24

Is there any easy way to convert a URL that contains to two-byte characters into an absolute path?

The reason I ask is I am trying to find resources like this:

URL url=getClass().getResources("/getresources/test.txt");
String path=url.toString();
File f=new File(path);

The program can't find the file. I know the path contain '%20' for all spaces which I could convert but my real problem is I'm using a japanese OS and when the program jar file is in a directory with japanese text (for example デスクトップ) I get the URL-encoding of the directory name, like this:

%e3%83%87%e3%82%b9%e3%82%af%e3%83%88%e3%83%83%e3%83%97

I think I could get the UTF-8 byte codes and convert this into the proper characters to find the file, but I'm wondering if there is an easier way to do this. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

nt

2
  • That isn't "garbage." Those are escaped representations of characters. They are legitimate values. The reason why your code fragment does not work is because Class.getResources and File have different root spaces.
    – Noel Ang
    Sep 2, 2010 at 22:15
  • Is there class i can use to convert the path to normal readable characters?
    – nite
    Sep 2, 2010 at 22:58

4 Answers 4

56
URL url = getClass().getResource("/getresources/test.txt");
File f = new File(url.toURI());
3
  • thx, as i was saying below, this only works in netbeans. when i compile the app i run into an error.
    – nite
    Sep 2, 2010 at 22:57
  • 1
    Moritz got it. A File object cannot instantiate using a URL to an archived resource. You'll have to stream it.
    – Noel Ang
    Sep 3, 2010 at 15:58
  • 3
    got an exception "URI is not hierarchical"
    – Igal
    Feb 1, 2016 at 7:45
23

If you were interested in getting Path from URL, you can do:

Path p = Paths.get(url.toURI());
1
  • 1
    Since Java 11, one may use Path#of instead of Paths#get.
    – Stephan
    Dec 26, 2022 at 17:21
10

File has a constructor taking an argument of type java.net.URI for this case:

File f = new File(url.toURI());
5
  • I tried this. When I run the program in Netbeans it works, but when a build it is doesn't work.
    – nite
    Sep 2, 2010 at 22:54
  • 4
    The error I'm getting is: java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: URI is not hierarchical
    – nite
    Sep 2, 2010 at 22:56
  • 2
    Could it be that you are bundling your app with the resources in a .jar-file? You cannot create a File object from that URI then as the resource is not a file but an entry in that .jar.
    – Moritz
    Sep 2, 2010 at 23:17
  • Ah I see. So since I am bundling it in a .jar file, is there any solution here?
    – nite
    Sep 3, 2010 at 2:36
  • 2
    No. You would have to read from the resource through an InputStream either by calling url.openStream() or directly via getClass().getResourceAsStream("resource.txt"). If you need to know where on disk your .jar is you can inspect the URL returned but you cannot create a File referencing your resource inside that .jar.
    – Moritz
    Sep 3, 2010 at 11:27
6

Another option for those who use Java 11 or later:

Path path = Path.of(url.toURI());

or as a string:

String path = Path.of(url.toURI()).toString();

Both methods above throw a URISyntaxException that can be safely ignored if the URL is guaranteed to be a file URL.

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