How do I read input character-by-character in Java?

笑着哭i 提交于 2019-11-26 14:31:50

Use Reader.read(). A return value of -1 means end of stream; else, cast to char.

This code reads character data from a list of file arguments:

public class CharacterHandler {
    //Java 7 source level
    public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
        // replace this with a known encoding if possible
        Charset encoding = Charset.defaultCharset();
        for (String filename : args) {
            File file = new File(filename);
            handleFile(file, encoding);
        }
    }

    private static void handleFile(File file, Charset encoding)
            throws IOException {
        try (InputStream in = new FileInputStream(file);
             Reader reader = new InputStreamReader(in, encoding);
             // buffer for efficiency
             Reader buffer = new BufferedReader(reader)) {
            handleCharacters(buffer);
        }
    }

    private static void handleCharacters(Reader reader)
            throws IOException {
        int r;
        while ((r = reader.read()) != -1) {
            char ch = (char) r;
            System.out.println("Do something with " + ch);
        }
    }
}

The bad thing about the above code is that it uses the system's default character set. Wherever possible, prefer a known encoding (ideally, a Unicode encoding if you have a choice). See the Charset class for more. (If you feel masochistic, you can read this guide to character encoding.)

(One thing you might want to look out for are supplementary Unicode characters - those that require two char values to store. See the Character class for more details; this is an edge case that probably won't apply to homework.)

Combining the recommendations from others for specifying a character encoding and buffering the input, here's what I think is a pretty complete answer.

Assuming you have a File object representing the file you want to read:

BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(
    new InputStreamReader(
        new FileInputStream(file),
        Charset.forName("UTF-8")));
int c;
while((c = reader.read()) != -1) {
  char character = (char) c;
  // Do something with your character
}

Another option is to not read things in character by character -- read the entire file into memory. This is useful if you need to look at the characters more than once. One trivial way to do that is:

  /** Read the contents of a file into a string buffer      */
    public static void readFile(File file, StringBuffer buf)
        throws IOException
    {
    FileReader fr = null;
    try {
      fr = new FileReader(file);
      BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(fr);
      char[] cbuf = new char[(int) file.length()];
      br.read(cbuf);  
      buf.append(cbuf);
      br.close();
    }
    finally {
      if (fr != null) {
        fr.close();
      }
    }
}
pfranza

Wrap your input stream in a buffered reader then use the read method to read one byte at a time until the end of stream.

import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;

public class Reader {

    public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {

        BufferedReader buffer = new BufferedReader(
                 new InputStreamReader(System.in));
        int c = 0;
        while((c = buffer.read()) != -1) {
            char character = (char) c;          
            System.out.println(character);          
        }       
    }   
}

If I were you I'd just use a scanner and use ".nextByte()". You can cast that to a char and you're good.

shake

You have several options if you use BufferedReader. This buffered reader is faster than Reader so you can wrap it.

BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(path));
reader.read(char[] buffer);

this reads line into char array. You have similar options. Look at documentation.

Wrap your reader in a BufferedReader, which maintains a buffer allowing for much faster reads overall. You can then use read() to read a single character (which you'll need to cast). You can also use readLine() to fetch an entire line and then break that into individual characters. The BufferedReader also supports marking and returning, so if you need to, you can read a line multiple times.

Generally speaking, you want to use a BufferedReader or BufferedInputStream on top of whatever stream you are actually using since the buffer they maintain will make multiple reads much faster.

In java 5 new feature added that is Scanner method who gives the chance to read input character by character in java.

for instance; for use Scanner method import java.util.Scanner; after in main method:define

Scanner myScanner = new Scanner(System.in); //for read character

char anything=myScanner.findInLine(".").charAt(0);

you anything store single character, if you want more read more character declare more object like anything1,anything2... more example for your answer please check in your hand(copy/paste)

     import java.util.Scanner;
     class ReverseWord  {

    public static void main(String args[]){
    Scanner myScanner=new Scanner(System.in);
    char c1,c2,c3,c4;

    c1 = myScanner.findInLine(".").charAt(0);
        c2 = myScanner.findInLine(".").charAt(0);
    c3 = myScanner.findInLine(".").charAt(0);
    c4 = myScanner.findInLine(".").charAt(0);

    System.out.print(c4);
    System.out.print(c3);
    System.out.print(c2);
    System.out.print(c1);
    System.out.println();

   }
  }

This will print 1 character per line from the file.

    try {

        FileInputStream inputStream = new FileInputStream(theFile);
        while (inputStream.available() > 0) {
            inputData = inputStream.read();
            System.out.println((char) inputData);

        }
        inputStream.close();
    } catch (IOException ioe) {
        System.out.println("Trouble reading from the file: " + ioe.getMessage());
    }
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