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I am trying to decode an outlook .MSG file to a text file, using Apache POI classes.

Everything works fine, except for the println method of PrintWriter: it doesn´t create a new line.

It just concatenates every sentence directly one after another. The result of the code snippet below is

"De: textPara: " iso 
"De: "
"Para: "

I tried the code on several machines: it works on my local tomcat instalation (Windows machine), but fails on a tomcat or Weblogic instalation on a Solaris platform. I thought it had something to do with the encoding algorithm, so I used PrintStream in stead of Printwriter, indicating the encoding ISO-8859-1, but no luck neither.

Any idea?

    try {
        byte [] msgByte = Base64.decodeBase64(msgBase64);

        InputStream inputMsg = new ByteArrayInputStream(msgByte);
        msg = new MAPIMessage(inputMsg);

        /* 1. Transform MSG to TXT. */
        try {
            txtOut = new PrintWriter(outputMsg);
            try {
                String displayFrom = msg.getDisplayFrom();
                txtOut.println("De: "+displayFrom);
            } catch (ChunkNotFoundException e) {
                _logger.info("Error extrayendo displayFrom: "+e);
            }
            try {
                String displayTo = msg.getDisplayTo();
                txtOut.println("Para: "+displayTo);
            } catch (ChunkNotFoundException e) {
                _logger.info("Error extrayendo displayTo: "+e);
            }

        } finally {
        if(txtOut != null) {
            txtOut.close();}
        else {
            _logger.error("No se ha podido parsear el mensaje.");
        }

        }
8
  • 2
    what are you printing to ? A console, a log file, a text box in a GUI app, html ?
    – nos
    Dec 12, 2011 at 15:44
  • 1
    Are you trying to add one extra line between each line. Try txtOut.println() right after each time you write a line. Dec 12, 2011 at 15:58
  • What is the exact output you are expecting, besides just what is actually output?
    – Peter
    Dec 12, 2011 at 16:00
  • @gurung: I will try this out. The weird thing is that it seems to work on a tomcat running on Windows.
    – nicBBB
    Dec 12, 2011 at 16:11
  • 1
    @nos: The end result should be a text file encoded to Base64. outputMsg is of the type ByteArrayOutputStream. I convert the ByteArrayOutputStream in a byte array which I encode to Base64.
    – nicBBB
    Dec 12, 2011 at 16:21

1 Answer 1

22

Change the following:

txtOut.print("De: "+displayFrom + "\r\n");
txtOut.print("Para: "+displayTo + "\r\n");

This is related to how PrintWriter.println() generates the Line break depending of the Operating System. For unix systems is LF (\n), for Windows is CR+LF (\r\n).

Notice how I added the "\r\n" which means CR+LF and used print() instead of println(). This way the line break generated is not platform dependent.

You can also add the following method to your class to avoid duplicity and just call this custom println() instead of directly calling txtOut.print().

private static final String LINE_SEPARATOR = "\r\n";

public void println(String str) {
    txtOut.print(str + LINE_SEPARATOR);
}

This way you just call println() method.

3
  • 7
    Instead of tagging on "\r\n" a safer method might be to define and use: public static String newline = System.getProperty("line.separator");
    – BlueVoid
    Dec 12, 2011 at 16:16
  • 1
    Problem solved changing println to print + \r\n. Thanks a lot.
    – nicBBB
    Dec 13, 2011 at 7:28
  • actually when is \r\n is platform dependant: it is strictly for Windows OS, in linux that extra char produce noise ^M char.
    – Raffaello
    Jul 14, 2018 at 12:56

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