A simple text scanner which can parse primitive types and strings using regular expressions.
A Scanner
breaks its input into tokens using a
delimiter pattern, which by default matches whitespace. The resulting
tokens may then be converted into values of different types using the
various next methods.
For example, this code allows a user to read a number from System.in:
Scanner sc = new Scanner(System.in); int i = sc.nextInt();
As another example, this code allows long
types to be
assigned from entries in a file myNumbers
:
Scanner sc = new Scanner(new File("myNumbers")); while (sc.hasNextLong()) { long aLong = sc.nextLong(); }
The scanner can also use delimiters other than whitespace. This example reads several items in from a string:
String input = "1 fish 2 fish red fish blue fish"; Scanner s = new Scanner(input).useDelimiter("\\s*fish\\s*"); System.out.println(s.nextInt()); System.out.println(s.nextInt()); System.out.println(s.next()); System.out.println(s.next()); s.close();
prints the following output:
1 2 red blue
The same output can be generated with this code, which uses a regular expression to parse all four tokens at once:
String input = "1 fish 2 fish red fish blue fish"; Scanner s = new Scanner(input); s.findInLine("(\\d+) fish (\\d+) fish (\\w+) fish (\\w+)"); MatchResult result = s.match(); for (int i=1; i<=result.groupCount(); i++) System.out.println(result.group(i)); s.close();
The default whitespace delimiter used
by a scanner is as recognized by java.lang.Character
.isWhitespace
. The reset
method will reset the value of the scanner's delimiter to the default
whitespace delimiter regardless of whether it was previously changed.
A scanning operation may block waiting for input.
The next
and hasNext
methods and their
primitive-type companion methods (such as nextInt
and
hasNextInt
) first skip any input that matches the delimiter
pattern, and then attempt to return the next token. Both hasNext
and next methods may block waiting for further input. Whether a
hasNext method blocks has no connection to whether or not its
associated next method will block.
The findInLine
, findWithinHorizon
, and skip
methods operate independently of the delimiter pattern. These methods will
attempt to match the specified pattern with no regard to delimiters in the
input and thus can be used in special circumstances where delimiters are
not relevant. These methods may block waiting for more input.
When a scanner throws an InputMismatchException
, the scanner
will not pass the token that caused the exception, so that it may be
retrieved or skipped via some other method.
Depending upon the type of delimiting pattern, empty tokens may be returned. For example, the pattern "\\s+" will return no empty tokens since it matches multiple instances of the delimiter. The delimiting pattern "\\s" could return empty tokens since it only passes one space at a time.
A scanner can read text from any object which implements the java.lang.Readable
interface. If an invocation of the underlying
readable's java.lang.Readable.read
method throws an java.io.IOException
then the scanner assumes that the end of the input
has been reached. The most recent IOException thrown by the
underlying readable can be retrieved via the ioException
method.
When a Scanner
is closed, it will close its input source
if the source implements the java.io.Closeable
interface.
A Scanner
is not safe for multithreaded use without
external synchronization.
Unless otherwise mentioned, passing a null
parameter into
any method of a Scanner
will cause a
NullPointerException
to be thrown.
A scanner will default to interpreting numbers as decimal unless a
different radix has been set by using the An instance of this class is capable of scanning numbers in the standard
formats as well as in the formats of the scanner's locale. A scanner's
initial locale is the value returned by the The localized formats are defined in terms of the following parameters,
which for a particular locale are taken from that locale's The strings that can be parsed as numbers by an instance of this class
are specified in terms of the following regular-expression grammar, where
Rmax is the highest digit in the radix being used (for example, Rmax is 9
in base 10).
useRadix
method. The
reset
method will reset the value of the scanner's radix to
10
regardless of whether it was previously changed.
Localized numbers
java.util.Locale.getDefault
method; it may be changed via the useLocale
method. The reset
method will reset the value of the
scanner's locale to the initial locale regardless of whether it was
previously changed.
DecimalFormat
object, df, and its and
DecimalFormatSymbols
object,
dfs.
LocalGroupSeparator
The character used to separate thousands groups,
i.e., dfs. getGroupingSeparator()
LocalDecimalSeparator
The character used for the decimal point,
i.e., dfs. getDecimalSeparator()
LocalPositivePrefix
The string that appears before a positive number (may
be empty), i.e., df. getPositivePrefix()
LocalPositiveSuffix
The string that appears after a positive number (may be
empty), i.e., df. getPositiveSuffix()
LocalNegativePrefix
The string that appears before a negative number (may
be empty), i.e., df. getNegativePrefix()
LocalNegativeSuffix
The string that appears after a negative number (may be
empty), i.e., df. getNegativeSuffix()
LocalNaN
The string that represents not-a-number for
floating-point values,
i.e., dfs. getNaN()
LocalInfinity
The string that represents infinity for floating-point
values, i.e., dfs. getInfinity()
Number syntax
NonASCIIDigit :: | = A non-ASCII character c for which
Character.isDigit (c)
returns true | ||||
Non0Digit :: | = [1-Rmax] | NonASCIIDigit | ||||
Digit :: | = [0-Rmax] | NonASCIIDigit | ||||
GroupedNumeral :: |
| ||||
Numeral :: | = ( ( Digit+ ) | GroupedNumeral ) | ||||
Integer :: | = ( [-+]? ( Numeral ) ) | ||||
| LocalPositivePrefix Numeral LocalPositiveSuffix | |||||
| LocalNegativePrefix Numeral LocalNegativeSuffix | |||||
DecimalNumeral :: | = Numeral | ||||
| Numeral LocalDecimalSeparator Digit* | |||||
| LocalDecimalSeparator Digit+ | |||||
Exponent :: | = ( [eE] [+-]? Digit+ ) | ||||
Decimal :: | = ( [-+]? DecimalNumeral Exponent? ) | ||||
| LocalPositivePrefix DecimalNumeral LocalPositiveSuffix Exponent? | |||||
| LocalNegativePrefix DecimalNumeral LocalNegativeSuffix Exponent? | |||||
HexFloat :: | = [-+]? 0[xX][0-9a-fA-F]*\.[0-9a-fA-F]+ ([pP][-+]?[0-9]+)? | ||||
NonNumber :: | = NaN | LocalNan | Infinity | LocalInfinity | ||||
SignedNonNumber :: | = ( [-+]? NonNumber ) | ||||
| LocalPositivePrefix NonNumber LocalPositiveSuffix | |||||
| LocalNegativePrefix NonNumber LocalNegativeSuffix | |||||
Float :: | = Decimal | ||||
| HexFloat | |||||
| SignedNonNumber |
Whitespace is not significant in the above regular expressions.
implements