The java.io.Writer interface has two methods called append and write. What are the differences between these two? It even says that
An invocation of t
Probably to conform to the Appendable interface: http://download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/lang/Appendable.html
Writer.append(c)
returns the Writer instance. Thus you can chain multiple calls to append, e.g. out.append("Hello").append("World")
;
There are minor differences between append() and write(). All of which you can work out by reading the Javadocs. Hint. ;)
void
write is an older style format created before CharSequence was available.
These methods are overloaded so that there is a
write(int)
where the int
is cast to a char. append(char)
must be a char type.write(char[] chars)
takes an array of char, there is no equivalent append().Append()
can take a CharSequence
, whereas write()
takes a String
.
Since String
is an implementation of CharSequence
, you can also pass a String
to append()
. But you can also pass a StringBuilder
or StringBuffer
to append
, which you can't do with write()
.
Looks to me like it's a byproduct of the Appendable
interface which java.io.Writer
implements in order to provide compatibility with java.util.Formatter
. As you noted, the documentation points out that for java.io.Writer
there is no practical difference between the two methods.
As you can see from the documentation, append also returns the Writer you have just written to so that you can perform multiple appends such as:
out.append(a).append(b).append(c)