I would like to restore an object from a CSV file. I need to know if scanner has 2 next values: scanner.hasNext()
the problem is my visit constructor takes 2 parameters and I need to ensure
there are at least 2 left in my csv file.
here is the relevant code:
/**
* method to restore a pet from a CSV file.
* #param fileName the file to be used as input.
* #throws FileNotFoundException if the input file cannot be located
* #throws IOException if there is a problem with the file
* #throws DataFormatException if the input string is malformed
*/
public void fromCSV(final String fileName)
throws FileNotFoundException, IOException, DataFormatException
{
FileReader inStream = new FileReader(fileName);
BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(inStream);
String data = in.readLine();
Scanner scan = new Scanner(data);
scan.useDelimiter(",");
this.setOwner(scan.next());
this.setName(scan.next());
while (scan.hasNext()) {
Visit v = new Visit(scan.next(), scan.next());
this.remember(v);
}
inStream.close();
}
thanks in advance
hasNext() can also take a pattern, which provides quite a nice way to check this:
String pattern = ".*,.*";
while (scan.hasNext(pattern)) {
...
}
To address directly what I think you're asking: You can check scan.hasNext() inside the while loop.
public void fromCSV(final String fileName) throws FileNotFoundException, IOException, DataFormatException
{
FileReader inStream = new FileReader(fileName);
BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(inStream);
String data = in.readLine();
Scanner scan = new Scanner(data);
scan.useDelimiter(",");
this.setOwner(scan.next());
this.setName(scan.next());
while (scan.hasNext()) {
String first = scan.next();
if(scan.hasNext()) {
String second = scan.next();
Visit v = new Visit(first, second);
this.remember(v);
}
}
inStream.close();
}
Although I think you're asking about the using scan.hasNext() in the while loop, you should also be checking before this.setOwner(scan.next()) and this.setName(scan.next()).
It might be better to take another approach to the problem as suggested by Hovercraft Full Of Eels in the comments. Better yet, since this is a CSV file, you can save yourself a lot of trouble by using a library such as Commons CSV or opencsv.
Related
How do you read and display data from .txt files?
BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new FileReader("<Filename>"));
Then, you can use in.readLine(); to read a single line at a time. To read until the end, write a while loop as such:
String line;
while((line = in.readLine()) != null)
{
System.out.println(line);
}
in.close();
If your file is strictly text, I prefer to use the java.util.Scanner class.
You can create a Scanner out of a file by:
Scanner fileIn = new Scanner(new File(thePathToYourFile));
Then, you can read text from the file using the methods:
fileIn.nextLine(); // Reads one line from the file
fileIn.next(); // Reads one word from the file
And, you can check if there is any more text left with:
fileIn.hasNext(); // Returns true if there is another word in the file
fileIn.hasNextLine(); // Returns true if there is another line to read from the file
Once you have read the text, and saved it into a String, you can print the string to the command line with:
System.out.print(aString);
System.out.println(aString);
The posted link contains the full specification for the Scanner class. It will be helpful to assist you with what ever else you may want to do.
In general:
Create a FileInputStream for the file.
Create an InputStreamReader wrapping the input stream, specifying the correct encoding
Optionally create a BufferedReader around the InputStreamReader, which makes it simpler to read a line at a time.
Read until there's no more data (e.g. readLine returns null)
Display data as you go or buffer it up for later.
If you need more help than that, please be more specific in your question.
I love this piece of code, use it to load a file into one String:
File file = new File("/my/location");
String contents = new Scanner(file).useDelimiter("\\Z").next();
Below is the code that you may try to read a file and display in java using scanner class. Code will read the file name from user and print the data(Notepad VIM files).
import java.io.*;
import java.util.Scanner;
import java.io.*;
public class TestRead
{
public static void main(String[] input)
{
String fname;
Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in);
/* enter filename with extension to open and read its content */
System.out.print("Enter File Name to Open (with extension like file.txt) : ");
fname = scan.nextLine();
/* this will reference only one line at a time */
String line = null;
try
{
/* FileReader reads text files in the default encoding */
FileReader fileReader = new FileReader(fname);
/* always wrap the FileReader in BufferedReader */
BufferedReader bufferedReader = new BufferedReader(fileReader);
while((line = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null)
{
System.out.println(line);
}
/* always close the file after use */
bufferedReader.close();
}
catch(IOException ex)
{
System.out.println("Error reading file named '" + fname + "'");
}
}
}
If you want to take some shortcuts you can use Apache Commons IO:
import org.apache.commons.io.FileUtils;
String data = FileUtils.readFileToString(new File("..."), "UTF-8");
System.out.println(data);
:-)
public class PassdataintoFile {
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
try {
PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter("C:/new/hello.txt", "UTF-8");
PrintWriter pw1 = new PrintWriter("C:/new/hello.txt");
pw1.println("Hi chinni");
pw1.print("your succesfully entered text into file");
pw1.close();
} catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
} catch (UnsupportedEncodingException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new FileReader("C:/new/hello.txt"));
String line;
while((line = br.readLine())!= null)
{
System.out.println(line);
}
br.close();
}
}
In Java 8, you can read a whole file, simply with:
public String read(String file) throws IOException {
return new String(Files.readAllBytes(Paths.get(file)));
}
or if its a Resource:
public String read(String file) throws IOException {
URL url = Resources.getResource(file);
return Resources.toString(url, Charsets.UTF_8);
}
You most likely will want to use the FileInputStream class:
int character;
StringBuffer buffer = new StringBuffer("");
FileInputStream inputStream = new FileInputStream(new File("/home/jessy/file.txt"));
while( (character = inputStream.read()) != -1)
buffer.append((char) character);
inputStream.close();
System.out.println(buffer);
You will also want to catch some of the exceptions thrown by the read() method and FileInputStream constructor, but those are implementation details specific to your project.
So i am working on a code that receives 2 strings. The string are "input#.txt" or "output#.txt" the # symbol is replaced with whatever number file is used. Now in the input file is the information I need to get to. How do I determine if that input.txt file can be opened and how do I open it.
I've tried a buffered reader and trying to just make the string a file.
import java.util.*;
import java.io.*;
public class Robot {
public static void readInstructions(String inputFileName, String outputFileName) throws InvalidRobotInstructionException{
try{
BufferedReader input = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(inputFileName));
File inner = new File(inputFileName);
Scanner in = new Scanner(input);
PrintWriter wrt;
wrt = new PrintWriter(outputFileName);
if(input.readLine() == null){
System.out.println("Input file not found.");
return;
}
This will read a file in:
Scanner input = new Scanner(new File("input5.txt"));
Don't forget to add throws FileNotFoundException in your main method
edit: I see you added code.
In Java, is there any method to read a particular line from a file? For example, read line 32 or any other line number.
For small files:
String line32 = Files.readAllLines(Paths.get("file.txt")).get(32)
For large files:
try (Stream<String> lines = Files.lines(Paths.get("file.txt"))) {
line32 = lines.skip(31).findFirst().get();
}
Unless you have previous knowledge about the lines in the file, there's no way to directly access the 32nd line without reading the 31 previous lines.
That's true for all languages and all modern file systems.
So effectively you'll simply read lines until you've found the 32nd one.
Not that I know of, but what you could do is loop through the first 31 lines doing nothing using the readline() function of BufferedReader
FileInputStream fs= new FileInputStream("someFile.txt");
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(fs));
for(int i = 0; i < 31; ++i)
br.readLine();
String lineIWant = br.readLine();
Joachim is right on, of course, and an alternate implementation to Chris' (for small files only because it loads the entire file) might be to use commons-io from Apache (though arguably you might not want to introduce a new dependency just for this, if you find it useful for other stuff too though, it could make sense).
For example:
String line32 = (String) FileUtils.readLines(file).get(31);
http://commons.apache.org/io/api-release/org/apache/commons/io/FileUtils.html#readLines(java.io.File, java.lang.String)
You may try indexed-file-reader (Apache License 2.0). The class IndexedFileReader has a method called readLines(int from, int to) which returns a SortedMap whose key is the line number and the value is the line that was read.
Example:
File file = new File("src/test/resources/file.txt");
reader = new IndexedFileReader(file);
lines = reader.readLines(6, 10);
assertNotNull("Null result.", lines);
assertEquals("Incorrect length.", 5, lines.size());
assertTrue("Incorrect value.", lines.get(6).startsWith("[6]"));
assertTrue("Incorrect value.", lines.get(7).startsWith("[7]"));
assertTrue("Incorrect value.", lines.get(8).startsWith("[8]"));
assertTrue("Incorrect value.", lines.get(9).startsWith("[9]"));
assertTrue("Incorrect value.", lines.get(10).startsWith("[10]"));
The above example reads a text file composed of 50 lines in the following format:
[1] The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog ODD
[2] The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog EVEN
Disclamer: I wrote this library
Although as said in other answers, it is not possible to get to the exact line without knowing the offset (pointer) before. So, I've achieved this by creating an temporary index file which would store the offset values of every line. If the file is small enough, you could just store the indexes (offset) in memory without needing a separate file for it.
The offsets can be calculated by using the RandomAccessFile
RandomAccessFile raf = new RandomAccessFile("myFile.txt","r");
//above 'r' means open in read only mode
ArrayList<Integer> arrayList = new ArrayList<Integer>();
String cur_line = "";
while((cur_line=raf.readLine())!=null)
{
arrayList.add(raf.getFilePointer());
}
//Print the 32 line
//Seeks the file to the particular location from where our '32' line starts
raf.seek(raf.seek(arrayList.get(31));
System.out.println(raf.readLine());
raf.close();
Also visit the Java docs on RandomAccessFile for more information:
Complexity: This is O(n) as it reads the entire file once. Please be aware for the memory requirements. If it's too big to be in memory, then make a temporary file that stores the offsets instead of ArrayList as shown above.
Note: If all you want in '32' line, you just have to call the readLine() also available through other classes '32' times. The above approach is useful if you want to get the a specific line (based on line number of course) multiple times.
Another way.
try (BufferedReader reader = Files.newBufferedReader(
Paths.get("file.txt"), StandardCharsets.UTF_8)) {
List<String> line = reader.lines()
.skip(31)
.limit(1)
.collect(Collectors.toList());
line.stream().forEach(System.out::println);
}
No, unless in that file format the line lengths are pre-determined (e.g. all lines with a fixed length), you'll have to iterate line by line to count them.
In Java 8,
For small files:
String line = Files.readAllLines(Paths.get("file.txt")).get(n);
For large files:
String line;
try (Stream<String> lines = Files.lines(Paths.get("file.txt"))) {
line = lines.skip(n).findFirst().get();
}
In Java 7
String line;
try (BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new FileReader("file.txt"))) {
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
br.readLine();
line = br.readLine();
}
Source: Reading nth line from file
If you are talking about a text file, then there is really no way to do this without reading all the lines that precede it - After all, lines are determined by the presence of a newline, so it has to be read.
Use a stream that supports readline, and just read the first X-1 lines and dump the results, then process the next one.
It works for me:
I have combined the answer of
Reading a simple text file
But instead of return a String I am returning a LinkedList of Strings. Then I can select the line that I want.
public static LinkedList<String> readFromAssets(Context context, String filename) throws IOException {
BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(context.getAssets().open(filename)));
LinkedList<String>linkedList = new LinkedList<>();
// do reading, usually loop until end of file reading
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
String mLine = reader.readLine();
while (mLine != null) {
linkedList.add(mLine);
sb.append(mLine); // process line
mLine = reader.readLine();
}
reader.close();
return linkedList;
}
Use this code:
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
public class FileWork
{
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
String line = Files.readAllLines(Paths.get("D:/abc.txt")).get(1);
System.out.println(line);
}
}
You can use LineNumberReader instead of BufferedReader. Go through the api. You can find setLineNumber and getLineNumber methods.
You can also take a look at LineNumberReader, subclass of BufferedReader. Along with the readline method, it also has setter/getter methods to access line number. Very useful to keep track of the number of lines read, while reading data from file.
public String readLine(int line){
FileReader tempFileReader = null;
BufferedReader tempBufferedReader = null;
try { tempFileReader = new FileReader(textFile);
tempBufferedReader = new BufferedReader(tempFileReader);
} catch (Exception e) { }
String returnStr = "ERROR";
for(int i = 0; i < line - 1; i++){
try { tempBufferedReader.readLine(); } catch (Exception e) { }
}
try { returnStr = tempBufferedReader.readLine(); } catch (Exception e) { }
return returnStr;
}
you can use the skip() function to skip the lines from begining.
public static void readFile(String filePath, long lineNum) {
List<String> list = new ArrayList<>();
long totalLines, startLine = 0;
try (Stream<String> lines = Files.lines(Paths.get(filePath))) {
totalLines = Files.lines(Paths.get(filePath)).count();
startLine = totalLines - lineNum;
// Stream<String> line32 = lines.skip(((startLine)+1));
list = lines.skip(startLine).collect(Collectors.toList());
// lines.forEach(list::add);
} catch (IOException e1) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e1.printStackTrace();
}
list.forEach(System.out::println);
}
EASY WAY - Reading a line using line number.
Let's say Line number starts from 1 till null .
public class TextFileAssignmentOct {
private void readData(int rowNum, BufferedReader br) throws IOException {
int n=1; //Line number starts from 1
String row;
while((row=br.readLine()) != null) { // Reads every line
if (n == rowNum) { // When Line number matches with which you want to read
System.out.println(row);
}
n++; //This increments Line number
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
File f = new File("../JavaPractice/FileRead.txt");
FileReader fr = new FileReader(f);
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(fr);
TextFileAssignmentOct txf = new TextFileAssignmentOct();
txf.readData(4, br); //Read a Specific Line using Line number and Passing buffered reader
}
}
for a text file you can use an integer with a loop to help you get the number of the line, don't forget to import the classes we are using in this example
File myObj = new File("C:\\Users\\LENOVO\\Desktop\\test.txt");//path of the file
FileReader fr = new FileReader(myObj);
fr.read();
BufferedReader bf = new BufferedReader(fr); //BufferedReader of the FileReader fr
String line = bf.readLine();
int lineNumber = 0;
while (line != null) {
lineNumber = lineNumber + 1;
if(lineNumber == 7)
{
//show line
System.out.println("line: " + lineNumber + " has :" + line);
break;
}
//lecture de la prochaine ligne, reading next
line = bf.readLine();
}
They are all wrong I just wrote this in about 10 seconds.
With this I managed to just call the object.getQuestion("linenumber") in the main method to return whatever line I want.
public class Questions {
File file = new File("Question2Files/triviagame1.txt");
public Questions() {
}
public String getQuestion(int numLine) throws IOException {
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(file));
String line = "";
for(int i = 0; i < numLine; i++) {
line = br.readLine();
}
return line; }}
So I'm learning new things day by day in Java, and I hope one day I should have same knowledge in Java as in PHP.
I'm trying to make a class that is similar to fopen, fwrite, fclose in PHP like:
<?php
$fp = fopen('data.txt', 'w');
fwrite($fp, '1');
fwrite($fp, '23');
fclose($fp);
// the content of 'data.txt' is now 123 and not 23!
?>
I also need the method of writing
o - for delete and write/overwrite
a - for append at end
and a read function that returns the the content line by line, so I can put it into an array , like file_get_contents(file);
This is what I have so far ...
import java.io.*;
import java.util.Scanner;
/**
Read and write a file using an explicit encoding.
Removing the encoding from this code will simply cause the
system's default encoding to be used instead.
**/
public final class readwrite_txt
{
/** Requires two arguments - the file name, and the encoding to use. **/
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException
{
String fileName = "text.txt";
String encoding = "UTF-8";
readwrite_txt test = new readwrite_txt(fileName,encoding);
test.write("argument.txt","some text","UTF-8","o");
}
/** Constructor. **/
readwrite_txt(String fileName, String encoding)
{
String fEncoding = "text.txt";
String fFileName = "UTF-8";
}
/** Write fixed content to the given file. **/
public void write(String fileName,String input,String encoding,String writeMethod) throws IOException
{
// Method overwrite
if(writeMethod == "o")
{
log("Writing to file named " + fileName + ". Encoding: " + encoding);
Writer out = new OutputStreamWriter(new FileOutputStream(fileName), encoding);
try
{
out.write(input);
}
finally
{
out.close();
}
}
}
/** Read the contents of the given file. **/
public void read(String fileName,String output,String encoding,String outputMethod) throws IOException
{
log("Reading from file.");
StringBuilder text = new StringBuilder();
String NL = System.getProperty("line.separator");
Scanner scanner = new Scanner(new FileInputStream(fileName), encoding);
try
{
while (scanner.hasNextLine())
{
text.append(scanner.nextLine() + NL);
}
}
finally
{
scanner.close();
}
log("Text read in: " + text);
}
// Why write System.out... when you can make a function like log("message"); simple!
private void log(String aMessage)
{
System.out.println(aMessage);
}
}
also, I don't understand why I must have
readwrite_txt test = new readwrite_txt(fileName,encoding);
instead of
readwrite_txt test = new readwrite_txt();
I just want to have an simple function similar to that in PHP.
EDITED
So my function must be
$fp = fopen('data.txt', 'w'); ==> readwrite_txt test = new readwrite_txt(filename,encoding,writeMethod);
fwrite($fp, '23'); ==> test.write("the text");
fclose($fp); ==> ???
to read a file in java you can
FileInputStream fstream = new FileInputStream("file.txt");
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(fstream));
String strLine;
while ((strLine = br.readLine()) != null) //Start of reading file
{
//what you want to do with every line is here
}
but for readwrite_txt test = new readwrite_txt(); problem ..
you must have another constructor inside the class that doesn't take any parameters
Have a look at the following file handling tutorials (Google is littered with them):
http://www.javapractices.com/topic/TopicAction.do?Id=42
http://www.coderanch.com/t/403914/java/java/do-read-entire-file-all
Pay attention to the following classes:
FileInputStream
FileOutpuStream
Scanner
There's all sorts of examples out there for you to learn from.
You can use the BufferedReader, here is an example and BufferedWriter, here is an example of write and here is an example for appending. For reading line-by-line you can use the readLine method of BufferedReader. You don't need those parameters in your constructor, because you don't use them, but you don't even need a class to implement these features because there are already standard classes for this purpose.
I hope this helps.
I wrote the below part of the code but I couldn't bind the arraylist with search and replace
so my csv file is as like below
1/1/1;7/6/1
1/1/2;7/7/1
I want to search the file 1.cfg for 1/1/1 and change it to 7/6/1 and 1/1/2 change to 7/7/1 and it goes so on.
Thank you all in advance
It's now only printing in a new file only the last line of the old File
import java.io.*;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;
public class ChangeConfiguration {
/**
* #param args
* #throws IOException
*/
public static void main(String[] args)
{
try{
// Open the file that is the first
// command line parameter
FileInputStream degistirilecek = new FileInputStream("c:/Config_Changer.csv");
FileInputStream config = new FileInputStream("c:/1.cfg");
// Get the object of DataInputStream
DataInputStream in = new DataInputStream(config);
DataInputStream degistir = new DataInputStream(degistirilecek);
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(in));
BufferedReader brdegis = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(degistir));
List<Object> arrayLines = new ArrayList<Object>();
Object contents;
while ((contents = brdegis.readLine()) != null)
{
arrayLines.add(contents);
}
System.out.println(arrayLines + "\n");
String strLine;
//Read File Line By Line
while ((strLine = br.readLine()) != null) {
//Couldn't modify this part error is here :(
BufferedWriter out = new BufferedWriter(new FileWriter("c:/1_new.cfg"));
out.write(strLine);
out.close();
}
in.close();
degistir.close();
}catch (Exception e){//Catch exception if any
System.err.println("Error: " + e.getMessage());
}
}
}
You are opening the file for reading when you declare:
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(in));
If you know the entire file will fit in memory, I recommend doing the following :
Open the file and read it's contents in memory into a giant string, then close the file.
Apply your replace in one shot to the giant string.
Open the file and write (e.g use a BufferedWriter) out the contents of the giant string, then close the file.
As a side note, your code as posted will not compile. The quality of the responses you receive are correlated with the quality of the question asked. Always include an SCCE with your question to increase the chance of getting a precise answer to your question.
can you elaborate the purpose of the program?
if it is a simple content replacement in a file.
then just read a line and store it in a string. then use string replace method for replacing a text in a string.
eg:
newStrog=oldString.replace(oldVlue,newValue);