4

I currently use:

BufferedReader input = new BufferedReader(new FileReader("filename"));

Is there a faster way?

1
  • Why do you need so much speed? Feb 17, 2014 at 6:50

6 Answers 6

11

While what you've got isn't necessarily the absolute fastest, it's simple. In fact, I wouldn't use quite that form - I'd use something which allows me to specify a charset, e.g.

// Why is there no method to give this guaranteed charset
// without "risk" of exceptions? Grr.
Charset utf8 = Charset.forName("UTF-8");     
BufferedReader input = new BufferedReader(
                           new InputStreamReader(
                               new FileInputStream("filename"),
                               utf8));

You can probably make it go faster using NIO, but I wouldn't until I'd seen an actual problem. If you see a problem, but you're doing other things with the data, make sure they're not the problem first: write a program to just read the text of the file. Don't forget to do whatever it takes on your box to clear file system caches between runs though...

6
  • 1
    How on earth can you instantiate InputStream ? Aug 7, 2009 at 13:12
  • Why not just do new Scanner(new File(...))? Feb 16, 2014 at 23:43
  • 1
    @SimonKuang: I don't know how much buffering Scanner does, and personally I hate the Scanner API. If you're only going to read lines of text, it's massive overkill - whereas every line of the code I've given is there to do precisely one thing.
    – Jon Skeet
    Feb 17, 2014 at 6:46
  • 1
    @SimonKuang: There's a simpler type available which does what's required (reading text with buffering) without the added kitchen sink of all kinds of other responsibilities (parsing numbers etc). When I want a type which is there to read text and that's all I need to do, I look at the Reader classes, not Scanner. Additionally, I can then pass a Reader to any other code which is just interested in reading text. For example, I can load Properties data from a Reader, but not from a Scanner. I can use a Reader to parse XML, but not a Scanner.
    – Jon Skeet
    Feb 17, 2014 at 7:07
  • 1
    @SimonKuang: I'd also strongly encourage you to pass in an encoding when constructing a Scanner to read from a file. Unfortunately Scanner won't let you pass in a Charset, only the name... whereas InputStreamReader lets you specify the Charset, so I can use StandardCharsets.UTF_8 as of Java 7 for example...
    – Jon Skeet
    Feb 17, 2014 at 7:08
3

If it's /fast/ you want, keep the character data in encoded form (and I don't mean UTF-16). Although disc I/O is generally slow (unless it's cached), decoding and keeping twice the data can also be a problem. Although the fastest to load is probably through java.nio.channels.FileChannel.map(MapMode.READ_ONLY, ...), that has severe problems with deallocation.

Usual caveats apply.

1

Look into java.nio.channels.FileChannel.

0

Have you benchmarked your other options? I imagine that not using a BufferedReader may be faster in some cases - like extremely small files. I would recommend that you at the very least do some small benchmarks and find the fastest implementation that works with your typical use cases.

0

Depends on what you want to read. The complete file, or from a specific location, do you need to able to seatch through it, or do you want to read the complete text in one go?

0
File file = new File("querySourceFileName");
Scanner s = new Scanner(file);
while (s.hasNext()) {
    System.out.println(s.nextLine());
}
1
  • This is the most obvious and simple way to read a file. But do you really think it can compete in terms of speed?
    – f4lco
    Sep 30, 2012 at 17:04

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