Possible Duplicates:
How do I convert an InputStream to a String in Java?
In Java how do a read an input stream in to a string?
I have an InputSteam
and need to simply get a single simple String
with the complete contents.
How is this done in Java?
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2Can you elaborate? By definition, a Stream is unbounded. Unless there are some more constraints, you can't get a String (something of fixed size) from an unbounded stream.Thomas Owens– Thomas Owens2010年08月13日 17:05:48 +00:00Commented Aug 13, 2010 at 17:05
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2This has been asked many times: stackoverflow.com/questions/1763789/…bakkal– bakkal2010年08月13日 17:05:54 +00:00Commented Aug 13, 2010 at 17:05
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stackoverflow.com/questions/309424/…Patrick Kafka– Patrick Kafka2010年08月13日 17:07:00 +00:00Commented Aug 13, 2010 at 17:07
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How to do it with nio FileChannel: stackoverflow.com/questions/326390x4u– x4u2011年06月04日 11:08:11 +00:00Commented Jun 4, 2011 at 11:08
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Awesome solution here: Read/convert an InputStream to a StringRichard Le Mesurier– Richard Le Mesurier2013年02月15日 11:40:33 +00:00Commented Feb 15, 2013 at 11:40
6 Answers 6
Here is a modification of Gopi's answer that doesn't have the line ending problem and is also more effective as it doesn't need temporary String objects for every line and avoids the redundant copying in BufferedReader and the extra work in readLine().
public static String convertStreamToString( InputStream is, String ecoding ) throws IOException
{
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder( Math.max( 16, is.available() ) );
char[] tmp = new char[ 4096 ];
try {
InputStreamReader reader = new InputStreamReader( is, ecoding );
for( int cnt; ( cnt = reader.read( tmp ) ) > 0; )
sb.append( tmp, 0, cnt );
} finally {
is.close();
}
return sb.toString();
}
1 Comment
You need to construct an InputStreamReader
to wrap the input stream, converting between binary data and text. Specify the appropriate encoding based on your input source.
Once you've got an InputStreamReader
, you could create a BufferedReader
and read the contents line by line, or just read buffer-by-buffer and append to a StringBuilder
until the read()
call returns -1.
The Guava library makes the second part of this easy - use CharStreams.toString(inputStreamReader)
.
2 Comments
Here is an example code adapted from here.
public String convertStreamToString(InputStream is) throws IOException {
/*
* To convert the InputStream to String we use the BufferedReader.readLine()
* method. We iterate until the BufferedReader return null which means
* there's no more data to read. Each line will appended to a StringBuilder
* and returned as String.
*/
if (is != null) {
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
String line;
try {
BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(is, "UTF-8"));
while ((line = reader.readLine()) != null) {
sb.append(line).append("\n");
}
} finally {
is.close();
}
return sb.toString();
} else {
return "";
}
}
4 Comments
\r\n
(or \r
) becomes \n
.You can also use Apache Commons IO library
Specifically, you can use IOUtils#toString(InputStream inputStream) method
2 Comments
IOUtils
provides such methods, too. BTW, the link to Javadoc is broken...You could also use a StringWriter as follows; each read
from your InputStream is matched with a write
(or append
) to the StringWriter, and upon completion you can call getBuffer
to get a StringBuffer which could be used directly or you could get call its toString
method.
Comments
Wrap the Stream in a Reader to get locale conversion, and then keep reading while collecting in a StringBuffer. When done, do a toString() on the StringBuffer.