Alright, so I was just writing a quick class and I tried to use the try with resources instead of the try-catch-finally (hate doing that) method and I keep getting the error "Illegal start of type". I then turned to The Java Tutorials section on it: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/exceptions/tryResourceClose.html
and it showed that you can assign a new variable in the parenthesis. I'm not sure what is going on.
private static final class EncryptedWriter {
private final Path filePath;
private FileOutputStream outputStream;
private FileInputStream inputStream;
public EncryptedWriter(Path filePath) {
if (filePath == null) {
this.filePath = Paths.get(EncryptionDriver.RESOURCE_FOLDER.toString(), "Encrypted.dat");
} else {
this.filePath = filePath;
}
}
public void write(byte[] data) {
try (this.outputStream = new FileOutputStream(this.filePath.toFile())){
} catch (FileNotFoundException ex) {
Logger.getLogger(EncryptionDriver.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
}
}
}
This is not how try-with-resources work. You have to declare the
OutputStream
there only. So, this would work:The whole point of try-with-resources is to manage the resource itself. They have the task of initializing the resource they need, and then close it when the execution leaves the scope. So, it doesn't make sense for it to use the resource declared else where. Because it wouldn't be right to close the resource which it hasn't opened, and then the issue with the old try-catch is back.
The very first line of that tutorial clearly states this thing:
... and declaration is different from initialization or assignment.