java.lang.Objectjava.io.OutputStream
All Implemented Interfaces:
Flushable, Closeable
Applications that need to define a subclass of
OutputStream
must always provide at least a method
that writes one byte of output.
Arthur
- van HoffJDK1.0
- Method from java.io.OutputStream Summary: |
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close, flush, write, write, write |
Methods from java.lang.Object: |
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clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait |
Method from java.io.OutputStream Detail: |
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close
is that it closes the output stream. A closed stream cannot perform
output operations and cannot be reopened.
The |
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 |
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 |
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) . |
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
If
If |