The easiest way to do this is by using serialization. To store your information in a file, use a FileOutputStream
and an ObjectOutputStream
(from the java.io package), like this:
File saveFile = new File("filename.sav");
try {
FileOutputStream fileOut = new FileOutputStream(saveFile);
try (ObjectOutputStream objOut = new ObjectOutputStream(fileOut)) {
objOut.writeObject(number); // you should use lower case for variable names
objOut.writeObject(array);
}
} catch (IOException e) {
}
This will store your information in a binary file named "filename.sav". To get your integer and array from that file, use a FileInputStream
and an ObjectInputStream
and cast the retrieved objects to the desired type in the order they were stored in:
try {
FileInputStream fileIn = new FileInputStream("filename.sav");
try (ObjectInputStream objIn = new ObjectInputStream(fileIn)) {
int number = (int) objIn.readObject();
int[] array = (int[]) objIn.readObject();
}
} catch (IOException | ClassNotFoundException e) {
}
This will also work for any serializable object (an object that implements Serializable
).
file.get
yourself. The closest thing to "automatic" you will get is probably JSON or some binary encoding.