Readerpublic abstract class Reader extends Object Abstract class for reading character streams. The only methods that a
subclass must implement are read(char[], int, int) and close(). Most
subclasses, however, will override some of the methods defined here in order
to provide higher efficiency, additional functionality, or both. |
Fields Summary |
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protected Object | lockThe object used to synchronize operations on this stream. For
efficiency, a character-stream object may use an object other than
itself to protect critical sections. A subclass should therefore use
the object in this field rather than this or a synchronized
method. | private static final int | maxSkipBufferSizeMaximum skip-buffer size | private char[] | skipBufferSkip buffer, null until allocated |
Constructors Summary |
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protected Reader()Create a new character-stream reader whose critical sections will
synchronize on the reader itself.
this.lock = this;
| protected Reader(Object lock)Create a new character-stream reader whose critical sections will
synchronize on the given object.
if (lock == null) {
throw new NullPointerException();
}
this.lock = lock;
|
Methods Summary |
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public abstract void | close()Close the stream. Once a stream has been closed, further read(),
ready(), mark(), or reset() invocations will throw an IOException.
Closing a previously-closed stream, however, has no effect.
| public void | mark(int readAheadLimit)Mark the present position in the stream. Subsequent calls to reset()
will attempt to reposition the stream to this point. Not all
character-input streams support the mark() operation.
throw new IOException(
/* #ifdef VERBOSE_EXCEPTIONS */
/// skipped "mark() not supported"
/* #endif */
);
| public boolean | markSupported()Tell whether this stream supports the mark() operation. The default
implementation always returns false. Subclasses should override this
method.
return false;
| public int | read()Read a single character. This method will block until a character is
available, an I/O error occurs, or the end of the stream is reached.
Subclasses that intend to support efficient single-character input
should override this method.
char cb[] = new char[1];
if (read(cb, 0, 1) == -1)
return -1;
else
return cb[0];
| public int | read(char[] cbuf)Read characters into an array. This method will block until some input
is available, an I/O error occurs, or the end of the stream is reached.
return read(cbuf, 0, cbuf.length);
| public abstract int | read(char[] cbuf, int off, int len)Read characters into a portion of an array. This method will block
until some input is available, an I/O error occurs, or the end of the
stream is reached.
| public boolean | ready()Tell whether this stream is ready to be read.
return false;
| public void | reset()Reset the stream. If the stream has been marked, then attempt to
reposition it at the mark. If the stream has not been marked, then
attempt to reset it in some way appropriate to the particular stream,
for example by repositioning it to its starting point. Not all
character-input streams support the reset() operation, and some support
reset() without supporting mark().
throw new IOException(
/* #ifdef VERBOSE_EXCEPTIONS */
/// skipped "reset() not supported"
/* #endif */
);
| public long | skip(long n)Skip characters. This method will block until some characters are
available, an I/O error occurs, or the end of the stream is reached.
if (n < 0L)
throw new IllegalArgumentException(
/* #ifdef VERBOSE_EXCEPTIONS */
/// skipped "skip value is negative"
/* #endif */
);
int nn = (int) Math.min(n, maxSkipBufferSize);
synchronized (lock) {
if ((skipBuffer == null) || (skipBuffer.length < nn))
skipBuffer = new char[nn];
long r = n;
while (r > 0) {
int nc = read(skipBuffer, 0, (int)Math.min(r, nn));
if (nc == -1)
break;
r -= nc;
}
return n - r;
}
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