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How do I close a file after catching an IOException in java?

All,

I am trying to ensure that a file I have open with BufferedReader is closed when I catch an IOException, but it appears as if my BufferedReader object is out of scope in the catch block.

public static ArrayList readFiletoArrayList(String fileName, ArrayList fileArrayList)
{
    fileArrayList.removeAll(fileArrayList);

    try {
        //open the file for reading
        BufferedReader fileIn = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(fileName));

        // add line by line to array list, until end of file is reached
        // when buffered reader returns null (todo). 
        while(true){
                fileArrayList.add(fileIn.readLine());
            }
    }catch(IOException e){
        fileArrayList.removeAll(fileArrayList);
        fileIn.close(); 
        return fileArrayList; //returned empty. Dealt with in calling code. 
    }
}

Netbeans complains that it "cannot find symbol fileIn" in the catch block, but I want to ensure that in the case of an IOException that the Reader gets closed. How can I do that without the ugliness of a second try/catch construct around the first?

Any tips or pointers as to best practise in this situation is appreciated,

like image 994
DimDom Avatar asked Apr 15 '10 22:04

DimDom


1 Answers

 BufferedReader fileIn = null;
 try {
       fileIn = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(filename));
       //etc.
 } catch(IOException e) {
      fileArrayList.removeall(fileArrayList);
 } finally {
     try {
       if (fileIn != null) fileIn.close();
     } catch (IOException io) {
        //log exception here
     }
 }
 return fileArrayList;

A few things about the above code:

  • close should be in a finally, otherwise it won't get closed when the code completes normally, or if some other exception is thrown besides IOException.
  • Typically you have a static utility method to close a resource like that so that it checks for null and catches any exceptions (which you never want to do anything about other than log in this context).
  • The return belongs after the try so that both the main-line code and the exception catching have a return method without redundancy.
  • If you put the return inside the finally, it would generate a compiler warning.
like image 71
Yishai Avatar answered Oct 20 '22 04:10

Yishai