1

I'm writing a parser with StreamTokenizer. I need an input like "8a" to echo an error that a number contains a char. Instead, it prints:

NUM: 8 ID: a

It seems to be identifying the char as a separate token, even though no whitespace separates them.

Is there a workaround?

6
  • 3
    Can you add a code snippet of what generates the current output? Oct 3, 2017 at 3:06
  • Generally, identifiers do not start with numbers, so this might cause a few trouble... Oct 3, 2017 at 3:10
  • Here is the code I'm parsing: { int s; if(z[1] <= 8a) return z; while(r>z) {if (x==2) return x; } Here's my code: switch (token) { case StreamTokenizer.TT_NUMBER: { String s=String.valueOf(st.nval);
    – moduluses
    Oct 3, 2017 at 3:14
  • Please show the relevant code snippet.
    – Bohemian
    Oct 3, 2017 at 3:29
  • What does if (z[1] <= 8a) actually mean? If 8a is not a hex-number, then what is the point of a?
    – dave
    Oct 3, 2017 at 5:21

2 Answers 2

0

You can override StringTokenizer's parseNumbers method to disable special handling of number characters. Please be aware this might be very risky and otherwise unsuitable.

As per javadoc https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/io/StreamTokenizer.html#parseNumbers():

 * When the parser encounters a word token that has the format of a
 * double precision floating-point number, it treats the token as a
 * number rather than a word, by setting the {@code ttype}
 * field to the value {@code TT_NUMBER} and putting the numeric
 * value of the token into the {@code nval} field.

Here comes example - I am not adding 'numeric' attribute to typical characters used in numbers:

    final Reader rd = new StringReader("8a");
    final StreamTokenizer tk = new StreamTokenizer(rd) {
        @Override
        public void parseNumbers() {
            // super.parseNumbers(); - by not calling super. I disable special handling of numeric characters
        }
    };

    tk.wordChars('a', 'z');
    tk.wordChars('0', '9');
    while ((tk.nextToken()) != StreamTokenizer.TT_EOF) {
        if (tk.ttype == StreamTokenizer.TT_WORD) {
            System.out.println("TT_WORD " + tk.sval);
        }
        if (tk.ttype == StreamTokenizer.TT_NUMBER) {
            System.out.println("TT_NUMBER " + tk.nval);
        }
    }

outputs:

TT_WORD 8a

With the above config, you could then get a String 8a and then do String.contains to check if a number is present inside.

1
  • This is the direction I was thinking. I may have to implement it on reaching a number then reset the tokenizer parameters after the check, but it should work for my purposes. Thanks!
    – moduluses
    Oct 3, 2017 at 3:38
0

You could identify if the current token is a StreamTokenizer.TT_WORD and output an error. Check the code snippet below it takes a text with numbers and characters without spaces and outputs an error when it reaches a character.

import java.io.*;
public class StreamCharacterChecker{

     public static void main(String []args) throws IOException{
        String text = "123458a787";
        Reader r = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(new ByteArrayInputStream(text.getBytes())));
        StreamTokenizer st = new StreamTokenizer(r);
        int token;
        while ((token = st.nextToken()) != StreamTokenizer.TT_EOF){
            if (token == StreamTokenizer.TT_WORD){
                System.out.println("Error characters detected!");
                break;
            }    
        }
     }
}
3
  • I just tried the snippet without the 'a' and still got the error on this one, so I'm unsure on that.
    – moduluses
    Oct 3, 2017 at 3:31
  • Sorry There was an error in the condition check it now Oct 3, 2017 at 3:39
  • I actually caught that != before and changed it; still wasn't working but somehow now seems to be. That works, thanks!
    – moduluses
    Oct 3, 2017 at 3:43

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