I want to read each line from a text file and store them in an ArrayList (each line being one entry in the ArrayList).
So far I understand that a BufferedInputStream writes to the buffer and only does another read once the buffer is empty which minimises or at least reduces the amount of operating system operations.
Am I correct - do I make sense?
If the above is the case in what situations would anyone want to use DataInputStream. And finally which of the two should I be using and why - or does it not matter.
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Use a normal
InputStream
(e.g.FileInputStream
) wrapped in anInputStreamReader
and then wrapped in aBufferedReader
- then callreadLine
on theBufferedReader
.DataInputStream
is good for reading primitives, length-prefixed strings etc. -
I would advocate using Jakarta Commons IO and the readlines() method (of whatever variety).
It'll look after buffering/closing etc. and give you back a list of text lines. I'll happily roll my own input stream wrapping with buffering etc., but nine times out of ten the Commons IO stuff works fine and is sufficient/more concise/less error prone etc.
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The two classes are not mutually exclusive - you can use both of them if your needs suit.
As you picked up, BufferedInputStream is about reading in blocks of data rather than a single byte at a time. It also provides the convenience method of readLine(). However, it's also used for peeking at data further in the stream then rolling back to a previous part of the stream if required (see the mark() and reset() methods).
DataInputStream/DataOutputStream provides convenience methods for reading/writing certain data types. For example, it has a method to write/read a UTF String. If you were to do this yourself, you'd have to decide on how to determine the end of the String (i.e. with a terminator byte or by specifying the length of the string).
This is different from BufferedInputStream's readLine() which, as the method sounds like, only returns a single line. writeUTF()/readUTF() deal with Strings - that string can have as many lines it it as it wants.
BufferedInputStream is suitable for most text processing purposes. If you're doing something special like trying to serialize the fields of a class to a file, you'd want to use DataInput/OutputStream as it offers greater control of the data at a binary level.
Hope that helps.
Martin OConnor : You are confusing a BufferedInputStream with a BufferedReader. InputStreams have no concept of a line so do not have readLine()Mike : Whoops - yes you are right!
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