How is it that for a scanner object the hasNextLine()
method returns true while the hasNext()
method returns false?
Note: Based on the input file, the hasNext()
method is returning the result as expected; the hasNextLine()
does not seem to be returning the correct result.
Here's the code I'm running that's creating the results below:
public void ScannerTest(Reader fileReaderObject){
Scanner scannerObj = new Scanner(fileReaderObject);
for(int i = 1; scannerObj.hasNext(); i++){
System.out.println(i + ": " + scannerObj.next());
System.out.println("Has next line: " + scannerObj.hasNextLine());
System.out.println("Has next: " + scannerObj.hasNext());
}
System.out.println();
scannerObj.close();
}
The following is the actual content of the file that I'm passing to this scanner:
a 3 9
b 3 6
c 3 3
d 2 8
e 2 5
f 2 2
g 1 7
h 1 4
i 1 1
The following is the end of what's printed in the console when I run my code, and includes the portion I can't make sense of:
25: i
Has next line: true
Has next: true
26: 1
Has next line: true
Has next: true
27: 1
Has next line: true
Has next: false
Conclusion. In this article, we've learned that Scanner's hasNextLine() method checks if there is another line in the input, no matter if the line is blank or not, while hasNext() uses a delimiter to check for another token.
The only way the code terminates, as designed, is with CTRL-Z in Windows or CTRL-D in UNIX/Linux, which ends the byte stream, causes hasNextLine() not to block waiting for input and to return a boolean false which terminates the while loop.
The hasNextLine() is a method of Java Scanner class which is used to check if there is another line in the input of this scanner. It returns true if it finds another line, otherwise returns false.
The reason is that hasNext()
checks if there are any more non-whitespace characters available. hasNextLine()
checks to see if there is another line of text available. Your text file probably has a newline at the end of it so it has another line but no more characters that are not whitespace.
Many text editors automatically add a newline to the end of a file if there isn't one already.
In other words, your input file is not this (the numbers are line numbers):
1. a 3 9
2. b 3 6
3. c 3 3
4. d 2 8
5. e 2 5
It is actually this:
1. a 3 9
2. b 3 6
3. c 3 3
4. d 2 8
5. e 2 5
6.
hasNextLine()
checks to see if there is another linePattern
in the buffer.hasNext()
checks to see if there is a parseable token in the buffer, as separated by the scanner's delimiter.Since the scanner's delimiter is whitespace, and the linePattern
is also white space, it is possible for there to be a linePattern
in the buffer but no parseable tokens.
Typically, the most common way to deal with this issue by always calling nextLine()
after parsing all the tokens (e.g. numbers) in each line of your text. You need to do this when using Scanner
when reading a user's input too from System.in
. To advance the scanner past this whitespace delimiter, you must use scanner.nextLine()
to clear the line delimiter. See: Using scanner.nextLine()
Appendix:
LinePattern
is defined to be a Pattern
that matches this:
private static final String LINE_SEPARATOR_PATTERN =
"\r\n|[\n\r\u2028\u2029\u0085]";
private static final String LINE_PATTERN = ".*("+LINE_SEPARATOR_PATTERN+")|.+$";
The default token delimiter is this Pattern
:
private static Pattern WHITESPACE_PATTERN = Pattern.compile(
"\\p{javaWhitespace}+");
You have an empty line at the end of the file.
If you take your content and save it for example into a txt file, some editors will add an empty new line to your file.
The editors behave this way, because this is part of the POSIX standard:
3.206 Line
A sequence of zero or more non- characters plus a terminating character.
This topic has been discussed in this thread.
Here is the documentation from the Java 8 Scanner class.
hasNext()
Returns true if this scanner has another token in its input.
hasNextLine()
Returns true if there is another line in the input of this scanner.
Because of the above described facts, hasNextLine()
will return true
, but hasNext()
cannot find anything, which it can recognize as Token
and returns therefore false
.
For additional infos see durron597 post.
You are consuming the value of next()
, but asking for hasNext()
and hasNextLine()
. next()
, per default, returns everything to the next whitespace()
. So you are iterating through all whitespace seperated strings, and after each of them you are asking about the nextLine()
.
i 1 1
-> hasNextLine()
? True. hasNext()
? Also true.
1 1
-> hasNextLine()
? True. hasNext()
? Also true (still a whitespace left)
1
-> hasNextLine()
? True (Line Seperator, probably). haxNext? False, no whitespace anymore.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With