An IOException is thrown.
Most IO methods throw
an IOException
when an error is encountered.
A method that uses one of these IO methods
must either (1) include throws IOException
in its header, or (2) perform its IO in a
try{}
block and then catch
IOExceptions.
Here is the example program modified to catch exceptions:
import java.io.*; class WriteTextFile2 { public static void main ( String[] args ) { String fileName = "reaper.txt" ; try { // append characters to the file FileWriter writer = new FileWriter( fileName, true ); writer.write( "Alone she cuts and binds the grain,\n" ); writer.write( "And sings a melancholy strain;\n" ); writer.write( "O listen! for the Vale profound\n" ); writer.write( "Is overflowing with the sound.\n\n" ); writer.close(); } catch ( IOException iox ) { System.out.println("Problem writing " + fileName ); } } }
The constructor, the write()
method, and the close()
method
can throw an IOException.
All are caught by the catch
block.
This program opens the file "reaper.txt" for appending. Run it and see what it does.