问题
In the answer to this question I don't understand why the input.nextInt
has a newline character as a leftover.
Scanner is skipping nextLine() after using next(), nextInt() or other nextFoo()?
回答1:
The answer is quite simple:
Scanner#nextInt()
reads the next integer but not the newline (ENTER
) the user presses to submit the integer.
To understand this you must know that everything you type will be written to a buffer, from which the Scanner
methods try to read from.
Regard the following example:
System.out.println("Enter a number: ");
int i = scanner.nextInt();
System.out.println("Enter a line: ");
String l = scanner.nextLine();
What will happen:
- The user sees
Enter a number:
and will press17
andENTER
. - The scanner will read the
17
but leave the newline of theENTER
. - The program will write
Enter a line:
but the scanner will read the newline of theENTER
instead of waiting for input.
回答2:
This is purly a design decision, the reason nextInt()
doesn't consume the newline character, is because there may be some other tokens that haven't been parsed yet, it would be most inappropriate to assume there's nothing left in the string, and consume the newline char.
For instance, you are given the following input
123 123 \n
Calling nextInt()
will result in the following string left in the buffer
123 \n
Calling nextInt()
again,
\n
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/45979007/why-does-input-nextint-method-have-a-n-as-a-leftover