If I have a class that utilizes an IO resource, such as a disk flat file, DB, or some other form of external resource, what are pros and cons of closing those streams/connections in an overridden finalize() method to be run by GC? I though this could leverage the existing JVM GC and reduce the exposure to the risk of relying on the client to invoke a class method called something like closeResources() as well as writing spaghetti-like try-catches (nested try-catches and ifs being my least favorite programming constructs).
As a concrete example, I have a simple file reading wrapper. The class is constructed with String filePath
, it reads the file into a List<String[]>
. I don't wan't to have to close the BufferedReader
in multiple places like close it if there is a problem opening the file (catch clause) but also close it if the file reads fine etc. I want to put it in one place and make sure it is ALWAYS closed no matter what when the object gets GC.
Is this approach a good practice or am I trying to afford myself too high level a convenience within the scope of Java?
BufferedReader
variable local to the constructor, to other method, or is it an instance variable ?