Here is a simple piece of code:
import java.io.*;
public class Read {
public static void main(String[] args) {
BufferedReader f = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(System.in));
while(true)
{
String x = null;
try{
x = f.readLine();
}
catch (IOException e) {e.printStackTrace();}
System.out.println(x);
}
}
}
I execute this as : java Read < input.txt
Once the input.txt is completely piped into the program, x keeps getting infinite nulls. Why is that so? Is there a way by which I can make the Standard In(Command Line) active after the file being fed into the code is done? I've tried closing the stream and reopening, it doesn't work. Reset etc also.
Sorry to bump an old question, but none of the answers so far points out that there is a (shell-only) way to pass back to console input after piping in a file.
If you run the command
then the text from
input.txt
will be passed tojava Read
and you will then be dropped back to console input.Note that if you then press Ctrl+D, you will get the infinite loop of
null
s, unless you modify your program to end the loop when it receives null.By executing
"java Read < input.txt"
you've told the operating system that for this process, the piped file is standard in. You can't then switch back to the command line from inside the application.If you want to do that, then pass input.txt as a file name parameter to the application, open/read/close the file yourself from inside the application, then read from standard input to get stuff from the command line.
You need to terminate your while loop when the line is null, like this:
Well, this is typical for reading in a
BufferedReader
.readLine()
returnsnull
when end of stream is hit. Perhaps your infinite loop is the problem ;-)