A Java application can accept any number of arguments from the command line. This allows the user to specify configuration information when the application is launched.
The user enters command-line arguments when invoking the application and specifies them after the name of the class to be run. For example, suppose a Java application called Sort
sorts lines in a file. To sort the data in a file named friends.txt
, a user would enter:
java Sort friends.txt
When an application is launched, the runtime system passes the command-line arguments to the application's main method via an array of String
s. In the previous example, the command-line arguments passed to the Sort
application in an array that contains a single String
: "friends.txt"
.
The
example displays each of its command-line arguments on a line by itself:Echo
public class Echo { public static void main (String[] args) { for (String s: args) { System.out.println(s); } } }
The following example shows how a user might run Echo
. User input is in italics.
java Echo Drink Hot Java Drink Hot Java
Note that the application displays each word Drink
, Hot
, and Java
on a line by itself. This is because the space character separates command-line arguments. To have Drink
, Hot
, and Java
interpreted as a single argument, the user would join them by enclosing them within quotation marks.
java Echo "Drink Hot Java" Drink Hot Java
If an application needs to support a numeric command-line argument, it must convert a String
argument that represents a number, such as "34", to a numeric value. Here is a code snippet that converts a command-line argument to an int
:
int firstArg; if (args.length > 0) { try { firstArg = Integer.parseInt(args[0]); } catch (NumberFormatException e) { System.err.println("Argument" + " must be an integer"); System.exit(1); } }
parseInt
throws a NumberFormatException
if the format of args[0]
isn't valid. All of the Number
classes Integer
, Float
, Double
, and so on have parseXXX
methods that convert a String
representing a number to an object of their type.