Reading an ASCII file with FileChannel and ByteArr

2019-05-02 00:55发布

I have the following code:

        String inputFile = "somefile.txt";
        FileInputStream in = new FileInputStream(inputFile);
        FileChannel ch = in.getChannel();
        ByteBuffer buf = ByteBuffer.allocateDirect(BUFSIZE);  // BUFSIZE = 256

        /* read the file into a buffer, 256 bytes at a time */
        int rd;
        while ( (rd = ch.read( buf )) != -1 ) {
            buf.rewind();
            for ( int i = 0; i < rd/2; i++ ) {
                /* print each character */
                System.out.print(buf.getChar());
            }
            buf.clear();
        }

But the characters get displayed at ?'s. Does this have something to do with Java using Unicode characters? How do I correct this?

6条回答
Anthone
2楼-- · 2019-05-02 01:31

Is there a particular reason why you are reading the file in the way that you do?

If you're reading in an ASCII file you should really be using a Reader.

I would do it something like:

File inputFile = new File("somefile.txt");
BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(inputFile));

And then use either readLine or similar to actually read in the data!

查看更多
Fickle 薄情
3楼-- · 2019-05-02 01:37

buf.getChar() is expecting 2 bytes per character but you are only storing 1. Use:

 System.out.print((char) buf.get());
查看更多
Deceive 欺骗
4楼-- · 2019-05-02 01:39

You have to know what the encoding of the file is, and then decode the ByteBuffer into a CharBuffer using that encoding. Assuming the file is ASCII:

import java.util.*;
import java.io.*;
import java.nio.*;
import java.nio.channels.*;
import java.nio.charset.*;

public class Buffer
{
    public static void main(String args[]) throws Exception
    {
        String inputFile = "somefile";
        FileInputStream in = new FileInputStream(inputFile);
        FileChannel ch = in.getChannel();
        ByteBuffer buf = ByteBuffer.allocateDirect(BUFSIZE);  // BUFSIZE = 256

        Charset cs = Charset.forName("ASCII"); // Or whatever encoding you want

        /* read the file into a buffer, 256 bytes at a time */
        int rd;
        while ( (rd = ch.read( buf )) != -1 ) {
            buf.rewind();
            CharBuffer chbuf = cs.decode(buf);
            for ( int i = 0; i < chbuf.length(); i++ ) {
                /* print each character */
                System.out.print(chbuf.get());
            }
            buf.clear();
        }
    }
}
查看更多
Animai°情兽
5楼-- · 2019-05-02 01:39

Changing your print statement to:

System.out.print((char)buf.get());

Seems to help.

查看更多
Root(大扎)
6楼-- · 2019-05-02 01:53

Depending on the encoding of somefile.txt, a character may not actually be composed of two bytes. This page gives more information about how to read streams with the proper encoding.

The bummer is, the file system doesn't tell you the encoding of the file, because it doesn't know. As far as it's concerned, it's just a bunch of bytes. You must either find some way to communicate the encoding to the program, detect it somehow, or (if possible) always ensure that the encoding is the same (such as UTF-8).

查看更多
The star\"
7楼-- · 2019-05-02 01:53

Yes, it is Unicode.

If you have 14 Chars in your File, you only get 7 '?'.

Solution pending. Still thinking.

查看更多
登录 后发表回答