I would like to make you think about a tiny problem using the method printStackTrace(PrintWriter s). I need to use it in append mode.
The following example is explaining what I mean:
try {
} catch (Exception e) {
try {
e.printStackTrace(new PrintWriter(new FileWriter("mylog.txt", true)));
} catch (IOException ioe) {
System.out.println("I can't open the file mylog.txt");
}
}
Note that
new FileWriter("mylog.txt", true);
is the way I open the file (and create it the first time because it doesn't exist) in append mode.
The result is that in the file there is only the last exception and not a series of exceptions. One time it occurred that the method opened the file in which it didn't write anything. How can I solve this problem?
Thank you.
Adding to what krzyk mentioned
Per OutputStreamWriter.close() : Closes the stream, flushing it first. Once the stream has been closed, further write() or flush() invocations will cause an IOException to be thrown. Closing a previously closed stream has no effect.
As mentioned, if you do not call close and this try{}catch is getting fired frequently, you are not flushing content to file.
It should written like
try {
} catch (Exception e) {
try {
FileWriter fw = new FileWriter("mylog.txt", true)
e.printStackTrace(new PrintWriter(fw));
fw.close();
} catch (IOException ioe) {
System.out.println("I can't open the file mylog.txt");
}
}
A better approach will be
FileWriter fw = new FileWriter("mylog.txt", true);
PrintWriter pw = new PrintWriter(fw);
try {
} catch (Exception e) {
try {
e.printStackTrace(pw);
} catch (IOException ioe) {
System.out.println("I can't open the file mylog.txt");
}
}finally {
pw.close();
fw.close();
}