I am using a BufferedReader
constructor to make a new copy of an existing BufferedReader
.
BufferedReader buffReader = new BufferedR
Any other way I can make a new bufferReader without affecting my oroginal BufferReader
There's no straight forward way of solving it by just creating two BufferedReader
s. (The two readers will consume data from the same source.) You'll have to add another level of buffering on the source, so each reader can read the stream independently.
This can be achieved by combining TeeInputStream from Apache Commons and a PipedInputStream and PipedOutputStream as follows:
import java.io.*;
import org.apache.commons.io.input.TeeInputStream;
class Test {
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
// Create the source input stream.
InputStream is = new FileInputStream("filename.txt");
// Create a piped input stream for one of the readers.
PipedInputStream in = new PipedInputStream();
// Create a tee-splitter for the other reader.
TeeInputStream tee = new TeeInputStream(is, new PipedOutputStream(in));
// Create the two buffered readers.
BufferedReader br1 = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(tee));
BufferedReader br2 = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(in));
// Do some interleaved reads from them.
System.out.println("One line from br1:");
System.out.println(br1.readLine());
System.out.println();
System.out.println("Two lines from br2:");
System.out.println(br2.readLine());
System.out.println(br2.readLine());
System.out.println();
System.out.println("One line from br1:");
System.out.println(br1.readLine());
System.out.println();
}
}
Output:
One line from br1:
Line1: Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, <-- reading from start
Two lines from br2:
Line1: Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, <-- reading from start
Line2: consectetur adipisicing elit,
One line from br1:
Line2: consectetur adipisicing elit, <-- resumes on line 2
Passing in a BufferedReader
instance in the constructor for a new BufferedReader
will not make a copy of the original BufferedReader!
What you are doing there is chaining the two reader, in other words, you are buffering the already buffered reader instance. When you call readLine()
on buffReader
, it will call readLine()
on originalBuffReader
.
Take a look here for more details of the chaining of streams: Chaining of Streams
Below is one way to consider creating a new BufferedReader out of the Original BufferedReader.
Essentially, we are dumping the contents of the original buffered reader into a string and then recreating a new BufferedReader object. To be able to re read the original BufferedReader a second time you can mark it and then after reading it, you can then reset it.
One thing to keep in mind is you might want to protect by DDOS attacks, where a very large buffered reader can come in and you might want to avoid reading for ever and filling up the memory, you can basically break the for loop after some point or when a certain condition is met.
final String originalBufferedReaderDump;
originalBufferedReaderDump.mark(Integer.MAX_VALUE);
for (String line; (line = originalBufferedReader.readLine()) != null; originalBufferedReaderDump+= line);
originalBufferedReader.reset();
final BufferedReader copiedBufferedReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(new ByteArrayInputStream(originalBufferedReaderDump.getBytes())));