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I am new to Java and have been reading Java docs and other threads (1 ,2) but couldn't make it work.

Basically my csv file has few records which read like this

How are
you

so I want my code to read it as one line

How are you

My code looks like this:

BufferedReader bReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(new FileInputStream(csv),"utf-8"));

    while ((line = bReader.readLine()) != null) {
        String lines = line.replaceAll("\r\n", " ");
        System.out.println(lines);

Manually, when I pressed backspace at youit goes back with areand I pressed space. Then it was fine. But I have a big csv file with 29k records. There must be a way through which I can fix this. Can you please point me towards the direction? Thank you.

[Edit]

This is how it appears.

Fav: Beaver tails.
Least fav: HST not included in prices.

Edit 2:

-3166,1054,CF ,5992841,15:37.5,en,13007,12,12,Comments: Favorite and/or least favorite things,0,"Cafe Fun
-Least favourite - cabs"

"Cafe Fun Least Favourite - cabs" should be on the same line.

10
  • It's not working for all of them? or just for few? Jan 22, 2018 at 19:09
  • 4
    Processing CSV correctly is tricky, especially when dealing with quotes fields. Don't write your own CSV reader, use one of the existing, debugged CSV libraries. Jan 22, 2018 at 19:14
  • @JimGarrison can you please suggest few? I'll google too.
    – Tam
    Jan 22, 2018 at 19:16
  • 2
    Look up OpenCSV or Apache Commons CSV Jan 22, 2018 at 19:18
  • 1
    @matt I have cells like that. I am going to take a crack at Apache Commons csv and give it a try.
    – Tam
    Jan 23, 2018 at 13:21

3 Answers 3

1

readLine() will return the next line in the file, without the line separator. So on the first iteration of your loop, lines is "How are" and on the second iteration, lines is "you". Neither of these contain "\r\n", so your calls to replaceAll(...) just return the same string.

Then, System.out.println(...) prints the text with a line separator appended, so you get back to what you started with.

You can collect all the lines into a list:

List<String> lines = Files.readAllLines(csv);

and then concatenate them using String.join(...):

String allLines = String.join(" ", lines);
2
  • @Sweeper In that case, yes. I read "my file has few records" as meaning that the file had only a few lines.
    – James_D
    Jan 22, 2018 at 19:17
  • @Sweeper "readLine" could load the whole file into memory and cause an out of memory error too.
    – matt
    Jan 22, 2018 at 19:25
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BufferedReader.readLine() doesn't read the newline, so your String lines does't have a brake.
You only print a newline with System.out.println(lines); change it to System.out.print(lines); and invoke System.out.println(); after the while-loop.

BufferedReader bReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(new FileInputStream(csv),"utf-8"));

while ((line = bReader.readLine()) != null) {
    System.out.print(line);
}
System.out.println();
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To start the csv (as the name implies) are files separated by commas, not by spaces. But forgetting that, the readLine only reads the line where the "pointer" is, and in that case "you" is in another line than "How are". I think that's where your problem lies. One way to solve it would be to use the StringBuilder and the "append (String)". and it is adding everything together. Regards

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