In Java, the mkdir() function is used to create a new directory. This method takes the abstract pathname as a parameter and is defined in the Java File class. mkdir() returns true if the directory is created successfully; else, it returns false.
walk(), and glob module are the methods available to iterate over files. A directory is also known as a folder. It is a collection of files and subdirectories. The module os is useful to work with directories.
You can use File#isDirectory()
to test if the given file (path) is a directory. If this is true
, then you just call the same method again with its File#listFiles()
outcome. This is called recursion.
Here's a basic kickoff example:
package com.stackoverflow.q3154488;
import java.io.File;
public class Demo {
public static void main(String... args) {
File dir = new File("/path/to/dir");
showFiles(dir.listFiles());
}
public static void showFiles(File[] files) {
for (File file : files) {
if (file.isDirectory()) {
System.out.println("Directory: " + file.getAbsolutePath());
showFiles(file.listFiles()); // Calls same method again.
} else {
System.out.println("File: " + file.getAbsolutePath());
}
}
}
}
Note that this is sensitive to StackOverflowError
when the tree is deeper than the JVM's stack can hold. If you're already on Java 8 or newer, then you'd better use Files#walk()
instead which utilizes tail recursion:
package com.stackoverflow.q3154488;
import java.io.File;
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.nio.file.Path;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
public class DemoWithJava8 {
public static void main(String... args) throws Exception {
Path dir = Paths.get("/path/to/dir");
Files.walk(dir).forEach(path -> showFile(path.toFile()));
}
public static void showFile(File file) {
if (file.isDirectory()) {
System.out.println("Directory: " + file.getAbsolutePath());
} else {
System.out.println("File: " + file.getAbsolutePath());
}
}
}
If you are using Java 1.7, you can use java.nio.file.Files.walkFileTree(...)
.
For example:
public class WalkFileTreeExample {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Path p = Paths.get("/usr");
FileVisitor<Path> fv = new SimpleFileVisitor<Path>() {
@Override
public FileVisitResult visitFile(Path file, BasicFileAttributes attrs)
throws IOException {
System.out.println(file);
return FileVisitResult.CONTINUE;
}
};
try {
Files.walkFileTree(p, fv);
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
If you are using Java 8, you can use the stream interface with java.nio.file.Files.walk(...)
:
public class WalkFileTreeExample {
public static void main(String[] args) {
try (Stream<Path> paths = Files.walk(Paths.get("/usr"))) {
paths.forEach(System.out::println);
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Check out the FileUtils class in Apache Commons - specifically iterateFiles:
Allows iteration over the files in given directory (and optionally its subdirectories).
Using org.apache.commons.io.FileUtils
File file = new File("F:/Lines");
Collection<File> files = FileUtils.listFiles(file, null, true);
for(File file2 : files){
System.out.println(file2.getName());
}
Use false if you do not want files from sub directories.
For Java 7+, there is also https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/nio/file/DirectoryStream.html
Example taken from the Javadoc:
List<Path> listSourceFiles(Path dir) throws IOException {
List<Path> result = new ArrayList<>();
try (DirectoryStream<Path> stream = Files.newDirectoryStream(dir, "*.{c,h,cpp,hpp,java}")) {
for (Path entry: stream) {
result.add(entry);
}
} catch (DirectoryIteratorException ex) {
// I/O error encounted during the iteration, the cause is an IOException
throw ex.getCause();
}
return result;
}
It's a tree, so recursion is your friend: start with the parent directory and call the method to get an array of child Files. Iterate through the child array. If the current value is a directory, pass it to a recursive call of your method. If not, process the leaf file appropriately.
As noted, this is a recursion problem. In particular, you may want to look at
listFiles()
In the java File API here. It returns an array of all the files in a directory. Using this along with
isDirectory()
to see if you need to recurse further is a good start.
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