I'm working on a simple level editor for my Android game. I've written the GUI (which draws a grid) using swing. You click on the squares where you want to position a tile and it changes colour. Once you're done, you write everything to a file.
My file consists of something like the following (this is just an example):
I use the asterisks to determine the level number being read and the hyphen to tell the reader to stop reading.
My file reading code is below, Selecting which part to read works OK - for example. if I pass in 2 by doing the following:
readFile(2);
Then it prints all of the characters in the 2nd section
What I can't figure out is, once I've got to the 'start' point, how do I actually read the numbers as integers and not individual characters?
Code
public void readFile(int level){
try {
//What ever the file path is.
File levelFile = new File("C:/Temp/levels.txt");
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(levelFile);
InputStreamReader isr = new InputStreamReader(fis);
Reader r = new BufferedReader(isr);
int charTest;
//Position the reader to the relevant level (Levels are separated by asterisks)
for (int x =0;x<level;x++){
//Get to the relevant asterisk
while ((charTest = fis.read()) != 42){
}
}
//Now we are at the correct read position, keep reading until we hit a '-' char
//Which indicates 'end of level information'
while ((charTest = fis.read()) != 45){
System.out.print((char)charTest);
}
//All done - so close the file
r.close();
} catch (IOException e) {
System.err.println("Problem reading the file levels.txt");
}
}
Scanner's a good answer. To remain closer to what you have, use the BufferedReader to read whole lines (instead of reading one character at a time) and Integer.parseInt to convert from String to Integer:
// get to starting position
BufferedReader r = new BufferedReader(isr);
...
String line = null;
while (!(line = reader.readLine()).equals("-"))
{
int number = Integer.parseInt(line);
}
If you use the BufferedReader and not the Reader interface, you can call r.readLine(). Then you can simply use Integer.valueOf(String) or Integer.parseInt(String).
Perhaps you should consider using readLine which gets all the chars up the the end of line.
This part:
for (int x =0;x<level;x++){
//Get to the relevant asterisk
while ((charTest = fis.read()) != 42){
}
}
Can change to this:
for (int x =0;x<level;x++){
//Get to the relevant asterisk
while ((strTest = fis.readLine()) != null) {
if (strTest.startsWith('*')) {
break;
}
}
}
Then, to read the values another loop:
for (;;) {
strTest = fls.readLine();
if (strTest != null && !strTest.startsWith('-')) {
int value = Integer.parseInt(strTest);
// ... you have to store it somewhere
} else {
break;
}
}
You also need some code in there to handle errors including a premature end of file.
I think you should have look at the Scanner API in Java.
You can have a look at their tutorial
Related
Is there in Java some sort of equivalent to BufferedReader.skip(), that would take number of lines as parameter instead of number of characters?
I want to jump to a specific line in a text file and start reading from that point without the need going thru all the lines of the file and checking against the line number (tens of thousands of them - model obj file).
All the examples I saw were dealing with the checking of line number which is not what I want.
So, the solution is to use FileInputStream.skip().
UPDATE: manually adding system-specific new line separator bytes length to line bytes length at each line iteration solved the problem of erroneous bytes skipping, so now it finally works as expected!
Define some Long variable where you will store the number of bytes to skip. I did that in my main application class (App.class):
public static long lineByteOffset = 0;
Then, in your method/function where you read your lines with BufferedReder make it like this (all my files that I read from are encoded as UTF-8):
File objFile = new File(PATH_TO_YOUR_FILE_HERE);
FileInputStream fir = null;
try {
fir = new FileInputStream(objFile);
} catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
System.err.println("File not found!");
}
fir.skip(App.lineByteOffset);//<--- 1ST IMPORTANT PART: SET HOW MANY BYTES TO SKIP, YOU START WITH 0 FOR THE 1ST TIME
BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(fir, "UTF-8"));
int nls = System.getProperty("line.separator").getBytes().length;
String line;
try {
while ((line = reader.readLine()) != null) {
App.lineByteOffset += (long) (line.getBytes().length + nls);//<--- 2ND IMPORTANT PART: INCREASE NUMBER OF BYTES TO SKIP FOR NEXT TIME
/*
DO YOUR STUFF HERE...
IN MY CASE IT RETURNS SPECIFIC BLOCK
WHICH IN EFFECT EXIT THE WHILE LOOP AS NEEDED
SO THAT THE NEXT TIME IT CONTINUE WHERE WE LEFT IT
WITHOUT NEED TO READ THE WHOLE FILE FROM THE START ONCE AGAIN
*/
}
reader.close();
} catch (IOException e) {
System.err.println("Error reading the file");
}
Hopefully my explanation does me some justice. I am pretty new to java. I have a text file that looks like this
Java
The Java Tutorials
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/
Python
Tutorialspoint Java tutorials
http://www.tutorialspoint.com/python/
Perl
Tutorialspoint Perl tutorials
http://www.tutorialspoint.com/perl/
I have properties for language name, website description, and website url. Right now, I just want to list the information from the text file exactly how it looks, but I need to assign those properties to them.
The problem I am getting is "index 1 is out of bounds for length 1"
try {
BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new FileReader("Tutorials.txt"));
while (in.readLine() != null) {
TutorialWebsite tw = new TutorialWebsite();
str = in.readLine();
String[] fields = str.split("\\r?\\n");
tw.setProgramLanguage(fields[0]);
tw.setWebDescription(fields[1]);
tw.setWebURL(fields[2]);
System.out.println(tw);
}
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
I wanted to test something so i removed the new lines and put commas instead and made it str.split(",") which printed it out just fine, but im sure i would get points taken off it i changed the format.
readline returns a "string containing the contents of the line, not including any line-termination characters", so why are you trying to split each line on "\\r?\\n"?
Where is str declared? Why are you reading two lines for each iteration of the loop, and ignoring the first one?
I suggest you start from
String str;
while ((str = in.readLine()) != null) {
System.out.println(str);
}
and work from there.
The first readline gets the language, the second gets the description, and the third gets the url, and then the pattern repeats. There is nothing to stop you using readline three times for each iteration of the while loop.
you can read all the file in a String like this
// try with resources, to make sure BufferedReader is closed safely
try (BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new FileReader("Tutorials.txt"))) {
//str will hold all the file contents
StringBuilder str = new StringBuilder();
String line;
while ((line = in.readLine()) != null) {
str.append(line);
str.append("\n");
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
Later you can split the string with
String[] fields = str.toString().split("[\\n\\r]+");
Why not try it like this.
allocate a List to hold the TutorialWebsite instances.
use try with resources to open the file, read the lines, and trim any white space.
put the lines in an array
then iterate over the array, filling in the class instance
the print the list.
The loop ensures the array length is a multiple of nFields, discarding any remainder. So if your total lines are not divisible by nFields you will not read the remainder of the file. You would still have to adjust the setters if additional fields were added.
int nFields = 3;
List<TutorialWebsite> list = new ArrayList<>();
try (BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new FileReader("tutorials.txt"))) {
String[] lines = in.lines().map(String::trim).toArray(String[]::new);
for (int i = 0; i < (lines.length/nFields)*nFields; i+=nFields) {
TutorialWebsite tw = new TutorialWebsite();
tw.setProgramLanguage(lines[i]);
tw.setWebDescription(lines[i+1]);
tw.setWebURL(lines[i+2]);
list.add(tw);
}
} catch (IOException ioe) {
ioe.printStackTrace();
}
list.forEach(System.out::println);
A improvement would be to use a constructor and pass the strings to that when each instance is created.
And remember the file name as specified is relative to the directory in which the program is run.
This is my debut question here, so I will try to be as clear as I can.
I have a sentences.txt file like this:
Galatasaray beat Juventus 1-0 last night.
I'm going to go wherever you never can find me.
Papaya is such a delicious thing to eat!
Damn lecturer never gives more than 70.
What's in your mind?
As obvious there are 5 sentences, and my objective is to write a listSize method that returns the number of sentences listed here.
public int listSize()
{
// the code is supposed to be here.
return sentence_total;}
All help is appreciated.
To read a file and count its lines, use a java.io.LineNumberReader, plugged on top of a FileReader. Call readLine() on it until it returns null, then getLineNumber() to know the last line number, and you're done !
Alternatively (Java 7+), you can use the NIO2 Files class to fully read the file at once into a List<String>, then return the size of that list.
BTW, I don't understand why your method takes that int as a parameter, it it's supposed to be the value to compute and return ?
Using LineNumberReader:
LineNumberReader reader = new LineNumberReader(new FileReader(new File("sentences.txt")));
reader.skip(Long.MAX_VALUE);
System.out.println(reader.getLineNumber() + 1); // +1 because line index starts at 0
reader.close();
use the following code to get number of lines in that file..
try {
File file = new File("filePath");
BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(file));
String line;
int totalLines = 0;
while((line = reader.readLine()) != null) {
totalLines++;
}
reader.close();
System.out.println(totalLines);
} catch (Exception ex) {
ex.printStackTrace(System.err);
}
You could do:
Path file = Paths.getPath("route/to/myFile.txt");
int numLines = Files.readAllLlines(file).size();
If you want to limit them or process them lazily:
Path file = Paths.getPath("route/to/myFile.txt");
int numLines = Files.llines(file).limit(maxLines).collect(Collectors.counting...);
I have a dictionary text file of around 60000 words. I would like to read in that text file and see if it has a certain amount of n words, provided by the user. At the recommendation of my Professor, I'm going to create a method that expands the array to compensate the different n values. I know how to do that. My question is, how do I initially read the text file and determine if each of the 60000 words has a specific n length?
I know I have to use a loop and import the file: (although I've never done throw exception)
Scanner inputFile = new Scanner(new File("2of12inf.txt"));
for(int i = 0; i < sizeWord; i++) {
}
But what I would normally do is use a charAt(i) , and check if the word has n many characters. But I can't possibly do that for 60000 words. Suggestions?
try{
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(new File("2of12inf.txt")));
String line;
while ((line = br.readLine()) != null) {
// process the line.
int lineLength = line.length();
// assuming each line contains one word, do whatever you want to with this length
}
} catch (Exception e) {
System.out.println("Exception caught! Should handle it accordingly: " + e);
} finally {
be.close();
}
Basicly I was looking for a script that puts some data of an array into a textfile, afterwards this saved data could be red in again.
I achieved to do the first part like so:
public void slaOp(){
try {
File file = new File("savefile.txt");
// Als bestand nog niet bestaat maak je het.
if (!file.exists()) {
file.createNewFile();
}
// Schrijven naar de file
FileWriter fw = new FileWriter(file.getAbsoluteFile());
BufferedWriter bw = new BufferedWriter(fw);
// alle x waarden op 1 lijn en alle y waarden op 1 lijn
String xwaarden = "";
for(int i=0; i<positiesX.length;i++){
xwaarden += ""+positiesX[i];
}
String ywaarden="";
for(int s=0; s<positiesY.length;s++){
ywaarden += ""+positiesY[s];
}
bw.write(xwaarden);
bw.newLine();
bw.write(ywaarden);
bw.close();
System.out.println("Bestand werkt correct verwerkt.");
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
This first part writes the data into a file like so:
123456
465489
For the second part I found many ways but not one that suits my demand.
First I had a script that red a whole line as a String. This worked except for the part that I don't need a Stringline but the numbers, seperated.
Afterwards I had tried a script that uses hasNextInt() and nextInt().
But for some reason, this script didn't read a thing. I thought that the problem would lay with the fact that the integers in the text file aren't actual integers but strings?
I couldn't resolve this problem so tried a 3th script.
FileInputStream fileInput = new FileInputStream("savefile.txt");
int r;
while ((r = fileInput.read()) != -1) {
int c = (int) r;
System.out.println(c);
}
fileInput.close();
This script reads characters. When a convert them to integers, the output are not the numbers that saved into the file.
Could anybody tell me the proper way of handling this situation? Are there some good explanations with examples?
I agree with #prabugp. If there is only 1 number in each line of the file, then you can read it line by line and convert each line to an Integer using Integer.parseInt.
At the moment I believe the reason the numbers you are getting when reading the file are not the same numbers as you have in the file is because you are converting each character in a line to its integer representation as #srm has mentioned. So you are getting the integer representation of the character '1' which is 49 for example.
To read the file line by line you can use something like the following (as explained here http://www.programcreek.com/2011/03/java-read-a-file-line-by-line-code-example/):
File file = new File("C:\\file.txt");
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(file);
//Construct BufferedReader from InputStreamReader
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(fis));
String line = null;
while ((line = br.readLine()) != null) {
// convert to integer
Integer a = Integer.parseInt(line);
}
A quick solution that i can thing of, is converting string into number and then split it as you like. Although its only one thought and it could be done with many ways
a quick link for you.
I can be more specific if you need help after that.
" When a convert them to integers" how do you convert the char into an int? (keep in mind, that a char is already an int).