What does System.in.read actually return?
Asked Answered
G

3

5

What does :

System.in.read()

return ? The documentation says :

Returns: the next byte of data, or -1 if the end of the stream is reached.

But for example if I enter : 10 I get back 49 . Why is that ?

Gabel answered 7/3, 2013 at 14:15 Comment(0)
P
13

49 is the ASCII value of the char 1. It is the value of the first byte.

The stream of bytes that is produced when you enter 10Enter on your console or terminal contains the three bytes {49,48,10} (on my Mac, may end with 10,12 or 12 instead of 10, depending on your System).

So the output of the simple snippet

int b = System.in.read();
while (b != -1) {
    System.out.println(b);
    b = System.in.read();
}

after entering a 10 and hitting enter, is (on my machine)

49
48
10
Prototype answered 7/3, 2013 at 14:18 Comment(2)
Because 10 is two bytes. A byte representing the character 1, followed by a byte representing the character 0.Kellen
@Gabel The thing to realize is that when you enter "10", you're not entering the number 10, but rather text which happens to be "10" but could have been "foo" or even "☃ is melting!". What System.in sees are the bytes of this text stream. For ascii and extended ascii (so, not my little snowman up there), check out ascii-code.comWhitsun
M
5

System.in.read() reads just one byte.

49 is the Unicode point value for 1.

Try to print:

System.out.println((char)49);

This will help you to understand it more.

Miracle answered 7/3, 2013 at 14:18 Comment(0)
I
3

When you enter 10, it is not read as an integer but as a String or, more precisely here, an array of bytes.

49 is the ASCII code for the character 1.

Indelicacy answered 7/3, 2013 at 14:18 Comment(0)

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