I'm trying to write information into a file using PrintWriter. The program complies correctly but when it get's to the following part of the program, an error is given. "Exception in thread 'main' java.io.FileNotFoundException" What is wrong with it?
System.out.print("Enter the filename:");
filename = kb.nextLine();
PrintWriter outputFile = new PrintWriter(filename);
outputFile.println(balance);
outputFile.print(item1+" "+item1Price);
outputFile.println(" "+item1Quantity);
outputFile.print(item2+" "+item2Price);
outputFile.println(" "+item2Quantity);
outputFile.print(item3+" "+item3Price);
outputFile.println(" "+item3Quantity);
outputFile.close();
System.out.println("Data written to the file.");
I have seen different methods of creating and reading files (specifically text files) in Java. The PrintWriter method or the Formatter with a Scanner to read the file, using a BufferedWriter with a BufferedReader, etc. They will all read/write text files, but from what I understand they do so in different ways. When would it be more beneficial to use a buffered writer than, say, PrintWriter, which is much simpler code-wise? Is there a "best" way to handle i/o in general in Java?
I have to write a diff which will compare two txt files, diff have to return changes and additional lines in console with indicating in what file and line.
I'm refitting a snippet of code I found on the net to write stuff into text files. After a bit of fiddling, here's what the code looks like in one of my classes:
public void addItem(String Item){ try{ Writer out = new OutputStreamWriter(fos, "UTF8"); out.append(Item); out.flush(); // out.close(); } catch (IOException e) { System.out.println(e.toString()); } }
The original snippet included the close() method. However, when I tried to do a test run writing multiple lines, I'd get an IOException about the stream being closed. I removed the close() method line, everything seems to work the way I want it, but I just wanna know if there's anything I'm missing out on by not having the close() method anywhere, especially when the IDE finds it important enough that it lit a warning about the stream not being closed somewhere as I was repurposing the original snippet.
I'm trying to use graphics for my programs and here I'm trying to write a program that searches through files for text received from a JTextField. However, it does not seem to be working as my message is not displayed when text is found...
My background is mainframe and i'm new to java. We're moving from mainframe to the java world and I'm trying to achieve a task. I have a main folder and then bunch of sub folders and each sub folder has bunch of xml files, files size are varies some of them are 900kb. I need to read these xml files and send the output to the txt file (comma separated).
Some possible options or sample example... Please find below the sample xml file. I need to extract information's only where
I got a question in my last interview, its all about multithreading, interviewer asked me to write a program, to write the contents of three files(F1,F2,F3) in to a new File F4, using multithreading , first thread should read the first file and second thread should read second file, so the File F4 should contain F1's contents in first then F2's contents after that etc. I tried to give my best shot, but i couldn't get a way to ensure that the first thread is reading the first file and write to F4 then second thread reading the second file and writing once first file is written completely into F4 and so on ..how to do this?
I'm supposed to write a computer based testing program using files. I have started writing however, I am stuck. I am to prompt the user to enter the file name 'test.dat" and if something different is entered then a error message should be displayed. Also the file will create an input stream for the data using the file. I am to have the user enter other information about an employee and then write the record to the file.
The program should be created so when the user enters "quit" the loop is terminated and the file is closed. I'm not asking for code. I was just giving a brief synopsis of the project. Where I am stuck is I wrote the first part of the program that creates the file; however when I enter a wrong file name the exception error message does not display. The code is below:
import java.io.*; import java.lang.*; import java.util.*; public class Project5Write { private Formatter x; public void openFile(){
I've been trying to send a file(text & image files) from one system to another. somewhat I did, but file is not send originally in destination system. It shows AccessDeniedException on the destination system. What should do to avoid this exception.
I have my code in 3 different files using encapsulation (Data hiding) and i have 1 problem at the very end of my code in my if and else statement (very bottom) when trying to call the classes from the other 2 documents. I will put the code in 1st document to 3rd document.
// FIRST DOCUMENT public class CollegeCourse { //class name //variables String deptName; int courseNum; int credits = 3; double fee;
[Code] ....
UPDATE: error message is
UseCourse.java:24: error: cannot find symbol LabCourse lc = new LabCourse(department, course, Credits); ^ symbol: variable department location: class UseCourse UseCourse.java:24: error: cannot find symbol LabCourse lc = new LabCourse(department, course, Credits);
I need to process 10000 xml files and verify and insert the data into database. I am loading all the files in the file object and iterating one by one. I am getting the memory issue. How to handle this?
In a program I created, I'm using a text file that contains some texts needed for the program. The method relevant to this is something like the following.
private String wordgen(){ try { BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new FileReader("src/Resources/adjectives.txt")); Random rand = new Random(); int low = rand.nextInt(400); String fil=""; int i=0; while(i!=low){
[Code]...
The program runs fine in netbeans project but once the jar is created it does not corporate with the text file. ("null" is returned) How can I attach text files to jar and exe?
I need to transformation the txt files into xml files, but each row txt files don't have same elements, for example the first book is composite one author
For my jsp file, the code editor shows no error, but the projects window shows an error. I built my project again, cleaned the project, restart eclipse twice and summoned cthulhu. But my project still shows an error. How do I find the cause.
Eclipse project -
JSP file -
<%@ page language="java" contentType="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" pageEncoding="ISO-8859-1"%> <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> <%@ taglib prefix="mine" uri="DiceFunctions"%>
<%@ page language="java" isErrorPage="true" contentType="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1" pageEncoding="ISO-8859-1"%> <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1"> <title>Error</title> </head>
[code]...
I have put error.jsp and badpage.jsp file in public access folder that is web content in eclipsewhen I am running the code I am status code of 500 and not the errorpage.jsp message .
I want to make a program that will move a square to the left if you press "a", and to the right if you press "d". (Once I know how to do this I can figure out W and S for up and down by myself). What code would I use for doing that? Here is the program I have now. I used the oracle tutorial but it just shows how to handle for if ANY key is pressed.
This is what I used How to Write a Key Listener (The Java Tutorials > Creating a GUI With JFC/Swing > Writing Event Listeners)
I am trying to do a read/write int property called currentQuestionIndex. This property is the index of the question currently selected, and the value of the property is 0 when a DrivingTest object is first created. I dont understand how to do this. I am not sure how to get the index of the current question. i was trying to use an iterator but i dont think i was doin it right. My question class that hold all my data
package cs320Labs.servlet; public class Question { String description; String answerA; String answerB; String answerC; int correctAnswer;
Is there anything wrong with writing JSP tags in psuedo-HTML? I've been writing tags in XHTML, but it would seem that XHTML could not be compliant with both an XHTML standard and the HTML5 standard.
I am trying to write a hashset to a text file. Normally, I have no issues with writing to txt as it is simple for me. However, in this case I am absolutely clueless.
A bit of background about the class: it is a hashset of ComputerScientist objects with 2 fields; name, and field of research (and yes, I know what I put to fill up the HashSet does not count, I was only trying to test to see if I could get this to work).
I know the basic setup to use filewriter to save strings to a txt, but I am getting confused with the HashSet element of it.
import java.util.HashSet; import java.io.FileWriter; import java.io.IOException; /** * Write a description of class ComputerScientistSet here. */ public class ComputerScientistSet { private HashSet<ComputerScientist> computerScientistSet;