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Java I/O Java I/O is based on input streams and output streams. All input and output are defined in the Java IO package. 1 Input and Output There are three predefined standard streams: Stream Purpose Default Device System.in reading input Keyboard System.out writing output Monitor System.err writing errors monitor e.g System.out.println writes to the console 2 Reading in using the Scanner class The code below creates an object of the Scanner class. What is returned is an Iterator that allows you read in from the keyboard – the Scanner class implements the iterator interface. Scanner scan = new Scanner(System.in) – reads from the keyboard Scanner scan = new Scanner(filename) – reads in from an input file 3 I/O Streams A stream is a sequence of bytes that flows from a source to a destination In a program, we read information from an input stream and write information to an output stream 4 STREAMS of DATA A program can manage multiple streams at a time The java.io package contains many classes to read from: a file, the keyboard, the console etc. 5 I/O Stream Categories The classes in the I/O package divide input and output streams into other categories An I/O stream is either a: character stream, which deals with text data Or A byte stream, which deal with byte data(1 & 0’s) 6 I/O Streams An I/O stream is also either a data stream, which acts as either a source or destination (keyboard or file) processing stream, which alters or manages information in the data stream - this stream will take characters and assemble them into words 7 IO streams to and from the Console There are three standard I/O streams to and from the console: standard output – defined by System.out standard input – defined by System.in standard error – defined by System.err We use System.out when we execute System.out.println statements 8 Types of input standard input – defined by System.in standard output – defined by System.out standard error – defined by System.err System.in reads characters in one by one. You attach System.in to another stream that will accumulate the characters into a word 9 Input/Output System.err implements the standard error stream. This is used to send error messages to you as the program is executing. E.g. - to the console. E.g. The is the screen at the bottom of the Jgrasp program where you can see your errors. 10 Streams Any source of input or destination for output is called a stream. You must import into your program import java.io 11 Exceptions Exceptions are thrown by a program, and may be caught and handled by another part of the program. A program can therefore be separated into a normal execution flow - your program runs and an exception execution flow – an exception stops the program and may start another flow 12 Exception Not to Catch public class Zero { public static void main (String[] args) { int numerator = 10; int denominator = 0; System.out.println (numerator / denominator);// } // method main } // class Zero // produces a division by 0 error An error – division by 0 - represents a unrecoverable situation and should not be caught. 13 Exception Handling A program can deal with an exception in one of three ways: ignore it – (which is sometimes very tempting) handle it where it occurs - preferred handle it an another place in the program The manner in which an exception is processed is an important design consideration. 14 Exception Handling If an exception is ignored by the program, the program will terminate and produce an appropriate message. E.g public static void main(String Args) throws IOException { ……. // reads in from a file and if an exception occurs // it throws the exception so the program will close …… } The program will terminate. The Exception was not caught but “ Thrown” 15 Throwing an Exception When the program terminates the call stack trace shows the method call trail that leads to the line of code that caused the problem. (line 40) E.g java.lang.NullPointerException at HPAirGUIApplet.init(HPAirGUIApplet.java:40) // your code problem occurred at line 40 in the applet // and the operation that is the culprits is at java 424 etc at sun.applet.AppletPanel.run(AppletPanel.java:424) at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:619) 16 BETTER WAY TO HANDLE EXCEPTION public String myMethod() { try { // calls trickyMethod() …….. return trickyMethod(); // calls method and an exception //may occur here // } catch ( IOException e ) // so catch it here and name it { // will print out the “bad data” (see next slide) System.out.println (e.getMessage()“) return null; }} 17 trickyMethod throws the Exception back to the calling method trickyMethod can have an input exception: public int trickyMethod() throws IOException { int result = readAnotherInt();// read in an int if ( result < 0 ) throw new IOException( "bad data" ); return result; } //So if result is less than 0, an exception is thrown //Execution goes back to the calling method ( myMethod()) //which prints out “bad data “ and then returns null – see previous slide 18 Exceptions come is several flavors: RuntimeExceptions, Errors, Checked and Unchecked. Type codes used in describing Exceptions Checked? (declare throws?) Letter Type Parent Class R Runtime java.lang.RuntimeException Error that can occur in almost any code e.g. NullPointerException. java.lang.Error Serious error you really should not try to catch, e.g. OutOfMemoryError. java.lang.Exception Checked exceptions are required by java to be handled e.g. EOFException. E C Error Checked Use 19 Class Exception – pre-defined java class class Exception // defined in the java.io package { // will contain an error message to be printed out private String message;// contains error message // a string which describes the exception is sent and stored in //“message” public Exception (String message) // constructor { this.message = message; // user defined error message } // retrieve the String sent to the constructor to output public String getMessage() { return message: } 20 (Class got Milk) try { System.out.println("Enter number of donuts:"); donutCount = scan.nextInt(); System.out.println("Enter # of glasses of milk:"); milkCount =scan.nextInt(); if (milkCount < 1) { throw new Exception("Exception: No Milk!"); } // close try { more code } catch(Exception e) // creates an object of Exception object “e” { // line below will output “Exception:NoMilk”) System.out.println(e.getMessage()) // prints “Exception:NoMilk” } // close catch } 21 TRY - Catch Exception is a predefined class and the throws statement creates a new object of the class Exception When the exception is thrown, the code in the surrounding try block stops executing and another portion of code the catch block begins execution. 22 The parameter to the catch : catch (Exception e) is preceded by a class name that specifies what kind of exception is thrown e.g. Exception, or FileNotFoundException 23 In throws new Exception (“ Exception: No Milk”), the string “Exception: no milk” is an argument to the constructor in the Exception class and is stored in an instance variable message so it can be recovered with a getter method - e.getMessage(). 24 Catching the Exception When the exception is thrown, execution goes to the catch block: catch ( Exception e) { System.out.println(e.getMessage());// prints error message e.g; if we throw the exception with the string below throw new Exception("Exception: No Milk!"); So e.getMessage prints: “Exception: No Milk” 25 Throwing Exceptions back to calling method public void eatPizza() throws StomachAcheException ( ….. Some code ….. if (ateTooMuch()) { throw new StomachAcheException(“Ouch”); ….. } When the StomachAcheException is thrown we exit from the eatPizza() method and go back to where the method was called from. If no exception is thrown, processing continues as normal to the code after the catch block. 26 USER DEFINED EXCEPTION class StomachAcheException // user defined exception { // will contain an error message to be printed out private String message;// contains error message // a string which describes the exception is sent and stored in //“message” public Exception (String message) // constructor { this.message = message; // user defined error message message = message + “ “ + “GET some alka seltzer” } // retrieve the String sent to the constructor to output public String getMessage() { return message: } So the message contains “Ouch” + “GET some alka seltzer” 27 Types of Exceptions I .Errors: When a dynamic linking failure or other "hardware" failure in the virtual machine occurs, the machine throws an Error. These are never thrown by the programmer. And the program terminates 28 . Runtime Exceptions II. Runtime Exceptions: Subtypes of the RuntimeException class are unchecked exceptions – they represent exceptions that occur during runtime. “Unchecked “ means you are not required to catch them But good coding practices demand that you do. 29 Exceptions and Exception Types ClassNotFoundException IOException ArithmeticException Exception AWTException NullPointerException RuntimeException IndexOutOfBoundsException Object Throwable Several more classes Several more classes LinkageError VirtualMachineError Error AWTError Several more classes 30 Checked Exceptions An exception therefore is either checked or unchecked. A checked exception can only be thrown within a try block or within a method that is designated to throw that exception. 31 Checked Exceptions The compiler will complain if a checked exception is not handled appropriately. Checked exceptions are due to the environment which are beyond the programmers control but to which the programmer must handle in their code E.g., EOFException (reading past the End of File), FileNotFoundException MalFormedURLException (an incorrectly coded URL) 32 Exception - Making your own To define a class representing a new checked exception, ( you can write your own!!) the code is public class MyCheckedException extends Exception. Checked exceptions are checked by the compiler so you have no choice but to handle them in the code 33 Unchecked Exceptions An unchecked exception (no try/catch required) results from programming errors. E.g. arithmetic exceptions such as dividing by zero ArithmeticException, ArrayIndexOutOfBounds Exception, NumberformatException, NullPointerException. 34 Unchecked Exceptions These do not require explicit handling, though good programmers do so. To define a class that will check these exceptions, Your new exception class must extend RunTime Exception . 35 Checked ExceptionsCatch or specify requirement Java requires that a method either catch or specify all checked exceptions that are thrown within the scope of the method. e.g. Catch A method can catch an exception by providing an exception handler for that type of exception. e .g. a try /catch block 36 Catch or specify requirement Catch or specify requirement (con’d) Specify If a method chooses not to catch an exception, the method must specify that it can throw that exception. E.g. in your method you can throw an exception without catching it anywhere in the program . This is bad form!! 37 Runtime Exceptions - examples I . Exceptions can be thrown within the method e.g The method handles the try/catch block II. Exceptions can be thrown indirectly by the method through calls to other methods. E.g. Thus method1 calls method2 which throws an exception. Whether method2 handles it or throws it is a design issue. 38 Exception Propagation If it is not appropriate to handle the exception where it occurs, it can be handled at a higher level. The method will throw the exception in its header 39 Exceptions propagate Exceptions propagate up through the method calling hierarchy until they are caught and handled or or until they reach the outermost level. 40 Propagating Errors Up the Call Stack public Method1 { try { call method2; } catch (exception) { doErrorProcessing; } } public Method2 throws exception // exception thrown to calling method { call method3; } public method3 throws exception // exception thrown back to calling method { call readFile; // this is where the exception can occur } 41 The try Block writing to a file: try{ /// all IO require checked exceptions outFile = new PrintStream( new BufferedOutputStream (new FileOutputStream("Out.txt"))); for (int i = 0; i < size; i++) outFile.println("Value at: " + i + vector.elementAt(i)); } // close file } catch (NegativeArraySizeException e) { System.out.println(“Illegal argument “); } catch (ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException e) { System.err.println("Caught ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException: " + e.getMessage()); } catch (IOException e) { System.err.println("Caught IOException: " + e.getMessage()); } 42 IMPORTANT Order of the listing of multiple exceptions: IF YOU PUT THE IOEXCEPTION FIRST IN THE ORDER, IF YOU HAVE A NegativeArraySizeException IT WILL BE CAUGHT BY THE IOEXCEPTION . IOEXCEPTION WILL CATCH ALL EXCEPTIONS AND YOU WILL NOT KNOW WHAT HAPPENED THIS WAS A QUESTION A GOOGLE INTERVIEWER ASKED. See slide 40 43 The finally Clause A try statement can have an optional clause designated by the reserved word finally. If no exception is generated, the statements in the finally clause are executed after the statements in the try block complete. 44 finally clauses Also, if an exception is generated, the statements in the finally clauses are executed after the statements in the catch clause for that exception completes. 45 The statements within the finally block are always executed. Why? To provides a mechanism that allows your method to clean up after itself regardless of what happens within the try block. Use the finally block to close files or release other system resources. finally { System.out.println("Closing file"); outFile.close(); } YOU MUST SPECIFICALLY CLOSE AN OUTPUT FILE, OR THE DATA YOU WROTE TO IT IS LOST 46 ORDER OF EXCEPTIONS In this next example, the order of the catch clauses is according to what you need to know. If you need to know if the file was not there, then you put that first. If you put IOException first, then any IO exception could occur and you would not know if the file was there. 47 Order of Exceptions // exception CATCHES INCORRECT DATA public void ReadFromFile try { // read in an integer from a file units = scanner.nextInt(); } // close try catch (NumberFormatException exception) { System.out.println ("Error in input. Line ignored:"); System.out.println (units); } // close catch 48 catch (FileNotFoundException exception) { System.out.println ("The file " + file + " was not found."); } // close catch catch (IOException exception){ // CATCHES ALL IO EXCEPTIONS System.out.println ( “ IOexception – problem with file”) System.out.println (exception); }// close catch catch (Exception e){ // CATCHES ALL EXCEPTIONS System.out.println (exception); }// close catch finally { outFile.close(); e.printStackTrace(); } 49