I have some questions about the usage of the close() method when using Java InputStreams. From what I see and read from most developers, you should always explicitly call close() on an InputStream when it is no longer needed. But, today I was looking into using a Java properties file, and every example I have found has something like this:
Properties props = new Properties();
try {
props.load(new FileInputStream("message.properties"));
//omitted.
} catch (Exception ex) {}
With the above example, there is no way to explicitly call close() because the InputStream is unreachable after it is used. I have seen many similar uses of InputStreams even though it seems to contradict what most people say about explicitly closing. I read through Oracle's JavaDocs and it does not mention if the Properties.load() method closes the InputStream. I am wondering if this is generally acceptable or if it is preferred to do something more like the following:
Properties props = new Properties();
InputStream fis = new FileInputStream("message.properties");
try {
props.load(fis);
//omitted.
} catch (Exception ex) {
//omitted.
} finally {
try {
fis.close();
} catch (IOException ioex) {
//omitted.
}
}
Which way is better and/or more efficient? Or does it really matter?
解决方案
The examples in the Properties Tutorial close the FileInputStream explicitly after loading, so I think it's safe to assume that the load method isn't responsible for it, you are.
// create and load default properties
Properties defaultProps = new Properties();
FileInputStream in = new FileInputStream("defaultProperties");
defaultProps.load(in);
in.close();
Just for reference, I checked the Apache Harmony implementation of Properties, and it does not close the stream on load.