Betamoo
Betamoo

Reputation: 15860

Whole text file to a String in Java

Does Java has a one line instruction to read to a text file, like what C# has?

I mean, is there something equivalent to this in Java?:

String data = System.IO.File.ReadAllText("path to file");

If not... what is the 'optimal way' to do this...?

Edit:
I prefer a way within Java standard libraries... I can not use 3rd party libraries..

Upvotes: 60

Views: 71209

Answers (10)

Neeme Praks
Neeme Praks

Reputation: 9150

Java 11 adds support for this use-case with Files.readString, sample code:

Files.readString(Path.of("/your/directory/path/file.txt"));

Before Java 11, typical approach with standard libraries would be something like this:

public static String readStream(InputStream is) {
    StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(512);
    try {
        Reader r = new InputStreamReader(is, "UTF-8");
        int c = 0;
        while ((c = r.read()) != -1) {
            sb.append((char) c);
        }
    } catch (IOException e) {
        throw new RuntimeException(e);
    }
    return sb.toString();
}

Notes:

  • in order to read text from file, use FileInputStream
  • if performance is important and you are reading large files, it would be advisable to wrap the stream in BufferedInputStream
  • the stream should be closed by the caller

Upvotes: 29

mir
mir

Reputation: 381

Not quite a one liner and probably obsolete if using JDK 11 as posted by nullpointer. Still usefull if you have a non file input stream

InputStream inStream = context.getAssets().open(filename);
Scanner s = new Scanner(inStream).useDelimiter("\\A");
String string = s.hasNext() ? s.next() : "";
inStream.close();
return string;

Upvotes: 0

SzB
SzB

Reputation: 1037

No external libraries needed. The content of the file will be buffered before converting to string.

Path path = FileSystems.getDefault().getPath(directory, filename);
String fileContent = new String(Files.readAllBytes(path), StandardCharsets.UTF_8);

Upvotes: 3

SzB
SzB

Reputation: 1037

No external libraries needed. The content of the file will be buffered before converting to string.

  String fileContent="";
  try {
          File f = new File("path2file");
          byte[] bf = new byte[(int)f.length()];
          new FileInputStream(f).read(bf);
          fileContent = new String(bf, "UTF-8");
      } catch (FileNotFoundException e) {
          // handle file not found exception
      } catch (IOException e) {
          // handle IO-exception
      }

Upvotes: 0

Naman
Naman

Reputation: 31858

With JDK/11, you can read a complete file at a Path as a string using Files.readString(Path path):

try {
    String fileContent = Files.readString(Path.of("/foo/bar/gus"));
} catch (IOException e) {
    // handle exception in i/o
}

the method documentation from the JDK reads as follows:

/**
 * Reads all content from a file into a string, decoding from bytes to characters
 * using the {@link StandardCharsets#UTF_8 UTF-8} {@link Charset charset}.
 * The method ensures that the file is closed when all content have been read
 * or an I/O error, or other runtime exception, is thrown.
 *
 * <p> This method is equivalent to:
 * {@code readString(path, StandardCharsets.UTF_8) }
 *
 * @param   path the path to the file
 *
 * @return  a String containing the content read from the file
 *
 * @throws  IOException
 *          if an I/O error occurs reading from the file or a malformed or
 *          unmappable byte sequence is read
 * @throws  OutOfMemoryError
 *          if the file is extremely large, for example larger than {@code 2GB}
 * @throws  SecurityException
 *          In the case of the default provider, and a security manager is
 *          installed, the {@link SecurityManager#checkRead(String) checkRead}
 *          method is invoked to check read access to the file.
 *
 * @since 11
 */
public static String readString(Path path) throws IOException 

Upvotes: 5

gomisha
gomisha

Reputation: 2924

Here are 3 ways to read a text file in one line, without requiring a loop. I documented 15 ways to read from a file in Java and these are from that article.

Note that you still have to loop through the list that's returned, even though the actual call to read the contents of the file requires just 1 line, without looping.

1) java.nio.file.Files.readAllLines() - Default Encoding

import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.util.List;

public class ReadFile_Files_ReadAllLines {
  public static void main(String [] pArgs) throws IOException {
    String fileName = "c:\\temp\\sample-10KB.txt";
    File file = new File(fileName);

    List  fileLinesList = Files.readAllLines(file.toPath());

    for(String line : fileLinesList) {
      System.out.println(line);
    }
  }
}

2) java.nio.file.Files.readAllLines() - Explicit Encoding

import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.nio.charset.StandardCharsets;
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.util.List;

public class ReadFile_Files_ReadAllLines_Encoding {
  public static void main(String [] pArgs) throws IOException {
    String fileName = "c:\\temp\\sample-10KB.txt";
    File file = new File(fileName);

    //use UTF-8 encoding
    List  fileLinesList = Files.readAllLines(file.toPath(), StandardCharsets.UTF_8);

    for(String line : fileLinesList) {
      System.out.println(line);
    }
  }
}

3) java.nio.file.Files.readAllBytes()

import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.nio.file.Files;

public class ReadFile_Files_ReadAllBytes {
  public static void main(String [] pArgs) throws IOException {
    String fileName = "c:\\temp\\sample-10KB.txt";
    File file = new File(fileName);

    byte [] fileBytes = Files.readAllBytes(file.toPath());
    char singleChar;
    for(byte b : fileBytes) {
      singleChar = (char) b;
      System.out.print(singleChar);
    }
  }
}

Upvotes: 0

Jon Skeet
Jon Skeet

Reputation: 1499740

Not within the main Java libraries, but you can use Guava:

String data = Files.asCharSource(new File("path.txt"), Charsets.UTF_8).read();

Or to read lines:

List<String> lines = Files.readLines( new File("path.txt"), Charsets.UTF_8 );

Of course I'm sure there are other 3rd party libraries which would make it similarly easy - I'm just most familiar with Guava.

Upvotes: 28

dimo414
dimo414

Reputation: 48794

Java 7 improves on this sorry state of affairs with the Files class (not to be confused with Guava's class of the same name), you can get all lines from a file - without external libraries - with:

List<String> fileLines = Files.readAllLines(path, StandardCharsets.UTF_8);

Or into one String:

String contents = new String(Files.readAllBytes(path), StandardCharsets.UTF_8);
// or equivalently:
StandardCharsets.UTF_8.decode(ByteBuffer.wrap(Files.readAllBytes(path)));

If you need something out of the box with a clean JDK this works great. That said, why are you writing Java without Guava?

Upvotes: 24

Kris
Kris

Reputation: 4823

In Java 8 (no external libraries) you could use streams. This code reads a file and puts all lines separated by ', ' into a String.

try (Stream<String> lines = Files.lines(myPath)) {
    list = lines.collect(Collectors.joining(", "));
} catch (IOException e) {
    LOGGER.error("Failed to load file.", e);
}

Upvotes: 11

Bozho
Bozho

Reputation: 597016

apache commons-io has:

String str = FileUtils.readFileToString(file, "utf-8");

But there is no such utility in the standard java classes. If you (for some reason) don't want external libraries, you'd have to reimplement it. Here are some examples, and alternatively, you can see how it is implemented by commons-io or Guava.

Upvotes: 51

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