Java Create and Write To Files
Create a File
To create a file in Java, you can use the createNewFile() method. This method returns a boolean value: true if the file was successfully created, and false if the file already exists. Note that the method is enclosed in a try...catch block. This is necessary because it throws an IOException if an error occurs (if the file cannot be created for some reason):
Example
import java.io.File; // Import the File class import java.io.IOException; // Import the IOException class to handle errors public class CreateFile { public static void main(String[] args) { try { File myObj = new File("filename.txt"); if (myObj.createNewFile()) { System.out.println("File created: " + myObj.getName()); } else { System.out.println("File already exists."); } } catch (IOException e) { System.out.println("An error occurred."); e.printStackTrace(); } } }
To create a file in a specific directory (requires permission), specify the path of the file and use double backslashes to escape the "\" character (for Windows). On Mac and Linux you can just write the path, like: /Users/name/filename.txt
Example
File myObj = new File("C:\\Users\\MyName\\filename.txt");
Write To a File
In the following example, we use the FileWriter class together with its write() method to write some text to the file we created in the example above. Note that when you are done writing to the file, you should close it with the close() method:
Example
import java.io.FileWriter; // Import the FileWriter class import java.io.IOException; // Import the IOException class to handle errors public class WriteToFile { public static void main(String[] args) { try { FileWriter myWriter = new FileWriter("filename.txt"); myWriter.write("Files in Java might be tricky, but it is fun enough!"); myWriter.close(); System.out.println("Successfully wrote to the file."); } catch (IOException e) { System.out.println("An error occurred."); e.printStackTrace(); } } }