3

I would like to implement the example of this page.

I'm stuck at the getResourceStream() method. My application has a byte[] (generated XML file), that users should be able to download. The problem is that I don't know how to convert a byte[] to IResourceStream.

This is what I have:

final AJAXDownload download = new AJAXDownload()
{
    private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;

    @Override
    protected IResourceStream getResourceStream()
    {
        ByteArrayResource bar = new ByteArrayResource("TEXT??", xmlFileInBytes);
                return (IResourceStream) bar;
        }
    };

The code above gives a ClassCastException. Can someone explain how can I solve this problem?

3 Answers 3

6

You can use the class StringResourceStream which is a child of IResourceStream and to use the byte array:

You can do something like this:

  byte byteArray[] = new byte[1024]   //this is the byte array containing the xml which you want to use.
  StringResourceStream srs = new StringResourceStream(new String(byteArray));

So in your case the method will look something like below:

 final AJAXDownload download = new AJAXDownload()
 {
     private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;

     @Override
     protected IResourceStream getResourceStream()
     {
         StringResourceStream bar = new StringResourceStream (new String(xmlFileInBytes) );
                 return (IResourceStream) bar;
         }
     };
2
  • Your answer was to fast for the system, I had to wait a few minutes ;) Now its marked as accepted
    – Alex
    Apr 15, 2013 at 9:21
  • This is a terrible solution. From the docs: "The behavior of this constructor when the given bytes are not valid in the default charset is unspecified." In other words, if you don't have prior knowledge of whether bytes indeed represents a valid string in the platforms default charset, the downloadable content is undefined. This is especially bad since it may work on your development machine, and break in production.
    – aioobe
    Dec 25, 2013 at 8:17
2

The class ByteArrayResource implements IResource, but not IResourceStream. That why you have the ClassCastException.

To solve it, you should find a class that implements IResourceStream; see it's Javadoc for a list of possible implementations.

0
0

This is untested code at the moment, but instead of doing

ByteArrayResource bar = new ByteArrayResource("TEXT??", xmlFileInBytes);
return (IResourceStream) bar;

you could try getResourceStream as follows:

ByteArrayResource bar = new ByteArrayResource("TEXT??", xmlFileInBytes);
return bar.getResourceStream();

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