You haven't provided enough information for a out-of-the box solution, but I'll give it a shot anyway.
First of all, I presume that mmInStream is an InputStream or its subclass. Look at the API of int InputStream.read(byte[] b):
Reads some number of bytes from the input stream and stores them into the buffer array b. The number of bytes actually read is returned as an integer. This method blocks until input data is available, end of file is detected, or an exception is thrown.
This means that what you're returning from your read() method is just the number of bytes that have been written to the buffer from mmInStream. That is probably not what you want to do. What you probably want to do is read just the value from this stream. To do that you should:
wrap your mmInStream in a DataInputStream just after the mmInStream is created:
mmInStream = yourMethodCreatingInputStream();
dataInStream = new DataInputStream(mmInStream);
read the double value from the dataInStream. But as in all computer systems you must be aware of the exact format that your input value comes in. You must refer to the specification of the device you're using to fetch the input data.
Now the dataInStream comes in handy because it abstracts the necessary low-level IO operations and lets you focus on the data. It will automatically translate your queries for the data to the IO operations. For example:
If your data is in double format (and I believe that is the case according to the words of your professor), your read() method is as simple as:
public static double read() {
return dataInStream.readDouble();
}
And in case the data is coming in the float format:
public static double read() {
return (double)dataInStream.readFloat();
}
But again, be sure to consult the specification of the device you're using for the exact format. Some devices may pass you data in exotic formats like for example: "first 2 bytes are the integer part of the resulting value, second 2 bytes are the fractional part". It is up to you as a consumer of the data to follow its format.