I currently use:
BufferedReader input = new BufferedReader(new FileReader("filename"));
Is there a faster way?
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...
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.
Feb 17, 2014 at 6:46
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
.
Feb 17, 2014 at 7:07
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...
Feb 17, 2014 at 7:08
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.
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.
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?
File file = new File("querySourceFileName");
Scanner s = new Scanner(file);
while (s.hasNext()) {
System.out.println(s.nextLine());
}