Reputation: 3076
When I tried to write an equivalent of a Java try
-with-resources statement in Kotlin, it didn't work for me.
I tried different variations of the following:
try (writer = OutputStreamWriter(r.getOutputStream())) {
// ...
}
But neither works. Does anyone know what should be used instead?
Apparently Kotlin grammar doesn't include such a construct, but maybe I'm missing something. It defines the grammar for a try
block as follows:
try : "try" block catchBlock* finallyBlock?;
Upvotes: 208
Views: 60277
Reputation: 7579
There is a use
function in kotlin-stdlib (src).
How to use it:
OutputStreamWriter(r.getOutputStream()).use {
// `it` is your OutputStreamWriter
it.write('a')
}
Upvotes: 301
Reputation: 2801
I will highly recommend to use AutoCloseable for classes.
AutoCloseable object is called automatically when exiting a try-with-resources block for which the object has been declared in the resource specification header.
Example:
class Resource : AutoCloseable {
fun op1() = println("op1")
override fun close() = println("close up.")
}
in main function:
Resource().use {
it.op1()
}
Output:
> op1
close up.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 27045
Since this StackOverflow post is near the top of the current search results for "kotlin closeable example," and yet none of the other answers (nor the official docs) clearly explain how to extend Closeable
(a.k.a. java.io.Closeable
), I thought I'd add an example of how to make your own class that extends Closeable
. It goes like this:
import java.io.Closeable
class MyServer : Closeable {
override fun close() {
println("hello world")
}
}
And then to use it:
fun main() {
val s = MyServer()
s.use {
println("begin")
}
println("end")
}
See this example in the Kotlin Playground here.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 81879
Kotlin, as opposed to Java, does not have a special syntax for this. Instead, try-with-resources, is offered as the standard library function use
.
FileInputStream("filename").use { fis -> //or implicit `it`
//use stream here
}
use
implementations@InlineOnly
public inline fun <T : Closeable?, R> T.use(block: (T) -> R): R {
var closed = false
try {
return block(this)
} catch (e: Exception) {
closed = true
try {
this?.close()
} catch (closeException: Exception) {
}
throw e
} finally {
if (!closed) {
this?.close()
}
}
}
This function is defined as a generic extension on all Closeable?
types. Closeable
is Java's interface that allows try-with-resources as of Java SE7.
The function takes a function literal block
which gets executed in a try
. Same as with try-with-resources in Java, the Closeable
gets closed in a finally
.
Also failures happening inside block
lead to close
executions, where possible exceptions are literally "suppressed" by just ignoring them. This is different from try-with-resources, because such exceptions can be requested in Java‘s solution.
The use
extension is available on any Closeable
type, i.e. streams, readers and so on.
FileInputStream("filename").use {
//use your stream by referring to `it` or explicitly give a name.
}
The part in curly brackets is what becomes block
in use
(a lambda is passed as an argument here). After the block is done, you can be sure that FileInputStream
has been closed.
Upvotes: 81
Reputation: 1781
Edit: The following response is still valid for Kotlin 1.0.x. For Kotlin 1.1, there is support a standard library that targets Java 8 to support closable resource pattern.
For other classes that do not support the "use" function, I have done the following homemade try-with-resources:
package info.macias.kotlin
inline fun <T:AutoCloseable,R> trywr(closeable: T, block: (T) -> R): R {
try {
return block(closeable);
} finally {
closeable.close()
}
}
Then you can use it the following way:
fun countEvents(sc: EventSearchCriteria?): Long {
return trywr(connection.prepareStatement("SELECT COUNT(*) FROM event")) {
var rs = it.executeQuery()
rs.next()
rs.getLong(1)
}
}
Upvotes: 16