After you've successfully created a URL
,
you can call the URL
's
openStream()
method to get a stream from which you
can read the contents of the URL. The openStream()
method returns a
java.io.InputStream
object, so reading from a URL is as easy as reading from an input stream.
The following small Java program uses openStream()
to get an input
stream on the URL http://www.oracle.com/
.
It then opens a BufferedReader
on the input stream and reads from the BufferedReader
thereby reading from the URL.
Everything read is copied to the standard output stream:
import java.net.*; import java.io.*; public class URLReader { public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception { URL oracle = new URL("http://www.oracle.com/"); BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader( new InputStreamReader( oracle.openStream())); String inputLine; while ((inputLine = in.readLine()) != null) System.out.println(inputLine); in.close(); } }
When you run the program, you should see, scrolling by in your command
window, the HTML commands and textual content from the HTML file
located at http://www.oracle.com/
.
Alternatively, the program might hang
or you might see an exception stack trace. If either of the latter two
events occurs, you may have to
set the proxy host so
that the program can find the Oracle server.