Difference between revisions of "IO"
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* createNewFile() - will attempt to create a file. Returns true/false depending on the success status. | * createNewFile() - will attempt to create a file. Returns true/false depending on the success status. | ||
* mkdir() - will create a directory. | * mkdir() - will create a directory. | ||
− | * list() - returns a String[] of directory contents if the File represents a dir, else it will return | + | * list() - returns a String[] of directory contents if the File represents a dir, else it will return null. |
+ | |||
[[Category:OCPJP]] | [[Category:OCPJP]] |
Revision as of 02:13, 18 August 2011
Basic Classes
- The File class is an abstract representation of files and directory pathnames. It works at a higher level, cant be used to read/write data.
- FileReader - read character levels - variety of read() methods. Usually wrapped in a BufferedReader.
- BufferedReader - Reads large chunks of files and keeps it in the buffer. Subsequent requests are got from the buffer thus minimizing the number of times time intensive file IO is performed.
Similarly:
- FileWriter - write to character files.
- BufferedWriter - Keeps data in buffer and writes large chunks of buffer to file at once, minimizing file IO.
- PrintWriter - Has a lot of convenience methods and constructors (takes a File or String etc). Methods like format(), printf() and append() make PrintWriters powerful.
Remember:
- For Characters - Reader and Writer classes are used.
- For Bytes - Stream classes are used.
- A File object can represent a file or a directory.
- File f = new File("a.txt") just creates an object representing the file, doesnt create the file on the disk.
- createNewFile() - will attempt to create a file. Returns true/false depending on the success status.
- mkdir() - will create a directory.
- list() - returns a String[] of directory contents if the File represents a dir, else it will return null.