What is simplest way to read a file into String? [duplicate]
I am trying to read a simple text file into a String. Of course there is the usual way of getting the input stream and iterating with readLine() and reading contents into String.
Having done this hundreds of times in past, I just wondered how can I do this in minimum lines of code? Isn't there something in java like String fileContents = XXX.rea开发者_C百科dFile(myFile/*File*/)
.. rather anything that looks as simple as this?
I know there are libraries like Apache Commons IO which provide such simplifications or even I can write a simple Util class to do this. But all that I wonder is - this is a so frequent operation that everyone needs then why doesn't Java provide such simple function? Isn't there really a single method somewhere to read a file into string with some default or specified encoding?
Yes, you can do this in one line (though for robust IOException
handling you wouldn't want to).
String content = new Scanner(new File("filename")).useDelimiter("\\Z").next();
System.out.println(content);
This uses a java.util.Scanner
, telling it to delimit the input with \Z
, which is the end of the string anchor. This ultimately makes the input have one actual token, which is the entire file, so it can be read with one call to next()
.
There is a constructor that takes a File
and a String charSetName
(among many other overloads). These two constructor may throw FileNotFoundException
, but like all Scanner
methods, no IOException
can be thrown beyond these constructors.
You can query the Scanner
itself through the ioException()
method if an IOException
occurred or not. You may also want to explicitly close()
the Scanner
after you read the content, so perhaps storing the Scanner
reference in a local variable is best.
See also
- Java Tutorials - I/O Essentials - Scanning and formatting
Related questions
- Validating input using java.util.Scanner - has many examples of more typical usage
Third-party library options
For completeness, these are some really good options if you have these very reputable and highly useful third party libraries:
Guava
com.google.common.io.Files
contains many useful methods. The pertinent ones here are:
String toString(File, Charset)
- Using the given character set, reads all characters from a file into a
String
- Using the given character set, reads all characters from a file into a
List<String> readLines(File, Charset)
- ... reads all of the lines from a file into a
List<String>
, one entry per line
- ... reads all of the lines from a file into a
Apache Commons/IO
org.apache.commons.io.IOUtils
also offer similar functionality:
String toString(InputStream, String encoding)
- Using the specified character encoding, gets the contents of an
InputStream
as aString
- Using the specified character encoding, gets the contents of an
List readLines(InputStream, String encoding)
- ... as a (raw)
List
ofString
, one entry per line
- ... as a (raw)
Related questions
Most useful free third party Java libraries (deleted)?
From Java 7 (API Description) onwards you can do:
new String(Files.readAllBytes(Paths.get(filePath)), StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
Where filePath is a String representing the file you want to load.
You can use apache commons IO..
FileInputStream fisTargetFile = new FileInputStream(new File("test.txt"));
String targetFileStr = IOUtils.toString(fisTargetFile, "UTF-8");
This should work for you:
import java.io.IOException;
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
String content = new String(Files.readAllBytes(Paths.get("abc.java")));
}
Using Apache Commons IO.
import org.apache.commons.io.FileUtils;
//...
String contents = FileUtils.readFileToString(new File("/path/to/the/file"), "UTF-8")
You can see de javadoc for the method for details.
Don't write your own util class to do this - I would recommend using Guava, which is full of all kinds of goodness. In this case you'd want either the Files
class (if you're really just reading a file) or CharStreams for more general purpose reading. It has methods to read the data into a list of strings (readLines
) or totally (toString
).
It has similar useful methods for binary data too. And then there's the rest of the library...
I agree it's annoying that there's nothing similar in the standard libraries. Heck, just being able to supply a CharSet
to a FileReader
would make life a little simpler...
Another alternative approach is:
How do I create a Java string from the contents of a file?
Other option is to use utilities provided open source libraries
http://commons.apache.org/io/api-1.4/index.html?org/apache/commons/io/IOUtils.html
Why java doesn't provide such a common util API ?
a) to keep the APIs generic so that encoding, buffering etc is handled by the programmer.
b) make programmers do some work and write/share opensource util libraries :D ;-)
Sadly, no.
I agree that such frequent operation should have easier implementation than copying of input line by line in loop, but you'll have to either write helper method or use external library.
I discovered that the accepted answer actually doesn't always work, because \\Z
may occur in the file. Another problem is that if you don't have the correct charset a whole bunch of unexpected things may happen which may cause the scanner to read only a part of the file.
The solution is to use a delimiter which you are certain will never occur in the file. However, this is theoretically impossible. What we CAN do, is use a delimiter that has such a small chance to occur in the file that it is negligible: such a delimiter is a UUID, which is natively supported in Java.
String content = new Scanner(file, "UTF-8")
.useDelimiter(UUID.randomUUID().toString()).next();
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