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Beschreibung
All of Java's Input/Output (I/O) facilities are based on streams, which provide simple ways to read and write data of different types. Java provides many different kinds of streams, each with its own application. The universe of streams is divided into four large categories: input streams and output streams, for reading and writing binary data; and readers and writers, for reading and writing textual (character) data. You're almost certainly familiar with the basic kinds of streams--but did you know that there's a CipherInputStream for reading encrypted data? And a ZipOutputStream for automatically compressing data? Do you know how to use buffered streams effectively to make your I/O operations more efficient? Java I/O, 2nd Edition has been updated for Java 5.0 APIs and tells you all you ever need to know about streams--and probably more. A discussion of I/O wouldn't be complete without treatment of character sets and formatting. Java supports the Unicode standard, which provides definitions for the character sets of most written languages. Consequently, Java is the first programming language that lets you do I/O in virtually any language. Java also provides a sophisticated model for formatting textual and numeric data. Java I/O, 2nd Edition shows you how to control number formatting, use characters aside from the standard (but outdated) ASCII character set, and get a head start on writing truly multilingual software. Java I/O, 2nd Edition includes: * Coverage of all I/O classes and related classes * In-depth coverage of Java's number formatting facilities and its support for international character sets
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Technische Daten


Erscheinungsdatum
28.06.2006
Sprache
Englisch
EAN
9780596527501
Herausgeber
O'Reilly and Associates
Sonderedition
Nein
Autor
Elliotte Rusty Harold
Seitenanzahl
726
Auflage
2
Einbandart
Unbekannter Einband
Einbandart Details
Trade Paperback (US)
Schlagwörter
java, cryptography, ZipOutputStream, CipherInputStream, networking
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface Part I. Basic I/O 1. Introducing I/O      What Is a Stream?      Numeric Data      Character Data      Readers and Writers      Buffers and Channels      The Ubiquitous IOException      The Console: System.out, System.in, and System.err      Security Checks on I/O 2. Output Streams      Writing Bytes to Output Streams      Writing Arrays of Bytes      Closing Output Streams      Flushing Output Streams      Subclassing OutputStream      A Graphical User Interface for Output Streams 3. Input Streams      The read( ) Method      Reading Chunks of Data from a Stream      Counting the Available Bytes      Skipping Bytes      Closing Input Streams      Marking and Resetting      Subclassing InputStream      An Efficient Stream Copier Part II. Data Sources 4. File Streams      Reading Files      Writing Files      File Viewer, Part 1 5. Network Streams      URLs      URL Connections      Sockets      Server Sockets      URLViewer Part III. Filter Streams 6. Filter Streams      The Filter Stream Classes      The Filter Stream Subclasses      Buffered Streams      PushbackInputStream      ProgressMonitorInputStream      Multitarget Output Streams      File Viewer, Part 2 7. Print Streams      Print Versus Write      Line Breaks      Error Handling      printf( )      Formatter      Formattable 8. Data Streams      The Data Stream Classes      Integers      Floating-Point Numbers      Booleans      Byte Arrays      Strings and chars      Little-Endian Numbers      Thread Safety      File Viewer, Part 3 9. Streams in Memory      Sequence Input Streams      Byte Array Streams      Communicating Between Threads Using Piped Streams 10. Compressing Streams      Inflaters and Deflaters      Compressing and Decompressing Streams      Zip Files      Checksums      File Viewer, Part 4 11. JAR Archives      Meta-Information: Manifest Files and Signatures      The jar Tool      The java.util.jar Package      JarFile      JarEntry      Attributes      Manifest      JarInputStream      JarOutputStream      JarURLConnection      Pack200      Reading Resources from JAR Files 12. Cryptographic Streams      Hash Functions      The MessageDigest Class      Digest Streams      Encryption Basics      The Cipher Class      Cipher Streams      File Viewer, Part 5 13. Object Serialization      Reading and Writing Objects      Object Streams      How Object Serialization Works      Performance      The Serializable Interface      Versioning      Customizing the Serialization Format      Resolving Classes      Resolving Objects      Validation      Sealed Objects      JavaDoc Part IV. New I/O 14. Buffers      Copying Files with Buffers      Creating Buffers      Buffer Layout      Bulk Put and Get      Absolute Put and Get      Mark and Reset      Compaction      Duplication      Slicing      Typed Data      Read-Only Buffers      CharBuffers      Memory-Mapped I/O 15. Channels      The Channel Interfaces      File Channels      Converting Between Streams and Channels      Socket Channels      Server Socket Channels      Datagram Channels 16. Nonblocking I/O      Nonblocking I/O      Selectable Channels      Selectors      Selection Keys      Pipe Channels Part V. The File System 17. Working with Files      Understanding Files      Directories and Paths      The File Class      Filename Filters      File Filters      File Descriptors      Random-Access Files      General Techniques for Cross-Platform File Access Code 18. File Dialogs and Choosers      File Dialogs      JFileChooser      File Viewer, Part 6 Part VI. Text 19. Character Sets and Unicode      The Unicode Character Set      UTF-16      UTF-8      Other Encodings      Converting Between Byte Arrays and Strings 20. Readers and Writers      The java.io.Writer Class      The OutputStreamWriter Class      The java.io.Reader Class      The InputStreamReader Class      Encoding Heuristics      Character Array Readers and Writers      String Readers and Writers      Reading and Writing Files      Buffered Readers and Writers      Print Writers      Piped Readers and Writers      Filtered Readers and Writers      File Viewer Finis 21. Formatted I/O with java.text      The Old Way      Choosing a Locale      Number Formats      Specifying Width with FieldPosition      Parsing Input      Decimal Formats Part VII. Devices 22. The Java Communications API      The Architecture of the Java Communications API      Identifying Ports      Communicating with a Device on a Port      Serial Ports      Parallel Ports 23. USB      USB Architecture      Finding Devices      Controlling Devices      Describing Devices      Pipes      IRPs      Temperature Sensor Example      Hot Plugging 24. The J2ME Generic Connection Framework      The Generic Connection Framework      ContentConnection      Files      HTTP      Serial I/O      Sockets      Server Sockets      Datagrams 25. Bluetooth      The Bluetooth Protocol      The Java Bluetooth API      The Local Device      Discovering Devices      Remote Devices      Service Records      Talking to Devices Part VIII. Appendix Appendix Index
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