public abstract class OutputStream extends Object implements Closeable, Flushable
Applications that need to define a subclass of OutputStream
must always provide at
least a method that writes one byte of output.
Constructor and Description |
---|
OutputStream() |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
void |
close()
Closes this output stream and releases any system resources associated with this stream.
|
void |
flush()
Flushes this output stream and forces any buffered output bytes to be written out.
|
void |
write(byte[] b)
Writes
b.length bytes from the specified byte array to this output stream. |
void |
write(byte[] b,
int off,
int len)
Writes
len bytes from the specified byte array starting at offset off
to this output stream. |
abstract void |
write(int b)
Writes the specified byte to this output stream.
|
public void close() throws IOException
close
is that it closes the output stream. A closed stream
cannot perform output operations and cannot be reopened.
The close
method of OutputStream
does nothing.
close
in interface Closeable
close
in interface AutoCloseable
IOException
- if an I/O error occurs.public void flush() throws IOException
flush
is that calling it is an indication that, if any bytes previously
written have been buffered by the implementation of the output stream, such bytes should
immediately be written to their intended destination.
If the intended destination of this stream is an abstraction provided by the underlying operating system, for example a file, then flushing the stream guarantees only that bytes previously written to the stream are passed to the operating system for writing; it does not guarantee that they are actually written to a physical device such as a disk drive.
The flush
method of OutputStream
does nothing.
flush
in interface Flushable
IOException
- if an I/O error occurs.public void write(byte[] b) throws IOException
b.length
bytes from the specified byte array to this output stream. The
general contract for write(b)
is that it should have exactly the same effect as the
call write(b, 0, b.length)
.b
- the data.IOException
- if an I/O error occurs.write(byte[], int, int)
public void write(byte[] b, int off, int len) throws IOException
len
bytes from the specified byte array starting at offset off
to this output stream. The general contract for write(b, off, len)
is that some of
the bytes in the array b
are written to the output stream in order; element
b[off]
is the first byte written and b[off+len-1]
is the last byte
written by this operation.
The write
method of OutputStream
calls the write method of one argument
on each of the bytes to be written out. Subclasses are encouraged to override this method and
provide a more efficient implementation.
If b
is null
, a NullPointerException
is thrown.
If off
is negative, or len
is negative, or off+len
is
greater than the length of the array b
, then an IndexOutOfBoundsException
is thrown.
b
- the data.off
- the start offset in the data.len
- the number of bytes to write.IOException
- if an I/O error occurs. In particular, an IOException
is thrown if the
output stream is closed.public abstract void write(int b) throws IOException
write
is
that one byte is written to the output stream. The byte to be written is the eight low-order bits
of the argument b
. The 24 high-order bits of b
are ignored.
Subclasses of OutputStream
must provide an implementation for this method.
b
- the byte
.IOException
- if an I/O error occurs. In particular, an IOException
may be thrown if
the output stream has been closed.