created. As bytes
from the stream are read or skipped, the internal buffer is refilled as necessary
from the contained input stream, many bytes at a time. The mark
operation
remembers a point in the input stream and the reset
operation causes all the
bytes read since the most recent mark
operation to be reread before new bytes are
taken from the contained input stream.
public classBufferedInputStream
extends FilterInputStream { protected byte[]buf
; protected intcount
= 0; protected intpos
= 0; protected intmarkpos
= -1; protected intmarklimit
= 0; publicBufferedInputStream
(InputStream in); publicBufferedInputStream
(InputStream in, int size); public intread
() throws IOException; public intread
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public intread
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public longskip
(long n) throws IOException; public intavailable
() throws IOException; public voidmark
(int readlimit); public voidreset
() throws IOException; public booleanmarkSupported
(); }
22.10.1 protected byte[]
buf
;
The internal buffer array. When necessary, it may be replaced by another array of a different size.
22.10.2 protected int
count
= 0;
This value is always in the range 0
through buf.length
; elements buf[0]
through buf[count-1]
contain buffered input data obtained from the underlying
input stream.
22.10.3 protected int
pos
= 0;
This value is always in the range 0
through count
. If it is less than count
, then
buf[pos]
is the next byte to be supplied as input; if it is equal to count
, then the
next read
or skip
operation will require more bytes to be read from the contained
input stream.
22.10.4 protected int
markpos
= -1;
This value is always in the range -1
through pos
. If there is no marked position in
the input stream, this field is -1
. If there is a marked position in the input stream,
then buf[markpos]
is the first byte to be supplied as input after a reset
operation. If markpos
is not -1
, then all bytes from positions buf[markpos]
through
buf[pos-1]
must remain in the buffer array (though they may be moved to
another place in the buffer array, with suitable adjustments to the values of count
,
pos
, and markpos
); they may not be discarded unless and until the difference
between pos
and markpos
exceeds marklimit
.
22.10.5 protected int
marklimit
;
Whenever the difference between pos
and markpos
exceeds marklimit
, then the
mark may be dropped by setting markpos
to -1
.
22.10.6 public
BufferedInputStream
(InputStream in)
This constructor initializes a newly created BufferedInputStream
by saving its
argument, the input stream in
, for later use. An internal buffer array is created and
stored in buf
.
22.10.7 public
BufferedInputStream
(InputStream in, int size)
This constructor initializes a newly created BufferedInputStream
by saving its
argument, the input stream in
, for later use. An internal buffer array of length
size
is created and stored in buf
.
22.10.8 public int
read
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.1).
Overrides the read
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.3).
22.10.9 public int
read
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
See the general contract of the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.2).
Overrides the read
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.4).
22.10.10 public int
read
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
See the general contract of the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.3).
Overrides the read
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.5).
22.10.11 public long
skip
(long n) throws IOException
See the general contract of the skip
method of InputStream
(§22.3.4).
Overrides the skip
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.6).
22.10.12 public int
available
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the available
method of InputStream
(§22.3.5).
Overrides the available
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.7).
22.10.13 public void
mark
(int readlimit)
The field marklimit
is set equal to the argument and markpos
is set equal to pos
Overrides the mark
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.9).
22.10.14 public void
reset
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the reset
method of InputStream
(§22.3.8).
If markpos
is -1
(no mark has been set or the mark has been invalidated), an IOException
is thrown. Otherwise, pos
is set equal to markpos
.
Overrides the reset
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.10).
22.10.15 public boolean
markSupported
()
This method returns true
(a BufferedInputStream
always supports mark
).
Overrides the markSupported
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.11).
java.io.DataInputStream
public classDataInputStream
extends FilterInputStream implements DataInput { publicDataInputStream
(InputStream in); public final voidreadFully
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public final voidreadFully
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public final intskipBytes
(int n) throws IOException; public final booleanreadBoolean
() throws IOException; public final bytereadByte
() throws IOException; public final intreadUnsignedByte
() throws IOException; public final shortreadShort
() throws IOException; public final intreadUnsignedShort
() throws IOException; public final charreadChar
() throws IOException; public final intreadInt
() throws IOException; public final longreadLong
() throws IOException; public final floatreadFloat
() throws IOException; public final doublereadDouble
() throws IOException; public final StringreadLine
() throws IOException; public final StringreadUTF
() throws IOException; public final static StringreadUTF
(DataInput in) throws IOException; }
22.11.1 public
DataInputStream
(InputStream in)
This constructor initializes a newly created DataInputStream
by saving its argument, the input stream in
, for later use.
22.11.2 public final void
readFully
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
See the general contract of the readFully
method of DataInput
(§22.1.1).
Bytes for this operation are read from the contained input stream.
22.11.3 public final void
readFully
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
See the general contract of the readFully
method of DataInput
(§22.1.2).
Bytes for this operation are read from the contained input stream.
22.11.4 public final int
skipBytes
(int n) throws IOException
See the general contract of the skipBytes
method of DataInput
(§22.1.3).
Bytes for this operation are read from the contained input stream.
22.11.5 public final boolean
readBoolean
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readBoolean
method of DataInput
(§22.1.4).
The byte for this operation is read from the contained input stream.
22.11.6 public final byte
readByte
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readByte
method of DataInput
(§22.1.5).
The byte for this operation is read from the contained input stream.
22.11.7 public final int
readUnsignedByte
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readUnsignedByte
method of DataInput
(§22.1.6).
The byte for this operation is read from the contained input stream.
22.11.8 public final short
readShort
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readShort
method of DataInput
(§22.1.7).
Bytes for this operation are read from the contained input stream.
22.11.9 public final int
readUnsignedShort
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readUnsignedShort
method of DataInput
(§22.1.8).
Bytes for this operation are read from the contained input stream.
22.11.10 public final char
readChar
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readChar
method of DataInput
(§22.1.9).
Bytes for this operation are read from the contained input stream.
22.11.11 public final int
readInt
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readInt
method of DataInput
(§22.1.10).
Bytes for this operation are read from the contained input stream.
22.11.12 public final long
readLong
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readLong
method of DataInput
(§22.1.11).
Bytes for this operation are read from the contained input stream.
22.11.13 public final float
readFloat
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readFloat
method of DataInput
(§22.1.12).
Bytes for this operation are read from the contained input stream.
22.11.14 public final double
readDouble
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readDouble
method of DataInput
(§22.1.13).
Bytes for this operation are read from the contained input stream.
22.11.15 public final String
readLine
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readLine
method of DataInput
(§22.1.14).
Bytes for this operation are read from the contained input stream.
22.11.16 public final String
readUTF
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readUTF
method of DataInput
(§22.1.15).
Bytes for this operation are read from the contained input stream.
22.11.17 public final static String
readUTF
(DataInput in)
throws IOException
The readUTF
method reads from the stream in
a representation of a Unicode
character string encoded in Java modified UTF-8 format; this string of characters
is then returned as a String
. The details of the modified UTF-8 representation are
exactly the same as for the readUTF
method of DataInput
(§22.1.15).
java.io.LineNumberInputStream
LineNumberInputStream
adds functionality to another input stream, namely
the ability to count lines. When the LineNumberInputStream
is created, the line
number counter is set to zero. As bytes from the stream are read or skipped, the
counter is incremented whenever a line terminator (\n
, \r
, or \r\n
) is encountered. Such line terminators are also converted to a single '\n'
character. The
method getLineNumber
returns the current value of the counter, and the method
setLineNumber
sets the counter to a given integer value. If the contained input
stream supports the mark
operation, then so does the LineNumberInputStream
;
the mark
operation remembers the line number counter and the reset
operation
sets the counter to the value remembered by the mark
operation.
public classLineNumberInputStream
extends FilterInputStream { publicLineNumberInputStream
(InputStream in); public intread
() throws IOException; public intread
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public intread
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public longskip
(long n) throws IOException; public intavailable
() throws IOException; public voidmark
(int readlimit); public voidreset
() throws IOException; public intgetLineNumber
(); public voidsetLineNumber
(int lineNumber); }
22.12.1 public
LineNumberInputStream
(InputStream in)
This constructor initializes a newly created LineNumberInputStream
by saving
its argument, the input stream in
, for later use.
22.12.2 public int
read
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.1).
As bytes are read from the contained input stream, line terminators are recognized and counted. For each line terminator recognized in the contained input stream, a single character '\n'
is returned.
Overrides the read
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.3).
22.12.3 public int
read
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
See the general contract of the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.2).
As bytes are read from the contained input stream, line terminators are recognized and counted. For each line terminator recognized in the contained input stream, a single character '\n'
is returned.
Overrides the read
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.4).
22.12.4 public int
read
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
See the general contract of the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.3).
As bytes are read from the contained input stream, line terminators are recognized and counted. For each line terminator recognized in the contained input stream, a single character '\n'
is returned.
Overrides the read
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.5).
22.12.5 public long
skip
(long n) throws IOException
See the general contract of the skip
method of InputStream
(§22.3.4).
As bytes are read from the contained input stream, line terminators are recognized and counted. Each line terminator recognized in the contained input stream is considered to be a single byte skipped, even if it is the sequence \r\n
.
Overrides the skip
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.6).
22.12.6 public int
available
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the available
method of InputStream
(§22.3.5).
Note that if the contained input stream is able to supply k input characters without blocking, the LineNumberInputStream
can guarantee only to provide characters without blocking, because the k characters from the contained input stream might consist of \r\n
pairs, which will be converted to just '\n'
characters.
Overrides the available
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.7).
22.12.7 public void
mark
(int readlimit)
See the general contract of the mark
method of InputStream
(§22.3.7).
Marking a point in the input stream remembers the current line number as it would be returned by getLineNumber
(§22.12.9).
Overrides the mark
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.9).
22.12.8 public void
reset
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the reset
method of InputStream
(§22.3.8).
Resetting the input stream to a previous point also resets the line number to the value it had at the marked point.
Overrides the reset
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.10).
22.12.9 public int
getLineNumber
()
The current line number is returned. This quantity depends on k, the number of line terminators encountered since the most recent occurrence of one of the following three kinds of events:
setLineNumber
method was most recent, let n be the argument that was given to setLineNumber
; then the current line number is .
reset
method was most recent, let m be the line number that had been remembered by mark
; then the current line number is .
LineNumberInputStream
was most recent (that is, neither of the other kinds of event have occurred), then the current line number is k.
0
as the characters of the first
line are read, and becomes 1
after the line terminator for the first line has been
read.
22.12.10 public void
setLineNumber
(int lineNumber)
The current line number is set equal to the argument.
java.io.PushbackInputStream
PushbackInputStream
adds functionality to another input stream, namely the
ability to "push back" or "unread" one byte. This is useful in situations where it is
convenient for a fragment of code to read an indefinite number of data bytes that
are delimited by a particular byte value; after reading the terminating byte, the
code fragment can "unread" it, so that the next read operation on the input stream
will reread the byte that was pushed back. For example, bytes representing the
characters constituting an identifier might be terminated by a byte representing an
operator character; a method whose job is to read just an identifier can read until it
sees the operator and then push the operator back to be re-read.
public classPushbackInputStream
extends FilterInputStream { protected intpushBack
= -1; publicPushbackInputStream
(InputStream in); public intread
() throws IOException; public intread
(byte[] bytes, int offset, int length) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public voidunread
(int ch) throws IOException; public intavailable
() throws IOException; public booleanmarkSupported
(); }
22.13.1 protected int
pushBack
= -1;
If this field has a nonnegative value, it is a byte that was pushed back. If this field
is -1
, there is currently no pushed-back byte.
22.13.2 public
PushbackInputStream
(InputStream in)
This constructor initializes a newly created PushbackInputStream
by saving its
argument, the input stream in
, for later use. Initially, there is no pushed-back byte
(the field pushBack
is initialized to -1
).
22.13.3 public int
read
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.1).
If pushBack
is not -1
, the value of pushBack
is returned and pushBack
is set to -1
. Otherwise, a byte is obtained from the contained input stream.
Overrides the read
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.3).
22.13.4 public int
read
(byte[] bytes, int offset, int length) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
See the general contract of the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.3).
If pushBack
is not -1
, it is used as an input byte (and pushBack
is set to -1
) before any bytes are read from the contained input stream.
Overrides the read
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.5).
22.13.5 public void
unread
(int b) throws IOException
If pushBack
is not -1
, an IOException
is thrown (it is not permitted to push back
more than one byte). Otherwise, the byte value b
is pushed back by assigning b
to
pushBack
.
22.13.6 public int
available
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the available
method of InputStream
(§22.3.1).
This method first calls the available
method of the contained input stream. If pushBack
is -1
, the result is returned; otherwise, the result plus 1
is returned.
Overrides the available
method of FilterInputStream
(§22.9.7).
22.13.7 public boolean
markSupported
()
This method returns false
(a PushbackInputStream
does not support mark
).
java.io.StreamTokenizer
StreamTokenizer
takes an input stream and parses it into "tokens," allowing
the tokens to be read one at a time. The parsing process is controlled by a table
and a number of flags that can be set to various states, allowing recognition of
identifiers, numbers, quoted strings, and comments in a standard style.
public classEach byte read from the input stream is regarded as a character in the rangeStreamTokenizer
{ public static final intTT_EOF
= -1; public static final intTT_EOL
= '\n'; public static final intTT_NUMBER
= -2; public static final intTT_WORD
= -3; public intttype
; public Stringsval
; public doublenval
; publicStreamTokenizer
(InputStream in); public voidresetSyntax
(); public voidwordChars
(int low, int hi); public voidwhitespaceChars
(int low, int hi); public voidordinaryChars
(int low, int hi); public voidordinaryChar
(int ch); public voidcommentChar
(int ch); public voidquoteChar
(int ch); public voidparseNumbers
(); public voideolIsSignificant
(boolean flag); public voidslashStarComments
(boolean flag); public voidslashSlashComments
(boolean flag); public voidlowerCaseMode
(boolean flag); public intnextToken
() throws IOException; public voidpushBack
(); public intlineno
(); public StringtoString
(); }
'\u0000'
through '\u00FF'
. The character value is used to look up five possible attributes of the character: whitespace, alphabetic, numeric, string quote, and comment character (a character may have more than one of these attributes, or none at all). In addition, there are three flags controlling whether line terminators are to be recognized as tokens, whether Java-style end-of-line comments that start with //
should be recognized and skipped, and whether Java-style "traditional" comments delimited by /*
and */
should be recognized and skipped. One more flag controls whether all the characters of identifiers are converted to lowercase.
Here is a simple example of the use of a StreamTokenizer
. The following code merely reads all the tokens in the standard input stream and prints an identification of each one. Changes in the line number are also noted.
import java.io.StreamTokenizer; import java.io.IOException;
class Tok { public static void main(String[] args) { StreamTokenizer st = new StreamTokenizer(System.in); st.ordinaryChar('/'); int lineNum = -1; try { for (int tokenType = st.nextToken(); tokenType != StreamTokenizer.TT_EOF; tokenType = st.nextToken()) { int newLineNum = st.lineno(); if (newLineNum != lineNum) { System.out.println("[line " + newLineNum + "]"); lineNum = newLineNum; } switch(tokenType) { case StreamTokenizer.TT_NUMBER: System.out.println("the number " + st.nval); break; case StreamTokenizer.TT_WORD: System.out.println("identifier " + st.sval); break; default: System.out.println(" operator " + (char)tokenType); } } } catch (IOException e) { System.out.println("I/O failure"); } } }If the input stream contains this data:
10 LET A = 4.5 20 LET B = A*A 30 PRINT A, Bthen the resulting output is:
[line 1] the number 10.0 identifier LET identifier A operator = the number 4.5 [line 2] the number 20.0 identifier LET identifier B operator = identifier A operator * identifier A [line 3] the number 30.0 identifier PRINT identifier A operator , identifier B
22.14.1 public static final int
TT_EOF
= -1;
A constant that indicates end of file was reached.
22.14.2 public static final int
TT_EOL
= '\n';
A constant that indicates that a line terminator was recognized.
22.14.3 public static final int
TT_NUMBER
= -2;
A constant that indicates that a number was recognized.
22.14.4 public static final int
TT_WORD
= -3;
A constant that indicates that a word (identifier) was recognized.
22.14.5 public int
ttype
;
The type of the token that was last recognized by this StreamTokenizer
. This
will be TT_EOF
, TT_EOL
, TT_NUMBER
, TT_WORD
, or a nonnegative byte value that
was the first byte of the token (for example, if the token is a string token, then
ttype
has the quote character that started the string).
22.14.6 public String
sval
;
If the value of ttype
is TT_WORD
or a string quote character, then the value of
sval
is a String
that contains the characters of the identifier or of the string
(without the delimiting string quotes). For all other types of tokens recognized,
the value of sval
is null
.
22.14.7 public double
nval
;
If the value of ttype
is TT_NUMBER
, then the value of nval
is the numerical value
of the number.
22.14.8 public
StreamTokenizer
(InputStream in)
This constructor initializes a newly created StreamTokenizer
by saving its argument, the input stream in
, for later use. The StreamTokenizer
is also initialized
to the following default state:
'A'
through 'Z'
, 'a'
through 'z'
, and 0xA0
through 0xFF
are considered to be alphabetic.
0x00
through 0x20
are considered to be whitespace.
'/'
is a comment character.
'\''
and double quote '"'
are string quote characters.
//
comments and /*
comments are not recognized.
22.14.9 public void
resetSyntax
()
The syntax table for this StreamTokenizer
is reset so that every byte value is
"ordinary"; thus, no character is recognized as being a whitespace, alphabetic,
numeric, string quote, or comment character. Calling this method is therefore
equivalent to:
ordinaryChars(0x00, 0xff)The three flags controlling recognition of line terminators,
//
comments, and /*
comments are unaffected.
22.14.10 public void
wordChars
(int low, int hi)
The syntax table for this StreamTokenizer
is modified so that every character in
the range low
through hi
has the "alphabetic" attribute.
22.14.11 public void
whitespaceChars
(int low, int hi)
The syntax table for this StreamTokenizer
is modified so that every character in
the range low
through hi
has the "whitespace" attribute.
22.14.12 public void
ordinaryChars
(int low, int hi)
The syntax table for this StreamTokenizer
is modified so that every character in
the range low
through hi
has no attributes.
22.14.13 public void
ordinaryChar
(int ch)
The syntax table for this StreamTokenizer
is modified so that the character ch
has no attributes.
22.14.14 public void
commentChar
(int ch)
The syntax table for this StreamTokenizer
is modified so that the character ch
has the "comment character" attribute.
22.14.15 public void
quoteChar
(int ch)
The syntax table for this StreamTokenizer
is modified so that the character ch
has the "string quote" attribute.
22.14.16 public void
parseNumbers
()
The syntax table for this StreamTokenizer
is modified so that each of the twelve
characters
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 . -has the "numeric" attribute.
22.14.17 public void
eolIsSignificant
(boolean flag)
This StreamTokenizer
henceforth recognizes line terminators as tokens if and
only if the flag
argument is true
.
22.14.18 public void
slashStarComments
(boolean flag)
This StreamTokenizer
henceforth recognizes and skips Java-style "traditional"
comments, which are delimited by /*
and */
and do not nest, if and only if the
flag
argument is true
.
22.14.19 public void
slashSlashComments
(boolean flag)
This StreamTokenizer
henceforth recognizes and skips Java-style end-of-line
comments that start with //
if and only if the flag
argument is true
.
22.14.20 public void
lowerCaseMode
(boolean flag)
This StreamTokenizer
henceforth converts all the characters in identifiers to
lowercase if and only if the flag
argument is true
.
22.14.21 public int
nextToken
() throws IOException
If the previous token was pushed back (§22.14.22), then the value of ttype
is
returned, effectively causing that same token to be reread.
Otherwise, this method parses the next token in the contained input stream. The type of the token is returned; this same value is also made available in the ttype
field, and related data may be made available in the sval
and nval
fields.
First, whitespace characters are skipped, except that if a line terminator is encountered and this StreamTokenizer
is currently recognizing line terminators, then the type of the token is TT_EOL
.
If a numeric character is encountered, then an attempt is made to recognize a number. If the first character is '-'
and the next character is not numeric, then the '-'
is considered to be an ordinary character and is recognized as a token in its own right. Otherwise, a number is parsed, stopping before the next occurrence of '-'
, the second occurrence of '.'
, the first nonnumeric character encountered, or end of file, whichever comes first. The type of the token is TT_NUMBER
and its value is made available in the field nval
.
If an alphabetic character is encountered, then an identifier is recognized, consisting of that character and all following characters up to, but not including, the first character that is neither alphabetic nor numeric, or up to end of file, whichever comes first. The characters of the identifier may be converted to lowercase if this StreamTokenizer
is in lowercase mode.
If a comment character is encountered, then all subsequent characters are skipped and ignored, up to but not including the next line terminator or end of file. Then another attempt is made to recognize a token. If this StreamTokenizer
is currently recognizing line terminators, then a line terminator that ends a comment will be recognized as a token in the same manner as any other line terminator in the contained input stream.
If a string quote character is encountered, then a string is recognized, consisting of all characters after (but not including) the string quote character, up to (but not including) the next occurrence of that same string quote character, or a line terminator, or end of file. The usual escape sequences (§3.10.6) such as \n
and \t
are recognized and converted to single characters as the string is parsed.
If //
is encountered and this StreamTokenizer
is currently recognizing //
comments, then all subsequent characters are skipped and ignored, up to but not including the next line terminator or end of file. Then another attempt is made to recognize a token. (If this StreamTokenizer
is currently recognizing line terminators, then a line terminator that ends a comment will be recognized as a token in the same manner as any other line terminator in the contained input stream.)
If /*
is encountered and this StreamTokenizer
is currently recognizing /*
comments, then all subsequent characters are skipped and ignored, up to and including the next occurrence of */
or end of file. Then another attempt is made to recognize a token.
If none of the cases listed above applies, then the only other possibility is that the first non-whitespace character encountered is an ordinary character. That character is considered to be a token and is stored in the ttype
field and returned.
22.14.22 public void
pushBack
()
Calling this method "pushes back" the current token; that is, it causes the next call
to nextToken
to return the same token that it just provided. Note that this method
does not restore the line number to its previous value, so if the method lineno
is
called after a call to pushBack
but before the next call to nextToken
, an incorrect
line number may be returned.
22.14.23 public int
lineno
()
The number of the line on which the current token appeared is returned. The first
token in the input stream, if not a line terminator, is considered to appear on line 1
.
A line terminator token is considered to appear on the line that it precedes, not on
the line it terminates; thus, the first line terminator in the input stream is considered to be on line 2
.
22.14.24 public String
toString
()
The current token and the current line number are converted to a string of the form:
"Token[x], line m"where m is the current line number in decimal form and x depends on the type of the current token:
TT_EOF
, then x is "EOF
".
TT_EOL
, then x is "EOL
".
TT_WORD
, then x is the current value of sval
(§22.14.6).
TT_NUMBER
, then x is "n=
" followed by the result of converting the current value of nval
(§22.14.7) to a string (§20.10.15).
toString
method of Object
(§20.1.2).java.io.OutputStream
public abstract classOutputStream
{ public abstract voidwrite
(int b) throws IOException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public voidflush
() throws IOException; public voidclose
() throws IOException; }
22.15.1 public abstract void
write
(int b) throws IOException
The general contract for write
is that one byte is written to the output stream. The
byte to be written is the eight low-order bits of the argument b
. The 24 high-order
bits of b
are ignored.
If the byte cannot be written for any reason, an IOException
is thrown. In particular, an IOException
may be thrown if the output stream has been closed (§22.15.5).
22.15.2 public void
write
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
The general contract for write(b)
is that it should have exactly the same effect as
the call write(b,
0,
b.length)
(§22.15.3).
The write(b)
method for class OutputStream
in fact makes such a call.
22.15.3 public void
write
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
The general contract for write(b, off, len)
is that some of the bytes in the
array b
are written to the output stream as if one at a time, in order; element
b[off]
is the first byte written and b[off+len-1]
is the last byte written by this
operation.
If b
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
If off
is negative, or len
is negative, or off+len
is greater than the length of the array b
, then an IndexOutOfBoundsException
is thrown.
If the byte cannot be written for any reason, an IOException
is thrown. In particular, an IOException
is thrown if the output stream has been closed (§22.15.5).
The write(b, off,
len)
method for class OutputStream
simply calls the method write
(§22.15.1) repeatedly, once for each byte in b
to be written.
22.15.4 public void
flush
() throws IOException
The general contract of flush
is that calling it is an indication that, if any bytes
previously written have been buffered by the implementation of the output stream,
such bytes should immediately be written to their intended destination.
The flush
method for class OutputStream
does nothing and simply returns.
22.15.5 public void
close
() throws IOException
The general contract of close
is that it closes the output stream. A closed stream
cannot perform output operations and cannot be reopened.
The close
method for class OutputStream
does nothing and simply returns.
java.io.FileOutputStream
public classFileOutputStream
extends OutputStream { publicFileOutputStream
(String path) throws SecurityException, FileNotFoundException; publicFileOutputStream
(File file) throws SecurityException, FileNotFoundException; publicFileOutputStream
(FileDescriptor fdObj) throws SecurityException; public final FileDescriptorgetFD
() throws IOException; public voidwrite
(int b) throws IOException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public voidclose
() throws IOException; protected voidfinalize
() throws IOException; }
22.16.1 public
FileOutputStream
(String path)
throws SecurityException, FileNotFound
Exception
This constructor initializes a newly created FileOutputStream
by opening a
connection to an actual file, the file named by the path name path
in the file system. A new FileDescriptor
object is created to represent this file connection.
First, if there is a security manager, its checkWrite
method (§20.17.21) is called with the path
argument as its argument.
If the actual file cannot be opened, a FileNotFoundException
is thrown.
22.16.2 public
FileOutputStream
(File file)
throws SecurityException, FileNotFound
Exception
This constructor initializes a newly created FileOutputStream
by opening a
connection to an actual file, the file named by file
in the file system. A new
FileDescriptor
object is created to represent this file connection.
First, if there is a security manager, its checkWrite
method (§20.17.21) is called with the path represented by the file
argument as its argument.
If the actual file cannot be opened, a FileNotFoundException
is thrown.
22.16.3 public
FileOutputStream
(FileDescriptor fdObj)
throws SecurityException
This constructor initializes a newly created FileOutputStream
by using the file
descriptor fdObj
, which represents an existing connection to an actual file in the
file system.
First, if there is a security manager, its checkWrite
method (§20.17.20) is called with the file descriptor fdObj
argument as its argument.
22.16.4 public final FileDescriptor
getFD
() throws IOException
This method returns the FileDescriptor
object (§22.26) that represents the connection to the actual file in the file system being used by this FileOutputStream
.
22.16.5 public void
write
(int b) throws IOException
The byte for this operation is written to the actual file to which this file output stream is connected.
Implements the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.1).
22.16.6 public void
write
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
Bytes for this operation are written to the actual file to which this file output stream is connected.
Overrides the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.2).
22.16.7 public void
write
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
Bytes for this operation are written to the actual file to which this file output stream is connected.
Overrides the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.3).
22.16.8 public void
close
() throws IOException
This file output stream is closed and may no longer be used for writing bytes.
Overrides the close
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.5).
22.16.9 protected void
finalize
() throws IOException
A FileOutputStream
uses finalization to clean up the connection to the actual
file.
java.io.PipedOutputStream
PipeOutputStream
object by one thread
and data is read from the corresponding PipedInputStream
(§22.5) by some
other thread. Attempting to use both objects from a single thread is not recommended, as it may deadlock the thread.
public classPipedOutputStream
extends OutputStream { publicPipedOutputStream
(PipedInputStream snk) throws IOException; publicPipedOutputStream
(); public voidconnect
(PipedInputStream snk) throws IOException; public voidwrite
(int b) throws IOException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public voidclose
() throws IOException; }
22.17.1 public
PipedOutputStream
(PipedInputStream snk)
throws IOException
This constructor initializes a newly created PipedOutputStream
so that it is connected to the piped input stream snk
. Data bytes written to this stream will then be
available as input from snk
.
22.17.2 public
PipedOutputStream
()
This constructor initializes a newly created PipedOutputStream
so that it is not
yet connected. It must be connected to a PipedInputStream
before being used.
22.17.3 public void
connect
(PipedInputStream snk)
throws IOException
The connect
method causes this piped output stream to be connected to the piped
input stream snk
. If this object is already connected to some other piped input
stream, an IOException
is thrown.
If snk
is an unconnected piped input stream and src
is an unconnected piped output stream, they may be connected by either the call:
src.connect(snk)or the call:
snk.connect(src)The two calls have the same effect.
22.17.4 public void
write
(int b) throws IOException
If a thread was reading data bytes from the connected piped input stream, but the
thread is no longer alive, then an IOException
is thrown.
Implements the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.1).
22.17.5 public void
write
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
If a thread was reading data bytes from the connected piped input stream, but the
thread is no longer alive, then an IOException
is thrown.
Overrides the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.3).
22.17.6 public void
close
() throws IOException
This piped output stream is closed and may no longer be used for writing bytes.
Overrides the close
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.5).
java.io.ByteArrayOutputStream
ByteArrayOutputStream
contains an internal buffer that accumulates all the
bytes written to the stream since its creation or the most recent call to the reset
method. At any point, the bytes written to the stream so far may be retrieved in the
form of an array of bytes or a String
. The bytes written so far may also be copied
to some other output stream. The size
method returns the number of characters
written so far.
public classByteArrayOutputStream
extends OutputStream { protected byte[]buf
; protected intcount
; publicByteArrayOutputStream
(); publicByteArrayOutputStream
(int size); public voidwrite
(int b); public voidwrite
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public intsize
(); public voidreset
(); public byte[]toByteArray
(); public StringtoString
(); public StringtoString
(int hibyte); public voidwriteTo
(OutputStream out) throws IOException; }
22.18.1 protected byte[]
buf
;
An internal array of bytes. Elements buf[0]
through buf[count-1]
are the bytes
that have been written to the stream since its creation or the last reset
(§22.18.8)
operation.
22.18.2 protected int
count
;
This value should always be nonnegative. It is the number of bytes that have been
written to the stream since its creation or the last reset
(§22.18.8) operation.
22.18.3 public
ByteArrayOutputStream
()
This constructor initializes a newly created ByteArrayOutputStream
so that its
internal buffer array has length 32.
22.18.4 public
ByteArrayOutputStream
(int size)
This constructor initializes a newly created ByteArrayOutputStream
so that its
internal buffer array has length size
. This matters only for reasons of efficiency;
the buffer array is replaced by a larger one whenever necessary to accommodate
additional bytes written to the stream.
22.18.5 public void
write
(int b)
One byte is added on the internal buffer. The byte to be added is the eight low-
order bits of the argument n
. The 24 high-order bits of n
are ignored.
Implements the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.1).
22.18.6 public void
write
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
Elements b[off]
through b[off+len-1]
are appended to the internal buffer.
If b
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
If off
is negative, or len
is negative, or off+len
is greater than the length of the array b
, then an IndexOutOfBoundsException
is thrown.
Overrides the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.3).
22.18.7 public int
size
()
The current value of count
is returned.
22.18.8 public void
reset
()
The internal variable count
is reset to zero, thereby logically discarding all bytes
written to the stream so far. However, the internal buffer array, which may be quite
large, remains as it is.
22.18.9 public byte[]
toByteArray
()
A new array of bytes is created and returned. Its length is equal to the current
value of count
. Its initial contents are copies of the bytes written to the stream so
far-that is, elements 0
through count-1
of buf
.
22.18.10 public String
toString
()
A new String
is created and returned. Its length is equal to the current value of
count
. Its initial contents are copies of the bytes written to the stream so far-that
is, elements 0
through count-1
of buf
, zero-extended to produce characters.
Thus, tostring()
has the same effect as toString(0)
(§22.18.11).
Overrides the toString
method of Object
(§20.1.2).
22.18.11 public String
toString
(int hibyte)
A new array of bytes is created and returned. Its length is equal to the current
value of count
. Its initial contents are copies of the bytes written to the stream so
far-that is, elements 0
through count-1
of buf
-with hibyte
supplying the
high-order eight bits of each character. Thus, character k
of the result is equal to:
((hibyte & 0xff) << 8) | (buf[k] & 0xff)See the
String
constructor that accepts a hibyte
argument (§20.12.6).22.18.12 public void
writeTo
(OutputStream out) throws IOException
The current contents of the internal buffer are written to the output stream out
by
the call:
out.write(buf, 0, count)Note that if
out
is the same as this
, the effect is simply to append to the buffer a copy of its current contents, thereby doubling the number of buffered bytes. This may not be a particularly useful effect; the point is merely that the operation does terminate, having had a sensible effect, rather than running off into an endless loop.java.io.FilterOutputStream
FilterOutputStream
contains some other output stream, which it uses as its
basic sink of data, possibly transforming the data along the way or providing additional functionality. The class FilterOutputStream
itself simply overrides all
methods of OutputStream
with versions that pass all requests to the contained
output stream. Subclasses of FilterOutputStream
may further override some of
these methods and may also provide additional methods and fields.
public classFilterOutputStream
extends OutputStream { protected OutputStreamout
; publicFilterOutputStream
(OutputStream out); public voidwrite
(int b) throws IOException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public voidflush
() throws IOException; public voidclose
() throws IOException; }
22.19.1 protected OutputStream
out
;
The output stream to be filtered.
22.19.2 public
FilterOutputStream
(OutputStream out)
This constructor initializes a newly created FilterInputStream
by assigning the
argument out
to the field this.out
so as to remember it for later use.
22.19.3 public void
write
(int b) throws IOException
This method simply performs out.write(b)
.
Implements the abstract write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.1).
22.19.4 public void
write
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
This method simply performs out.write(b)
.
Overrides the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.2).
22.19.5 public void
write
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
This method simply performs out.write(b,
off,
len)
.
Overrides the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.3).
22.19.6 public void
flush
() throws IOException
This method simply performs out.flush()
.
Overrides the flush
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.4).
22.19.7 public void
close
() throws IOException
This method simply performs out.close()
.
Overrides the close
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.5).
java.io.BufferedOutputStream
BufferedOutputStream
adds functionality to another output stream, namely
the ability to buffer the output. When the BufferedOutputStream
is created, an
internal buffer array is created. As bytes are written to the stream, they are stored
in the internal buffer, which is flushed as necessary, thereby performing output to
the contained output stream in large blocks rather than a byte at a time.
public classBufferedOutputStream
extends FilterOutputStream { protected byte[]buf
; protected intcount
; publicBufferedOutputStream
(OutputStream out); publicBufferedOutputStream
(OutputStream out, int size); public voidwrite
(int b) throws IOException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public voidflush
() throws IOException; }
22.20.1 protected byte[]
buf
;
22.20.2 protected int
count
;
This value is always in the range 0
through buf.length
; elements buf[0]
through buf[count-1]
contain valid byte data.
22.20.3 public
BufferedOutputStream
(OutputStream out)
This constructor initializes a newly created BufferedOutputStream
by saving its
argument, the input stream out
, for later use. An internal buffer array is created
and stored in buf
.
22.20.4 public
BufferedOutputStream
(OutputStream out, int size)
This constructor initializes a newly created BufferedOutputStream
by saving its
argument, the input stream out
, for later use. An internal buffer array of length
size
is created and stored in buf
.
22.20.5 public void
write
(int b) throws IOException
See the general contract of the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.1).
Overrides the write
method of FilterOutputStream
(§22.19.3).
22.20.6 public void
write
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
See the general contract of the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.2).
Overrides the write
method of FilterOutputStream
(§22.19.4).
22.20.7 public void
write
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
See the general contract of the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.3).
Overrides the write
method of FilterOutputStream
(§22.19.5).
22.20.8 public void
flush
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the flush
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.4).
Overrides the flush
method of FilterOutputStream
(§22.19.6).
java.io.DataOutputStream
public classDataOutputStream
extends FilterOutputStream implements DataOutput { protected intwritten
; publicDataOutputStream
(OutputStream out); public voidwrite
(int b) throws IOException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public voidflush
() throws IOException; public final voidwriteBoolean
(boolean v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteByte
(int v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteShort
(int v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteChar
(int v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteInt
(int v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteLong
(long v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteFloat
(float v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteDouble
(double v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteBytes
(String s) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public final voidwriteChars
(String s) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public final voidwriteUTF
(String str) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public final intsize
(); }
22.21.1 protected int
written
;
This field contains the number of bytes written to the stream so far.
22.21.2 public
DataOutputStream
(OutputStream out)
This constructor initializes a newly created DataOutputStream
by saving its
argument, the output stream out
, for later use. The counter written
is set to zero.
22.21.3 public void
write
(int b) throws IOException
The byte for this operation (the low eight bits of the argument b
) is written to the
contained output stream. If no exception is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by 1
.
Implements the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.1).
22.21.4 public void
write
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
Bytes for this operation are written to the contained output stream. If no exception
is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by len
.
Overrides the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.3).
22.21.5 public void
flush
() throws IOException
The contained output stream is flushed.
Overrides the flush
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.4).
22.21.6 public final void
writeBoolean
(boolean v)
throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeBoolean
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.4).
The byte for this operation is written to the contained output stream. If no exception is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by 1
.
22.21.7 public final void
writeByte
(int v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeByte
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.5).
The byte for this operation is written to the contained output stream. If no exception is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by 1
.
22.21.8 public final void
writeShort
(int v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeShort
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.6).
Bytes for this operation are written to the contained output stream. If no exception is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by 2
.
22.21.9 public final void
writeChar
(int v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeChar
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.7).
Bytes for this operation are written to the contained output stream. If no exception is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by 2
.
22.21.10 public final void
writeInt
(int v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeInt
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.8).
Bytes for this operation are written to the contained output stream. If no exception is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by 4
.
22.21.11 public final void
writeLong
(long v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeLong
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.9).
Bytes for this operation are written to the contained output stream. If no exception is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by 8
.
22.21.12 public final void
writeFloat
(float v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeFloat
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.10).
Bytes for this operation are written to the contained output stream. If no exception is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by 4
.
22.21.13 public final void
writeDouble
(double v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeDouble
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.11).
Bytes for this operation are written to the contained output stream. If no exception is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by 8
.
22.21.14 public final void
writeBytes
(String s)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
See the general contract of the writeBytes
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.12).
Bytes for this operation are written to the contained output stream. If no exception is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by the length of s
.
22.21.15 public final void
writeChars
(String s)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
See the general contract of the writeChars
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.13).
Bytes for this operation are written to the contained output stream. If no exception is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by twice the length of s
.
22.21.16 public final void
writeUTF
(String str)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
See the general contract of the writeUTF
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.14).
Bytes for this operation are written to the contained output stream. If no exception is thrown, the counter written
is incremented by the total number of bytes written to the output stream. This will be at least two plus the length of s
, and at most two plus thrice the length of s
.
22.21.17 public final int
size
()
The size
method returns the current value of the counter written
, the number of
bytes written to the stream so far.
java.io.PrintStream
PrintStream
adds functionality to another output stream-namely, the ability
to print representations of various data values conveniently. Two other features are
provided as well. Unlike other output streams, a PrintStream
never throws an
IOException
; instead, exceptional situations merely set an internal flag that can
be tested by the checkError
method. Optionally, a PrintStream
can be created
so as to "autoflush"; this means that after an array of bytes is written, or after a
single byte equal to '\n'
is written, the flush
method is automatically invoked.
public classPrintStream
extends FilterOutputStream { publicPrintStream
(OutputStream out); publicPrintStream
(OutputStream out, boolean autoflush); public voidwrite
(int b); public voidwrite
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public voidflush
(); public voidclose
(); public booleancheckError
(); public voidprintln
(); public voidprintln
(Object obj); public voidprintln
(String s); public voidprintln
(char[] s) throws NullPointerException; public voidprintln
(boolean b); public voidprintln
(char c); public voidprintln
(int i); public voidprintln
(long l); public voidprintln
(float f); public voidprintln
(double d); }
22.22.1 public
PrintStream
(OutputStream out)
This constructor initializes a newly created PrintStream
by saving its argument,
the output stream out
, for later use. This stream will not autoflush.
22.22.2 public
PrintStream
(OutputStream out, boolean autoflush)
This constructor initializes a newly created PrintStream
by saving its argument,
the output stream out
, for later use. This stream will autoflush if and only if
autoflush
is true
.
22.22.3 public void
write
(int b)
See the general contract of the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.1).
Overrides the write
method of FilterOutputStream
(§22.19.3).
22.22.4 public void
write
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
See the general contract of the write
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.3).
Overrides the write
method of FilterOutputStream
(§22.19.5).
22.22.5 public void
flush
()
See the general contract of the flush
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.4).
Overrides the flush
method of FilterOutputStream
(§22.19.6).
22.22.6 public void
close
()
See the general contract of the close
method of OutputStream
(§22.15.5).
Overrides the close
method of FilterOutputStream
(§22.19.7).
22.22.7 public boolean
checkError
()
The result is true
if and only if this output stream has ever encountered any kind
of trouble-that is, if any operation on the contained output stream has ever
resulted in an IOException
other than an InterruptedIOException
. If an
operation on the contained output stream throws an InterruptedIOException
,
then the PrintStream
class converts the exception back to an interrupt by doing:
Thread.currentThread().interrupt();or the equivalent.
22.22.8 public void
print
(Object obj)
The low-order bytes of the characters in the String
that would be produced by
String.valueOf(obj)
(§20.12.38) are written, in order, to the contained output
stream in exactly the manner of the write
method (§22.22.3).
22.22.9 public void
print
(String s)
The low-order bytes of the characters in the string s
are written, in order, to the
contained output stream in exactly the manner of the write
method (§22.22.3).
If s
is null
, then the low-order bytes of the four characters n
, u
, l
, l
are written to
the contained output stream.
22.22.10 public void
print
(char[] s) throws NullPointerException
The low-order bytes of the characters in the character array s
are written, in order,
to the contained output stream in exactly the manner of the write
method
(§22.22.3).
If s
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
22.22.11 public void
print
(boolean b)
The low-order bytes of the characters in the String
that would be produced by
String.valueOf(b)
(§20.12.41) as a string are written, in order, to the contained
output stream in exactly the manner of the write
method (§22.22.3).
22.22.12 public void
print
(char c)
The low-order byte of the character c
is written to the contained output stream in
exactly the manner of the write
method (§22.22.3).
22.22.13 public void
print
(int i)
The low-order bytes of the characters in the String
that would be produced by
String.valueOf(i)
(§20.12.43) as a string are written, in order, to the contained
output stream in exactly the manner of the write
method (§22.22.3).
22.22.14 public void
print
(long l)
The low-order bytes of the characters in the String
that would be produced by
String.valueOf(l)
(§20.12.44) as a string are written, in order, to the contained
output stream in exactly the manner of the write
method (§22.22.3).
22.22.15 public void
print
(float f)
The low-order bytes of the characters in the String
that would be produced by
String.valueOf(f)
(§20.12.45) as a string are written, in order, to the contained
output stream in exactly the manner of the write
method (§22.22.3).
22.22.16 public void
print
(double d)
The low-order bytes of the characters in the String
that would be produced by
String.valueOf(d)
(§20.12.46) as a string are written, in order, to the contained
output stream in exactly the manner of the write
method (§22.22.3).
22.22.17 public void
println
()
The low-order byte of the newline character '\n'
is written to the contained output stream in exactly the manner of the write
method (§22.22.3).
22.22.18 public void
println
(Object obj)
This is exactly the same as print(obj)
(§22.22.8) followed by writing the low-
order byte of the newline character '\n'
to the contained output stream.
22.22.19 public void
println
(String s)
This is exactly the same as print(s)
(§22.22.9) followed by writing the low-
order byte of the newline character '\n'
to the contained output stream.
22.22.20 public void
println
(char[] s) throws NullPointerException
This is exactly the same as print(s)
(§22.22.10) followed by writing the low-
order byte of the newline character '\n'
to the contained output stream.
If s
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
22.22.21 public void
println
(boolean b)
This is exactly the same as print(b)
(§22.22.11) followed by writing the low-
order byte of the newline character '\n'
to the contained output stream.
22.22.22 public void
println
(char c)
This is exactly the same as print(c)
(§22.22.12) followed by writing the low-
order byte of the newline character '\n'
to the contained output stream.
22.22.23 public void
println
(int i)
This is exactly the same as print(i)
(§22.22.13) followed by writing the low-
order byte of the newline character '\n'
to the contained output stream.
22.22.24 public void
println
(long l)
This is exactly the same as print(l)
(§22.22.14) followed by writing the low-
order byte of the newline character '\n'
to the contained output stream.
22.22.25 public void
println
(float f)
This is exactly the same as print(f)
(§22.22.15) followed by writing the low-
order byte of the newline character '\n'
to the contained output stream.
22.22.26 public void
println
(double d)
This is exactly the same as print(d)
(§22.22.16) followed by writing the low-
order byte of the newline character '\n'
to the contained output stream.
java.io.RandomAccessFile
getFilePointer
method and set by the seek
method.
public classIt is generally true of all the reading routines in this class that if end of file is reached before the desired number of bytes has been read, anRandomAccessFile
implements DataOutput, DataInput { publicRandomAccessFile
(String path, String mode) throws SecurityException, IOException, IllegalArgumentException; publicRandomAccessFile
(File file, String mode) throws SecurityException, IOException, IllegalArgumentException; public final FileDescriptorgetFD
() throws IOException; public native longgetFilePointer
() throws IOException; public native voidseek
(long pos) throws IOException; public native longlength
() throws IOException; public native voidclose
() throws IOException; public native intread
() throws IOException; public intread
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public intread
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; // The methods that implement interface DataInput: public final voidreadFully
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public final voidreadFully
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public intskipBytes
(int n) throws IOException; public final booleanreadBoolean
() throws IOException; public final bytereadByte
() throws IOException; public final intreadUnsignedByte
() throws IOException; public final shortreadShort
() throws IOException; public final intreadUnsignedShort
() throws IOException; public final charreadChar
() throws IOException; public final intreadInt
() throws IOException; public final longreadLong
() throws IOException; public final floatreadFloat
() throws IOException; public final doublereadDouble
() throws IOException; public final StringreadLine
() throws IOException; public final StringreadUTF
() throws IOException; // The methods that implement interface DataOutput: public native voidwrite
(int b) throws IOException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b) throws IOException, NullPointerException; public voidwrite
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException; public final voidwriteBoolean
(boolean v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteByte
(int v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteShort
(int v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteChar
(int v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteInt
(int v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteLong
(long v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteFloat
(float v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteDouble
(double v) throws IOException; public final voidwriteBytes
(String s) throws IOException; public final voidwriteChars
(String s) throws IOException; public final voidwriteUTF
(String str) throws IOException; }
EOFException
(which is a kind of IOException
) is thrown. If any byte cannot be read for any reason other than end of file, an IOException
other than EOFException
is thrown. In particular, an IOException
may be thrown if the stream has been closed (§22.23.7).22.23.1 public
RandomAccessFile
(String path, String mode)
throws SecurityException, IOException, IllegalArgumentException
This constructor initializes a newly created RandomAccessFile
by opening a
connection to an actual file, the file named by the path name path
in the file system. A new FileDescriptor
object is created to represent this file connection.
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called with the path
argument as its argument.
Next, if mode
is "rw"
and there is a security manager, its checkWrite
method (§20.17.21) is called with the path
argument as its argument.
If mode
is "rw"
, then the file may be both read and written. If mode
is "r"
, then the file may be read but may not be written (every write method for this object will simply throw an IOException
). If mode
is not "r"
or "rw"
, then this constructor throws an IllegalArgumentException
.
22.23.2 public
RandomAccessFile
(File file, String mode)
throws SecurityException, IOException, IllegalArgumentException
This constructor initializes a newly created RandomAccessFile
by opening a
connection to an actual file, the file named by file
in the file system. A new
FileDescriptor
object is created to represent this file connection.
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called with the path represented by the file
argument as its argument.
Next, if mode
is "rw"
and there is a security manager, its checkWrite
method (§20.17.21) is called with the path represented by the file
argument as its argument.
If mode
is "rw"
, then the file may be both read and written. If mode
is "r"
, then the file may be read but may not be written (every write method for this object will simply throw an IOException
). If mode
is not "r"
or "rw"
, then this constructor throws an IllegalArgumentException
.
22.23.3 public final FileDescriptor
getFD
() throws IOException
This method returns the FileDescriptor
object (§22.26) that represents the connection to the actual file in the file system being used by this RandomAccessFile
.
22.23.4 public long
getFilePointer
() throws IOException
The current file pointer for this random access file is returned. An IOException
is
thrown if the file pointer cannot be read for any reason.
22.23.5 public void
seek
(long pos) throws IOException
The file pointer for this random access file is set to pos
, which is a position within
the file, measured in bytes. Position 0
is the start of the file. An IOException
is
thrown if pos
is less than zero or greater than the length of the file, or if the file
pointer cannot be set for any other reason.
22.23.6 public long
length
() throws IOException
The length of this random access file, measured in bytes, is returned.
An IOException
is thrown if the length cannot be read for any reason.
22.23.7 public void
close
() throws IOException
This random access file is closed. A closed random access file cannot perform input or output operations and cannot be reopened.
22.23.8 public int
read
() throws IOException
This method reads one byte from the random access file. The byte is returned as
an integer in the range 0 to 255 (0x00
-0xff
). If no byte is available because the
file pointer is at end of file, the value -1
is returned.
If the byte cannot be read for any reason other than end of file, an IOException
is thrown. In particular, an IOException
is thrown if the input stream has been closed (§22.23.7).
Although RandomAccessFile
is not a subclass of InputStream
, this method behaves in exactly the same way as the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.1).
22.23.9 public int
read
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
Although RandomAccessFile
is not a subclass of InputStream
, this method
behaves in exactly the same way as the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.2).
22.23.10 public int
read
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
Although RandomAccessFile
is not a subclass of InputStream
, this method
behaves in exactly the same way as the read
method of InputStream
(§22.3.3).
22.23.11 public final void
readFully
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
See the general contract of the readFully
method of DataInput
(§22.1.1).
Bytes for this operation are read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.12 public final void
readFully
(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
See the general contract of the readFully
method of DataInput
(§22.1.2).
Bytes for this operation are read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.13 public int
skipBytes
(int n) throws IOException
See the general contract of the skipBytes
method of DataInput
(§22.1.3).
Bytes for this operation are read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.14 public final boolean
readBoolean
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readBoolean
method of DataInput
(§22.1.4).
The byte for this operation is read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.15 public final byte
readByte
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readByte
method of DataInput
(§22.1.5).
The byte for this operation is read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.16 public final int
readUnsignedByte
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readUnsignedByte
method of DataInput
(§22.1.6).
The byte for this operation is read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.17 public final short
readShort
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readShort
method of DataInput
(§22.1.7).
Bytes for this operation are read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.18 public final int
readUnsignedShort
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readUnsignedShort
method of DataInput
(§22.1.8).
Bytes for this operation are read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.19 public final char
readChar
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readChar
method of DataInput
(§22.1.9).
Bytes for this operation are read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.20 public final int
readInt
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readInt
method of DataInput
(§22.1.10).
Bytes for this operation are read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.21 public final long
readLong
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readLong
method of DataInput
(§22.1.11).
Bytes for this operation are read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.22 public final float
readFloat
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readFloat
method of DataInput
(§22.1.12).
Bytes for this operation are read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.23 public final double
readDouble
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readDouble
method of DataInput
(§22.1.13).
Bytes for this operation are read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.24 public final String
readLine
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readLine
method of DataInput
(§22.1.14).
Bytes for this operation are read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.25 public final String
readUTF
() throws IOException
See the general contract of the readUTF
method of DataInput
(§22.1.15).
Bytes for this operation are read from the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.26 public void
write
(int b) throws IOException;
See the general contract of the write
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.1).
The byte for this operation is written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.27 public void
write
(byte[] b)
throws IOException, NullPointerException
See the general contract of the write
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.2).
Bytes for this operation are written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.28 public void
write
(byte[] b, int off, int len)
throws IOException, NullPointerException, IndexOutOfBoundsException
See the general contract of the write
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.3).
Bytes for this operation are written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.29 public final void
writeBoolean
(boolean v)
throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeBoolean
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.4).
The byte for this operation is written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.30 public final void
writeByte
(int v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeByte
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.5).
The byte for this operation is written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.31 public final void
writeShort
(int v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeShort
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.6).
Bytes for this operation are written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.32 public final void
writeChar
(int v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeChar
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.7).
Bytes for this operation are written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.33 public final void
writeInt
(int v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeInt
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.8).
Bytes for this operation are written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.34 public final void
writeLong
(long v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeLong
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.9).
Bytes for this operation are written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.35 public final void
writeFloat
(float v) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeFloat
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.10).
Bytes for this operation are written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.36 public final void
writeDouble
(double v)
throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeDouble
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.11).
Bytes for this operation are written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.37 public final void
writeBytes
(String s) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeBytes
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.12).
Bytes for this operation are written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.38 public final void
writeChars
(String s) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeChars
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.13).
Bytes for this operation are written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
22.23.39 public final void
writeUTF
(String str) throws IOException
See the general contract of the writeUTF
method of DataOutput
(§22.2.14).
Bytes for this operation are written to the random access file, starting at the current file pointer.
java.io.File
File
object contains a path, which is a character string that can be used to identify a file within a file system. A path is assumed to consist of two parts, the directory and the file name, separated by the last occurrence within the path of a
particular character known as the separator character. Some methods provide
access to parts of the path string; other methods operate on the file that is identified by the path string. The details of such operations on files are to some extent
dependent on the implementation of the host file system. The File
class is
designed to provide a set of abstract operations that are reasonably portable across
otherwise incompatible file systems.
public classFile
{ public static final Stringseparator
= System.getProperty("file.separator"); public static final charseparatorChar
= separator.charAt(0); public static final StringpathSeparator
= System.getProperty("path.separator"); public static final charpathSeparatorChar
= pathSeparator.charAt(0); publicFile
(String path) throws NullPointerException; publicFile
(String dirname, String name) throws NullPointerException publicFile
(File dir, String name) throws NullPointerException public StringtoString
(); public booleanequals
(Object obj); public inthashCode
(); public StringgetName
(); public StringgetPath
(); public StringgetAbsolutePath
(); public StringgetParent
(); public native booleanisAbsolute
(); public booleanexists
() throws SecurityException; public booleancanRead
() throws SecurityException; public booleancanWrite
() throws SecurityException; public booleanisFile
() throws SecurityException; public booleanisDirectory
() throws SecurityException; public longlastModified
() throws SecurityException; public longlength
() throws SecurityException; public booleanmkdir
() throws SecurityException; public booleanmkdirs
() throws SecurityException; public String[]list
() throws SecurityException; public String[]list
(FilenameFilter filter) throws SecurityException; public booleanrenameTo
(File dest) throws SecurityException; public booleandelete
() throws SecurityException; }
22.24.1 public static final String
separator
= System.getProperty("file.separator");
This string should consist of a single character, whose value is also available in
the field separatorChar
; the string is provided merely for convenience.
22.24.2 public static final char
separatorChar
= separator.charAt(0);
The last occurrence of this character in a path string is assumed to separate the
directory part of the path from the file name part of the path. On UNIX systems
this character is typically '/'
.
22.24.3 public static final String
pathSeparator
= System.getProperty("path.separator");
This string should consist of a single character, whose value is also available in
the field pathSeparatorChar
; the string is provided merely for convenience.
22.24.4 public static final char
pathSeparatorChar
= pathSeparator.charAt(0);
The first occurrence of this character in a string is sometimes assumed to separate
a host name from a path name. On UNIX systems this character is typically ':'
.
22.24.5 public
File
(String path) throws NullPointerException
This constructor initializes a newly created File
so that it represents the path indicated by the argument path
.
If the path
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
22.24.6 public
File
(String dirname, String name)
throws NullPointerException
This constructor initializes a newly created File
so that it represents the path
whose directory part is specified by the argument dirname
and whose file name
part is specified by the argument name
. If the dirname
argument is null
, the name
is used as the path; otherwise the concatenation of dirname
, the separatorChar
(§22.24.2), and the name
is used as the path.
If the name
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
22.24.7 public
File
(File dir, String name)
throws NullPointerException
This constructor initializes a newly created File
so that it represents the path
whose directory part is specified by the File
object dir
and whose file name part
is specified by the argument name
.
If the name
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
22.24.8 public String
toString
()
The result is a String
equal to the path represented by this File
object.
Overrides the toString
method of Object
(§20.1.2).
22.24.9 public boolean
equals
(Object obj)
The result is true
if and only if the argument is not null
and is a File
object that
represents the same path as this File
object. In other words, two File
objects are
equal if and only if the strings returned by the getPath
method (§22.24.12) are
equal.
Overrides the equals
method of Object
(§20.1.3).
22.24.10 public int
hashCode
()
The hash code of this File
object is equal to the exclusive OR of the hash code of
its path string and the decimal value 1234321
:
this.getPath().hashcode() ^ 1234321Overrides the
hashCode
method of Object
(§20.1.4).22.24.11 public String
getName
()
If the path string contains the separatorChar
character (§22.24.2), this method
returns the substring of the path that follows the last occurrence of the separator
character; otherwise, the entire path string is returned.
22.24.12 public String
getPath
()
The result is a String
equal to the path represented by this File
object.
22.24.13 public String
getAbsolutePath
()
The result is a String
equal to the result of converting to "absolute form" the path
represented by this File
object.
22.24.14 public String
getParent
()
If the path has a parent directory, a String
representing the path of that parent
directory is returned; otherwise, null
is returned.
22.24.15 public boolean
isAbsolute
()
The result is true
if and only if the path represented by the File object is in absolute form, indicating a complete name that starts from the root of the directory
hierarchy, rather than a name relative to some implied directory.
22.24.16 public boolean
exists
() throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called
with the path represented by this File
object as its argument.
The result is true
if and only if the file system actually contains a file that is specified by the path of the File
object.
22.24.17 public boolean
canRead
() throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called
with the path represented by this File
object as its argument.
The result is true
if and only if both of the following are true:
File
object.
22.24.18 public boolean
canWrite
() throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkWrite
method (§20.17.21) is called
with the path represented by this File
object as its argument.
The result is true
if and only if both of the following are true:
File
object.
22.24.19 public boolean
isFile
() throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called
with the path represented by this File
object as its argument.
The result is true
if and only if both of the following are true:
File
object.
22.24.20 public boolean
isDirectory
() throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called
with the path represented by this File
object as its argument.
The result is true
if and only if both of the following are true:
File
object.
22.24.21 public long
lastModified
() throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called
with the path represented by this File
object as its argument.
An abstract modification time is returned. If two values returned by this method are compared, whether for the same file or for two different files, the smaller value represents an earlier modification time. Abstract modification times do not necessarily bear any relationship, even monotonicity, to times returned by the method System.currentTimeMillis
(§20.18.6).
22.24.22 public long
length
() throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called
with the path represented by this File
object as its argument.
The length of the file, measured in bytes, is returned.
22.24.23 public boolean
mkdir
() throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkWrite
method (§20.17.21) is called
with the path represented by this File
object as its argument.
An attempt is made to create the directory specified by the path represented by this File
object; the result is true if and only if the creation operation succeeds.
22.24.24 public boolean
mkdirs
() throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called
with the path represented by this File
object as its argument.
If the directory name represented by this File
object has a parent directory name (§22.24.14), an attempt is first made to create the parent directory; if this attempt fails, the result is false
. Otherwise, once the parent directory has been determined to exist, or if the path has no parent, an attempt is made to create the directory specified by this File
object. The result is true
if and only if the creation operation succeeds.
22.24.25 public String[]
list
() throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called
with the path represented by this File
object as its argument.
If the path represented by this File
object does not correspond to a directory in the file system, then null
is returned. Otherwise, an array of strings is returned, one for each file in the directory (on UNIX systems, the names ".
" and "..
" are not included). Each string is a file name, not a complete path. There is no guarantee that the strings will appear in any particular order within the array; for example, they are not guaranteed to appear in alphabetical order.
22.24.26 public String[]
list
(FilenameFilter filter)
throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkRead
method (§20.17.19) is called
with the path represented by this File
object as its argument.
If the path represented by this File
object does not correspond to a directory in the file system, then null
is returned. Otherwise, an array of strings is returned, one for each file in the directory (on UNIX systems, the names ".
" and "..
" are not included) whose name satisfies the given filter
. Each string is a file name, not a complete path. There is no guarantee that the strings will appear in any particular order within the array; for example, they are not guaranteed to appear in alphabetical order. A file name satisfies the filter if and only if the value true
results when the accept
method (§22.25.1) of the filter is called with this File
object and the name as arguments.
22.24.27 public boolean
renameTo
(File dest)
throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkWrite
method (§20.17.21) is called
twice, first with the path represented by this File
object as its argument and again
with the path of dest
as its argument.
An attempt is made to rename the file specified by the path represented by this File
object to the name specified by dest
; the result is true
if and only if the renaming operation succeeds.
22.24.28 public boolean
delete
() throws SecurityException
First, if there is a security manager, its checkDelete
method (§20.17.22) is called
with the path represented by this File
object as its argument.
An attempt is made to delete the file specified by the path represented by this File
object; the result is true
if and only if the deletion operation succeeds.
java.io.FilenameFilter
list
method (§22.24.26) of class File
requires, as an argument, an object
that implements the FilenameFilter
interface. The only purpose of such an
object is to provide a method accept
that decides which files should appear in the
generated directory listing.
public interfaceFilenameFilter
{ public booleanaccept
(File dir, String name); }
22.25.1 public boolean
accept
(File dir, String name)
This method should return true
if and only if the given file named name
in the
directory dir
is to appear in the final list of files generated by the list
method
(§22.24.26) of class File
.
java.io.FileDescriptor
FileDescriptor
is an opaque representation of a connection to an actual file
in a file system, or to a network socket, or to another source or sink of bytes. The
main practical use for a file descriptor is to create a FileInputStream
(§22.4.3)
or FileOutputStream
(§22.16.3) to contain it.
public final classFileDescriptor
{ public static final FileDescriptorin
= ...; public static final FileDescriptorout
= ...; public static final FileDescriptorerr
= ...; public booleanvalid
(); }
22.26.1 public static final FileDescriptor
in
= ...
A file descriptor for the standard input stream. Usually, this file descriptor is not
used directly, but rather the input stream known as System.in
(§20.18.1).
22.26.2 public static final FileDescriptor
out
= ...
A file descriptor for the standard output stream. Usually, this file descriptor is not
used directly, but rather the output stream known as System.out
(§20.18.2).
22.26.3 public static final FileDescriptor
err
= ...
A file descriptor for the standard error output stream. Usually, this file descriptor
is not used directly, but rather the output stream known as System.err
(§20.18.3).
22.26.4 public boolean
valid
()
If this FileDescriptor
is valid (represents an active connection to a file or other
active I/O connection), then the result is true
. Otherwise, the result is false
.
java.io.IOException
IOException
is the general class of exceptions produced by failed or
interrupted input/output operations. Subclasses of IOException
include:
EOFException
FileNotFoundException
InterruptedIOException
UTFDataFormatException
public classIOException
extends Exception { publicIOException
(); publicIOException
(String s); }
22.27.1 public
IOException
()
This constructor initializes a newly created IOException
with null
as its error
message string.
22.27.2 public
IOException
(String s)
This constructor initializes a newly created IOException
by saving a reference to
the error message string s
for later retrieval by the getMessage
method
(§20.22.3).
java.io.EOFException
EOFException
is thrown to indicate that an input operation has encountered
end of file. Note that some Java input operations react to end of file by returning a
distinguished value (such as -1
) rather than by throwing an exception.
public classEOFException
extends IOException { publicEOFException
(); publicEOFException
(String s); }
22.28.1 public
EOFException
()
This constructor initializes a newly created EOFException
with null
as its error
message string.
22.28.2 public
EOFException
(String s)
This constructor initializes a newly created EOFException
by saving a reference
to the error message string s
for later retrieval by the getMessage
method
(§20.22.3).
java.io.FileNotFoundException
FileNotFoundException
is thrown to indicate that no actual file could be
opened for a specified path name. See constructors FileInputStream
(§22.4.1,
§22.4.2) and FileOutputStream
(§22.16.1, §22.16.2).
public classFileNotFoundException
extends IOException { publicFileNotFoundException
(); publicFileNotFoundException
(String s); }
22.29.1 public
FileNotFoundException
()
This constructor initializes a newly created FileNotFoundException
with null
as its error message string.
22.29.2 public
FileNotFoundException
(String s)
This constructor initializes a newly created FileNotFoundException
by saving a
reference to the error message string s
for later retrieval by the getMessage
method (§20.22.3).
java.io.InterruptedIOException
InterruptedIOException
is thrown to indicate that an input or output transfer has been terminated because the thread performing it was interrupted. The
field bytesTransferred
indicates how many bytes were successfully transferred
before the interruption occurred.
public classInterruptedIOException
extends IOException { public intbytesTransferred
= 0; publicInterruptedIOException
(); publicInterruptedIOException
(String s); }
22.30.1 public int
bytesTransferred
= 0;
The number of bytes that had been transferred by the I/O operation before the operation was interrupted.
22.30.2 public
InterruptedIOException
()
This constructor initializes a newly created InterruptedIOException
with
null
as its error message string.
22.30.3 public
InterruptedIOException
(String s)
This constructor initializes a newly created InterruptedIOException
by saving
a reference to the error message string s
for later retrieval by the getMessage
method (§20.22.3).
java.io.UTFDataFormatException
UTFDataFormatException
is thrown to indicate that a problem occurred in
converting data from Java modified UTF-8 format. See method readUTF
of
DataInput
(§22.1.15).
public classUTFDataFormatException
extends IOException { publicUTFDataFormatException
(); publicUTFDataFormatException
(String s); }
22.31.1 public
UTFDataFormatException
()
This constructor initializes a newly created UTFDataFormatException
with
null
as its error message string.
22.31.2 public
UTFDataFormatException
(String s)
This constructor initializes a newly created UTFDataFormatException
by saving
a reference to the error message string s
for later retrieval by the getMessage
method (§20.22.3).
Contents | Prev | Next | Index
Java Language Specification (HTML generated by dkramer on August 01, 1996)
Copyright © 1996 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
All rights reserved
Please send any comments or corrections to doug.kramer@sun.com