Usually, when dealing with Java IO code, here is what I wrote
FileOutputStream out = null;
try
{
out = new FileOutputStream("myfile.txt");
// More and more code goes here...
}
catch (Exception e)
{
}
finally
{
// I put the close code in finally block, to enture the opened
// file stream is always closed even there is exception happened.
if (out != null) {
// Another try catch block, troublesome.
try {
out.close();
} catch (IOException ex) {
}
}
}
As you can see, while I try to close the file stream, I need to deal with another try…catch block.
Look troublesome 🙁
Is there any way I can avoid? I don’t feel comfortable in putting the close code in non-finally block, as exception caused by other codes will make no chance for “close” being called.
It is very important that you close streams in a finally. You can simplify this process with a utility method such as:
I make it a point of at least logging a stream close failure. The usage then becomes:
In Java 7 I believe that streams will be closed automatically and the need for such blocks should be mostly redundant.