134

Possible Duplicate:
Best way to iterate through a directory in java?

I want to process each file in a certain directory using Java.

What is the easiest (and most common) way of doing this?

2

4 Answers 4

222

If you have the directory name in myDirectoryPath,

import java.io.File;
...
  File dir = new File(myDirectoryPath);
  File[] directoryListing = dir.listFiles();
  if (directoryListing != null) {
    for (File child : directoryListing) {
      // Do something with child
    }
  } else {
    // Handle the case where dir is not really a directory.
    // Checking dir.isDirectory() above would not be sufficient
    // to avoid race conditions with another process that deletes
    // directories.
  }
2
  • 1
    Javado says in listFiles(): "Pathnames denoting the directory itself and the directory's parent directory are not included in the result."
    – pihentagy
    Sep 14, 2012 at 10:35
  • 1
    fyi if you want the current folder you can use `new File(".");'
    – SüniÚr
    Oct 28, 2014 at 8:59
35

I guess there are so many ways to make what you want. Here's a way that I use. With the commons.io library you can iterate over the files in a directory. You must use the FileUtils.iterateFiles method and you can process each file.

You can find the information here: http://commons.apache.org/proper/commons-io/download_io.cgi

Here's an example:

Iterator it = FileUtils.iterateFiles(new File("C:/"), null, false);
        while(it.hasNext()){
            System.out.println(((File) it.next()).getName());
        }

You can change null and put a list of extentions if you wanna filter. Example: {".xml",".java"}

2
  • 3
    @john-assymptoth, without this lib and just the java implemented util you would drive in StackOverflowError if the library contains a lot of files. (java.sun.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/lang/…)
    – Rihards
    Apr 15, 2011 at 18:51
  • 1
    In the most recent version (2.6) of commons.io your call would look like FileUtils.iterateFiles(new File("C:/"), null, null) (ignoring subdirectories) or for example FileUtils.iterateFiles(new File("C:/"), new SuffixFileFilter(".java"), null) to apply a filter on the file extension.
    – jammartin
    Mar 27, 2019 at 17:11
11

Here is an example that lists all the files on my desktop. you should change the path variable to your path.

Instead of printing the file's name with System.out.println, you should place your own code to operate on the file.

public static void main(String[] args) {
    File path = new File("c:/documents and settings/Zachary/desktop");

    File [] files = path.listFiles();
    for (int i = 0; i < files.length; i++){
        if (files[i].isFile()){ //this line weeds out other directories/folders
            System.out.println(files[i]);
        }
    }
}
4

Use java.io.File.listFiles
Or
If you want to filter the list prior to iteration (or any more complicated use case), use apache-commons FileUtils. FileUtils.listFiles

1
  • listFiles is overridden to take a file filter or a filename filter so there's no need to use apache-commons if the only thing you want is filtering. Although it is a fine library. Feb 7, 2011 at 1:34

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