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/*

This is not an official specification document, and usage is restricted.

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(c) 2005-2007 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Neither this file nor any files generated from it describe a complete specification, and they may only be used as described below. For example, no permission is given for you to incorporate this file, in whole or in part, in an implementation of a Java specification.

Sun Microsystems Inc. owns the copyright in this file and it is provided to you for informative, as opposed to normative, use. The file and any files generated from it may be used to generate other informative documentation, such as a unified set of documents of API signatures for a platform that includes technologies expressed as Java APIs. The file may also be used to produce "compilation stubs," which allow applications to be compiled and validated for such platforms.

Any work generated from this file, such as unified javadocs or compiled stub files, must be accompanied by this notice in its entirety.

This work corresponds to the API signatures of JSR 219: Foundation Profile 1.1. In the event of a discrepency between this work and the JSR 219 specification, which is available at http://www.jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=219, the latter takes precedence. */ package java.io; /** * Abstract class for reading character streams. The only methods that a * subclass must implement are read(char[], int, int) and close(). Most * subclasses, however, will override some of the methods defined here in order * to provide higher efficiency, additional functionality, or both. * * * @see BufferedReader * @see LineNumberReader * @see CharArrayReader * @see InputStreamReader * @see FileReader * @see FilterReader * @see PushbackReader * @see PipedReader * @see StringReader * @see Writer * * @version 1.21, 00/02/02 * @author Mark Reinhold * @since JDK1.1 */ public abstract class Reader { /** * The object used to synchronize operations on this stream. For * efficiency, a character-stream object may use an object other than * itself to protect critical sections. A subclass should therefore use * the object in this field rather than this or a synchronized * method. */ protected Object lock; /** * Create a new character-stream reader whose critical sections will * synchronize on the reader itself. */ protected Reader() { } /** * Create a new character-stream reader whose critical sections will * synchronize on the given object. * * @param lock The Object to synchronize on. */ protected Reader(Object lock) { } /** * Read a single character. This method will block until a character is * available, an I/O error occurs, or the end of the stream is reached. * *

Subclasses that intend to support efficient single-character input * should override this method. * * @return The character read, as an integer in the range 0 to 65535 * (0x00-0xffff), or -1 if the end of the stream has * been reached * * @exception IOException If an I/O error occurs */ public int read() throws IOException { return 0; } /** * Read characters into an array. This method will block until some input * is available, an I/O error occurs, or the end of the stream is reached. * * @param cbuf Destination buffer * * @return The number of characters read, or -1 * if the end of the stream * has been reached * * @exception IOException If an I/O error occurs */ public int read(char[] cbuf) throws IOException { return 0; } /** * Read characters into a portion of an array. This method will block * until some input is available, an I/O error occurs, or the end of the * stream is reached. * * @param cbuf Destination buffer * @param off Offset at which to start storing characters * @param len Maximum number of characters to read * * @return The number of characters read, or -1 if the end of the * stream has been reached * * @exception IOException If an I/O error occurs */ public abstract int read(char[] cbuf, int off, int len) throws IOException; /** * Skip characters. This method will block until some characters are * available, an I/O error occurs, or the end of the stream is reached. * * @param n The number of characters to skip * * @return The number of characters actually skipped * * @exception IllegalArgumentException If n is negative. * @exception IOException If an I/O error occurs */ public long skip(long n) throws IOException { return -1; } /** * Tell whether this stream is ready to be read. * * @return True if the next read() is guaranteed not to block for input, * false otherwise. Note that returning false does not guarantee that the * next read will block. * * @exception IOException If an I/O error occurs */ public boolean ready() throws IOException { return false; } /** * Tell whether this stream supports the mark() operation. The default * implementation always returns false. Subclasses should override this * method. * * @return true if and only if this stream supports the mark operation. */ public boolean markSupported() { return false; } /** * Mark the present position in the stream. Subsequent calls to reset() * will attempt to reposition the stream to this point. Not all * character-input streams support the mark() operation. * * @param readAheadLimit Limit on the number of characters that may be * read while still preserving the mark. After * reading this many characters, attempting to * reset the stream may fail. * * @exception IOException If the stream does not support mark(), * or if some other I/O error occurs */ public void mark(int readAheadLimit) throws IOException { } /** * Reset the stream. If the stream has been marked, then attempt to * reposition it at the mark. If the stream has not been marked, then * attempt to reset it in some way appropriate to the particular stream, * for example by repositioning it to its starting point. Not all * character-input streams support the reset() operation, and some support * reset() without supporting mark(). * * @exception IOException If the stream has not been marked, * or if the mark has been invalidated, * or if the stream does not support reset(), * or if some other I/O error occurs */ public void reset() throws IOException { } /** * Close the stream. Once a stream has been closed, further read(), * ready(), mark(), or reset() invocations will throw an IOException. * Closing a previously-closed stream, however, has no effect. * * @exception IOException If an I/O error occurs */ public abstract void close() throws IOException; }





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