I'm trying to re-factor a large and frequently used part of my application into separate methods to make it easier to maintain.
Some of these methods asks the user for input and does input validation, so I've used a Scanner and System.in But when I close my Scanner I also close System.in
So my question is, can I only prevent System.in being closed by shielding it with CloseShieldInputStream or should I just start passing a Scanner to the methods?
Simply use a custom FilterInputStream instead of System.in:
new FilterInputStream(System.in) {
@Override
public void close() throws IOException {
//don't close System.in!
}
}
You can just ignore close by implementing custom decorator.
public class UnClosableDecorator extends InputStream {
private final InputStream inputStream;
public UnClosableDecorator(InputStream inputStream) {
this.inputStream = inputStream;
}
@Override
public int read() throws IOException {
return inputStream.read();
}
@Override
public int read(byte[] b) throws IOException {
return inputStream.read(b);
}
@Override
public int read(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException {
return inputStream.read(b, off, len);
}
@Override
public long skip(long n) throws IOException {
return inputStream.skip(n);
}
@Override
public int available() throws IOException {
return inputStream.available();
}
@Override
public synchronized void mark(int readlimit) {
inputStream.mark(readlimit);
}
@Override
public synchronized void reset() throws IOException {
inputStream.reset();
}
@Override
public boolean markSupported() {
return inputStream.markSupported();
}
@Override
public void close() throws IOException {
//do nothing
}
}
And use it in main
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
System.setIn(new UnClosableDecorator(System.in));
}
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