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Trail: Essential Java Classes
Lesson: I/O

Scanning

Objects of type Scanner (in the API reference documentation) are useful for breaking down formatted input into tokens and translating individual tokens according to their data type.

Breaking Input into Tokens

By default, a scanner uses white space (blanks, tabs, and line separators) as token separators. To see how this works, let's look at ScanFar (in a .java source file), a program that reads the individual words in farrago.txt and prints them out, one per line.
import java.io.*;
import java.util.*;

public class ScanFar {
    public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
        Scanner s = 
            new Scanner(new BufferedReader(new FileReader("farrago.txt")));

        while (s.hasNext()) {
            System.out.println(s.next());
        }
        s.close();
    }
}
Notice that ScanFar calls Scanner's close method when it is done with the scanner object. Even though a scanner is not a stream, you need to close it to indicate that you're done with its underlying stream.

The output of ScanFar looks like this:

So
she
went
into
the
garden
to
cut
a
cabbage-leaf,
to
make
...
To use a different token separator, call the useDelimiter() method, specifying a regular expression. For example, suppose you wanted the token separator to be a comma, optionally followed by white space. You would call,
s.useDelimiter(",\s*");

Translating Individual Tokens

The ScanFar examples all input tokens as simple String values. Scanner also supports tokens for all of the Java language's primitive types (except for char), as well as BigInteger and BigDecimal. Also, numeric values can use thousands separators. Thus in a US locale, Scanner correctly reads the string "32,767" as representing an integer value.

We have to mention the locale, because thousands separators and decimal symbols are locale-specific. So the following example would not work correctly in all locales if we didn't specify that the scanner should use the US locale. That's not something you usually have to worry about, because your input data usually comes from sources that use the same locale as you do. But this example is part of the Java Tutorial, and gets distributed all over the world.

The ScanSum (in a .java source file) example reads a list of double values and adds them up. Here's the source:

import java.io.*;
import java.util.*;

public class ScanSum {
    public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
        Scanner s = 
            new Scanner(new BufferedReader(new FileReader("usnumbers.txt")));
        s.useLocale(Locale.US);

        double sum = 0;

        while (s.hasNext()) {
            sum += s.nextDouble();
        }
        s.close();

        System.out.println(sum);
    }
}


And here's the sample input file, usnumbers.txt (in a .java source file)
8.5
32,767
3.14159
1,000,000.1
The output string is "1032778.74159". The period will be a different character in some locales, because System.out is a PrintStream object, and that class doesn't provide a way to override the default locale. We could override the locale for the whole program — or we could just use formatting, as described in the next topic, Formatting (in the Essential Java Classes trail).

ScanSum has a serious shortcoming: if the input file contains any tokens that aren't valid Double values, it throws an exception and dies. To fix that problem, we need to add some kind of error recovery. Here's how we can rewrite the scanning loop so that it skips over any token that isn't a Double:

while (s.hasNext()) {
    if (s.hasNextDouble() {
        sum += s.nextDouble();
    } else {
        next();
    }
}
Each Next method has a corresponding hasNext method, which provides for this kind of error recovery.

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