Pergunta

does J2ME have something similar to RandomAccessFile class, or is there any way to emulate this particular (random access) functionality?

The problem is this: I have a rather large binary data file (~600 KB) and would like to create a mobile application for using that data. Format of that data is home-made and contains many index blocks and data blocks. Reading the data on other platforms (like PHP or C) usually goes like this:

  1. Read 2 bytes for index key (K), another 2 for index value (V) for the data type needed
  2. Skip V bytes from the start of the file to seek to a file position there the data for index key K starts
  3. Read the data
  4. Profit :)

This happens many times during the program flow.

Um, and I'm investigating possibility of doing the very same on J2ME, and while I admit I'm quite new to the whole Java thing, I can't seem to be able to find anything beyond InputStream (DataInputStream) classes which don't have the basic seeking/skipping to byte/returning position functions I need.

So, what are my chances?

Foi útil?

Solução

You should have something like this

try {
    DataInputStream di = new DataInputStream(is);
    di.marke(9999);
    short key = di.readShort();
    short val = di.readShort();
    di.reset();
    di.skip(val);
    byte[] b= new byte[255];
    di.read(b);
}catch(Exception ex ) {
    ex.printStackTrace();
}

I prefer not to use the marke/reset methods, I think it is better to save the offset from the val location not from the start of the file so you can skip these methods. I think they have som issues on some devices.

One more note, I don't recommend to open a 600 KB file, it will crash the application on many low end devices, you should split this file to multiple files.

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