I'm trying to delete a line of text from a text file without copying to a temporary file. I am trying to do this by using a Printwriter and a Scanner and having them traverse the file at the same time, the writer writing what the Scanner reads and overwriting each line with the same thing, until it gets to the line that I wish to delete. Then, I advance the Scanner but not the writer, and continue as before. Here is the code:
But first, the parameters: My file names are numbers, so this would read 1.txt or 2.txt, etc, and so f specifies the file name. I convert it to a String in the constructor for a file. Int n is the index of the line that I want to delete.
public void deleteLine(int f, int n){
try{
Scanner reader = new Scanner(new File(f+".txt"));
PrintWriter writer = new PrintWriter(new FileWriter(new File(f+".txt")),false);
for(int w=0; w<n; w++)
writer.write(reader.nextLine());
reader.nextLine();
while(reader.hasNextLine())
writer.write(reader.nextLine());
} catch(Exception e){
System.err.println("Enjoy the stack trace!");
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
It gives me strange errors. It says "NoSuchElementException" and "no line found" in the stack trace. It points to different lines; it seems that any of the nextLine() calls can do this. Is it possible to delete a line this way? If so, what am I doing wrong? If not, why? (BTW, just in case you'd want this, the text file is about 500 lines. I don't know if that counts as large or even matters, though.)