I/O / Streams :: API To Read Metadata From MP4 File
May 13, 2012
I am looking for a pure java api that can read metadata from an mp4 file, I have looked online but all apis I found are wrappers to native code. How to read mp4 with java .....
I'm having a bit of trouble with using the Scanner and the Printwriter. I start with a file like this (1 = amount of Houses in the file)
1 FOR SALE: Emmalaan 23 3051JC Rotterdam 7 rooms buyprice 300000 energylevel C
The user gets (let's say for simplicity) 3 options:
1. Add a House to the file, 2. Get all Houses which fullfil requirements (price, FOR SALE / SOLD etc.) and 3. Close the application.
This is how I start:
Scanner sc = new Scanner (System.in); while (!endLoop) { System.out.println("Make a choice); System.out.println("1) Add House"); System.out.println("2) Show Houses"); System.out.println("3) Exit"); int choice = sc.nextInt();
Then I have a switch for all of the three cases. I keep the scanner open, so Java can get the user input (house = for sale or sold, price = ... etc). If the user chose option 1, and all information needed is inputted and scanned, the House will be written to the file (which looks like what I typed above).
For this, I use try (PrintWriter out = new PrintWriter(new BufferedWriter(new FileWriter("Makelaar.txt", false)))). This works perfectly (at least so it seems.)
If the user chose option 1, and all requirements are inputted and scanned, the Houses will be read (scanner) from the file and outputted. For this I use the same Scanner sc. This also works perfectly (so it seems atleast).
My problem is as follows: If a House has been added, I can only read the House(s) which were already in the file. Let's say I have added 2 houses, and there were from the start 3 houses. If option 2 is chosen, the first 3 houses will be scanned perfectly. An exception will be caught for the remaining 2 (just added) Houses. How can I solve this? I tried to close the Scanner, and reopening it, but apparently Java doesn't agree with this
I'm getting an IllegalArgumentException returned when I try to get a file using guava library.
I previously had the function working when the file was in a different location, before I switched to running JBehave, my steps run but it fails to find the resource, even after I've moved it.
The code being executed is (this worked previously before using JBehave):
The file I'm looking for is in the root folder for src/main/resources and also src/test/resources, previously I had it within a completely different location before I switched over to JBehave. I've tried it within a subdirectory in the same locations too.
I've recently updated the pom.xml to try to include the location required.
I am creating an application with having a callerID module. This module is to read calling phone number from modem. I have googled and reference many SerialPort related stuff but could not find a concrete solution. I am able to detect phone ring using serialEvent with javax.comm jar.
I am wondering if AT commands can be used to read/get calling phone number. I also referred following AT commands:
AT+CLIP AT+VCID AT+CNUM
1. Is it possible to read calling phone number using AT commands or any other alternative
2. Which AT command can be used and how to send from java application..
I want to write Metadata to a JPEg image using the Exif 'XPComment' field.
Because the standart Java libraries does not support writing metadata I tried using the JAI (Java Advanced Imaging) and Sanselan (Commons Sanselan - Commons ) but I was not able to find an example or something else which create a working code.
I am creating a web application that runs on server X(unix) and it has another unix system mounted on it. I want to generate the file tree structure of this mounted unix file system and show it on to a web application so that users can select a file and move it onto this current unix machine.
I know this sounds stupid and you may want to say why cant we directly copy the file, I am doing a proof of concept and using this as a basis.
I have a code that clear old text then add new text to text file afterthat download the file but the problem my code dose not add new text
FileInputStream fileToDownload ; private static final int BYTES_DOWNLOAD = 1024; response.setContentType("text/plain"); String name = request.getParameter("n"); String text = new String(request.getParameter("text").getBytes("iso-8859-1"), "UTF-8");
[Code] ....
How to clear old text then add new text to text file
I would like to create a component to detect the file being modify before process.is it the right way to detect the file modification based on file size value?
Below are the flow:
1. Get the file size of a file 2. Used file size value encrypt it with MD5 algorithm, and say it generated us encrypted value "0123sdf" 3. to avoid user modify the file content, before file process, we take the file and do the encryption with md5 again, if it return value "0123sdf", then we are sure it doesn't have modification.
my question: a. is it the right approach to detect file modification? b. what the library advise to use or using java.security.DigestInputStream will do?
I have been going over my code line by line, over and over again for nearly and hour now...When I execute method `file.createNewFile()`, the method returns true and throws no exceptions. It even says that the file exists. However, the file is not created and cannot be accessed until the program has exited.
File portLib = new File(""); private class RememberPortAction extends AbstractMenuItemAction { methods... protected void actionPerformed() { LibraryCreator creator = new LibraryCreator(self, logger); File newPortLib;
I do most of my file I/O with {Scanner} for input and {PrintWriter} for output. I've got lots of places in my code that looks like:
Scanner source = new Scanner( new File( sourceName)); PrintWriter dstntn = new PrintWriter( new BufferedWriter( new FileWriter( dstntnName)));
But when I call the constructor for {PrintWriter} up above, it overwrites whatever the original contents of the file designated by {dstntnName} were, doesn't it? Is there a way to call the constructor so that any future writes to it simply append to the original contents, instead of overwriting them?
I have to divide a text file into blocks of 128 bits. I think i must use the ByteArrayInputStream and ByteArrayOutputStream classes. is there any website showing how to user these two ByteArrayInputStream and ByteArrayOutputStream classes in detail. or it would be much better if you could show me a portion of the code.
When I am trying to read data from BufferedReader and writing into excel using FileOutputStream object with POI APIs then i am getting the data in excel file in bad formats. you can check the log file and excel file attached for more information.
Here my problem is I cannot use BufferedWriter in place of FileOutputStream because POI class XSSFWorkbook only have one write method and we can only pass FileOutputStream class object there.
I am completing a USACO online problem and am trying to create a print writer to write to my file(ride.out). I did this:
PrintWriter out = new PrintWriter(new BufferedReader(new FileWriter("ride.out")));
However, a load of undefined constructor errors come up for PrintWriter(BufferedWriter) and BufferedWriter(FileWriter). I have imported java.io.* so I don't know what the issue is. This has worked before.
My code below creates the 2 files successfully, but it is not able to write the sample data into the newly created file. I can't figure out the reason why.
Another strange thing is that when I tried inserting System.out.println calls for debugging, nothing prints out.