729

How to read all the files in a folder through Java?

Line
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M.J.
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    I agree, point out the class to use so the poster can become familiar with the various method, otherwise the poster doesn't bother to read the API to find out what other methods are available. – camickr Dec 04 '09 at 03:48
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    Did you mean all files in a folder, or all files in a folder and all subfolders? – Jim Garrison Dec 04 '09 at 04:36
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    An up to date link to the API: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/io/File.html – Tom Duckering Apr 27 '14 at 16:10
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    If you are using Java 7 or newer you can use `Files.walkFileTree`, see http://stackoverflow.com/a/23814217/1115554 – micha May 22 '14 at 18:08

32 Answers32

1058
public void listFilesForFolder(final File folder) {
    for (final File fileEntry : folder.listFiles()) {
        if (fileEntry.isDirectory()) {
            listFilesForFolder(fileEntry);
        } else {
            System.out.println(fileEntry.getName());
        }
    }
}

final File folder = new File("/home/you/Desktop");
listFilesForFolder(folder);

Files.walk API is available from Java 8.

try (Stream<Path> paths = Files.walk(Paths.get("/home/you/Desktop"))) {
    paths
        .filter(Files::isRegularFile)
        .forEach(System.out::println);
} 

The example uses try-with-resources pattern recommended in API guide. It ensures that no matter circumstances the stream will be closed.

rich
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    `getName()` will only give the name of the file in its directory, which could be a subdirectory of the original. If you plan to use this information to find the files, you may find the path given by `getPath()` to be more useful. – Tim Parenti Sep 23 '13 at 09:35
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    Can I use this method to find all files of a specific type say pdf or html across my whole system? My concern is efficiency, is it fast enough to be used for systems with thousands of files or is there a better alternative? – Nitin Labhishetty Mar 10 '14 at 15:28
  • @codeln As of Java 8, the performance is very acceptable, you don't notice anything laggy about it. It's fast, efficient, and readable enough to get your job done. – tom_mai78101 Apr 15 '14 at 02:40
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    In Java 8 you can also make use of the `filter` method. Then forEach is not longer needed. See here -> http://stackoverflow.com/a/26215931/1029251 – Julian Pieles Oct 06 '14 at 12:10
  • What is the purpose of declaring the File objects final? – Zeimyth Dec 06 '14 at 23:13
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    Just to indicate it's only initialised once. – rich Dec 07 '14 at 08:54
  • Beautiful recursion. It's like a preorder travelling. Nice. – Joaquin Iurchuk May 20 '15 at 15:18
  • Let's not forget the import here for those who get a NoClassDefFoundError on the File object. import java.io.File; – Nick Constantine Dec 02 '18 at 20:00
  • I would only mention simple detail regarding to Files.walk() throws IOException, so the bottom example should contain the catch clause. – Peter S. Sep 26 '19 at 11:29
195
File folder = new File("/Users/you/folder/");
File[] listOfFiles = folder.listFiles();

for (File file : listOfFiles) {
    if (file.isFile()) {
        System.out.println(file.getName());
    }
}
atripathi
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David Robles
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    I think this will print the directory names, and no filenames – Fortega Dec 04 '09 at 10:17
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    By far easier to understand than accepted answer. +1. – sam1370 Jul 14 '18 at 01:37
  • @sam1370 Because this doesn't read all files in the directory, it only gets the files directly inside the given directory. If the given directory itself contains other directories, their content won't be read – Farid Feb 11 '21 at 07:12
146

In Java 8 you can do this

Files.walk(Paths.get("/path/to/folder"))
     .filter(Files::isRegularFile)
     .forEach(System.out::println);

which will print all files in a folder while excluding all directories. If you need a list, the following will do:

Files.walk(Paths.get("/path/to/folder"))
     .filter(Files::isRegularFile)
     .collect(Collectors.toList())

If you want to return List<File> instead of List<Path> just map it:

List<File> filesInFolder = Files.walk(Paths.get("/path/to/folder"))
                                .filter(Files::isRegularFile)
                                .map(Path::toFile)
                                .collect(Collectors.toList());

You also need to make sure to close the stream! Otherwise you might run into an exception telling you that too many files are open. Read here for more information.

Julian Pieles
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    Getting an error with .map(Path::toFile) Also .forEach(path -> System.out.println(path.toString()); should be .forEach(path -> System.out.println(path.toString())); – XaolingBao Oct 13 '14 at 04:33
  • Thanks for the correction. What error do you get? I execute the exact code in a project of mine and do not get an error. – Julian Pieles Oct 13 '14 at 14:38
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    It says "Invalid method reference, cannot find symbol" "Method toFile" is toFile supposed to be something else? – XaolingBao Oct 13 '14 at 21:18
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    Can u please paste your code in a PasteBin? Are you using `java.nio.file.Path`? I just checked the method toFile() should exist even prior to java 8 -> http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/nio/file/Path.html#toFile() – Julian Pieles Oct 14 '14 at 09:44
  • I had the same problem, but automatic imports imported something else, not the java.nio.file.Path. – Ev0oD Mar 22 '15 at 17:54
  • and to apply a filename filter (like by extension, using String.endsWith()) after that is extremely easy too, thanks! – Aquarius Power Apr 05 '15 at 01:08
  • Looks like your Java compiler is set to 1.7. Bump it up to 1.8 and/or install new version of your IDE. – Rg90 Jun 11 '15 at 07:15
  • @JulianLiebl how do we skip hidden files? `filter(Files::isHidden)` doesn't work. The error says: "Unhandled exception type IOException", but the method already throws IOException. – Nadjib Mami Aug 17 '15 at 22:52
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    @NadjibMami Please have a look here: http://razem.io/blog/posts/year2015/0819_try_catch_lambda Was to compilcated to answer in a comment. So I wrote a quick blog post. – Julian Pieles Aug 19 '15 at 10:29
  • @JulianLiebl Whow, this is cool. Thanks for your effort, it really helps! – Nadjib Mami Aug 19 '15 at 11:04
  • You could write the forEach as `.forEach(System.out::println)`. Also the `.collect(Collectors.toList())` is not needed in your first example. – YingYang Nov 12 '15 at 07:04
  • @YingYang I updated the answer to address your concerns. – Julian Pieles Nov 16 '15 at 11:22
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    If anyone is still looking for the try catch lambda topic the url of my blog has been changed -> https://razem.io/blog/y2015/0819_try_catch_lambda.html – Julian Pieles Dec 02 '15 at 10:17
  • How do you close the stream when your code is like the second example code: List filesInFolder = Files.walk(Paths.get("/path/to/folder")) .filter(Files::isRegularFile) .map(Path::toFile) .collect(Collectors.toList()); – C J Jan 08 '19 at 16:22
33

All of the answers on this topic that make use of the new Java 8 functions are neglecting to close the stream. The example in the accepted answer should be:

try (Stream<Path> filePathStream=Files.walk(Paths.get("/home/you/Desktop"))) {
    filePathStream.forEach(filePath -> {
        if (Files.isRegularFile(filePath)) {
            System.out.println(filePath);
        }
    });
}

From the javadoc of the Files.walk method:

The returned stream encapsulates one or more DirectoryStreams. If timely disposal of file system resources is required, the try-with-resources construct should be used to ensure that the stream's close method is invoked after the stream operations are completed.

Martin
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19

One remark according to get all files in the directory.
The method Files.walk(path) will return all files by walking the file tree rooted at the given started file.

For instance, there is the next file tree:

\---folder
    |   file1.txt
    |   file2.txt
    |
    \---subfolder
            file3.txt
            file4.txt

Using the java.nio.file.Files.walk(Path):

Files.walk(Paths.get("folder"))
        .filter(Files::isRegularFile)
        .forEach(System.out::println);

Gives the following result:

folder\file1.txt
folder\file2.txt
folder\subfolder\file3.txt
folder\subfolder\file4.txt

To get all files only in the current directory use the java.nio.file.Files.list(Path):

Files.list(Paths.get("folder"))
        .filter(Files::isRegularFile)
        .forEach(System.out::println);

Result:

folder\file1.txt
folder\file2.txt
xxxception
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12
import java.io.File;


public class ReadFilesFromFolder {
  public static File folder = new File("C:/Documents and Settings/My Documents/Downloads");
  static String temp = "";

  public static void main(String[] args) {
    // TODO Auto-generated method stub
    System.out.println("Reading files under the folder "+ folder.getAbsolutePath());
    listFilesForFolder(folder);
  }

  public static void listFilesForFolder(final File folder) {

    for (final File fileEntry : folder.listFiles()) {
      if (fileEntry.isDirectory()) {
        // System.out.println("Reading files under the folder "+folder.getAbsolutePath());
        listFilesForFolder(fileEntry);
      } else {
        if (fileEntry.isFile()) {
          temp = fileEntry.getName();
          if ((temp.substring(temp.lastIndexOf('.') + 1, temp.length()).toLowerCase()).equals("txt"))
            System.out.println("File= " + folder.getAbsolutePath()+ "\\" + fileEntry.getName());
        }

      }
    }
  }
}
Geoff Reedy
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muthu krishna
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11
private static final String ROOT_FILE_PATH="/";
File f=new File(ROOT_FILE_PATH);
File[] allSubFiles=f.listFiles();
for (File file : allSubFiles) {
    if(file.isDirectory())
    {
        System.out.println(file.getAbsolutePath()+" is directory");
        //Steps for directory
    }
    else
    {
        System.out.println(file.getAbsolutePath()+" is file");
        //steps for files
    }
}
Sergio
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Sanket Thakkar
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11

In Java 7 and higher you can use listdir

Path dir = ...;
try (DirectoryStream<Path> stream = Files.newDirectoryStream(dir)) {
    for (Path file: stream) {
        System.out.println(file.getFileName());
    }
} catch (IOException | DirectoryIteratorException x) {
    // IOException can never be thrown by the iteration.
    // In this snippet, it can only be thrown by newDirectoryStream.
    System.err.println(x);
}

You can also create a filter that can then be passed into the newDirectoryStream method above

DirectoryStream.Filter<Path> filter = new DirectoryStream.Filter<Path>() {
    public boolean accept(Path file) throws IOException {
        try {
            return (Files.isRegularFile(path));
        } catch (IOException x) {
            // Failed to determine if it's a file.
            System.err.println(x);
            return false;
        }
    }
};

For other filtering examples, [see documentation].(http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/essential/io/dirs.html#glob)

Marcel Bro
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Mark Spangler
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  • I'm confused by the create filter example. What is newDirectoryStream.Filter. Can you show how that is declared? – simgineer Nov 10 '17 at 02:20
  • I think i figured it out. its a copy and paste typo. there is a space between the "new" and the "DirectoryStream.Filter...". If i'm right recommend correcting your example. – simgineer Nov 10 '17 at 02:25
8

Just walk through all Files using Files.walkFileTree (Java 7)

Files.walkFileTree(Paths.get(dir), new SimpleFileVisitor<Path>() {
    @Override
    public FileVisitResult visitFile(Path file, BasicFileAttributes attrs) throws IOException {
        System.out.println("file: " + file);
        return FileVisitResult.CONTINUE;
    }
});
micha
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  • Note, that this code will throw an exception (and **not** report any further files) if for some file or directory the file attributes could not be read, e.g. because of permissions. Easy to reproduce on `C:\`. – Thomas S. Oct 06 '18 at 17:36
5

If you want more options, you can use this function which aims to populate an arraylist of files present in a folder. Options are : recursivility and pattern to match.

public static ArrayList<File> listFilesForFolder(final File folder,
        final boolean recursivity,
        final String patternFileFilter) {

    // Inputs
    boolean filteredFile = false;

    // Ouput
    final ArrayList<File> output = new ArrayList<File> ();

    // Foreach elements
    for (final File fileEntry : folder.listFiles()) {

        // If this element is a directory, do it recursivly
        if (fileEntry.isDirectory()) {
            if (recursivity) {
                output.addAll(listFilesForFolder(fileEntry, recursivity, patternFileFilter));
            }
        }
        else {
            // If there is no pattern, the file is correct
            if (patternFileFilter.length() == 0) {
                filteredFile = true;
            }
            // Otherwise we need to filter by pattern
            else {
                filteredFile = Pattern.matches(patternFileFilter, fileEntry.getName());
            }

            // If the file has a name which match with the pattern, then add it to the list
            if (filteredFile) {
                output.add(fileEntry);
            }
        }
    }

    return output;
}

Best, Adrien

4
File directory = new File("/user/folder");      
File[] myarray;  
myarray=new File[10];
myarray=directory.listFiles();
for (int j = 0; j < myarray.length; j++)
{
       File path=myarray[j];
       FileReader fr = new FileReader(path);
       BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(fr);
       String s = "";
       while (br.ready()) {
          s += br.readLine() + "\n";
       }
}
Drahakar
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    You might want to add an explanation what you are trying to achieve, instead of only showing code. Furthermore, `myarray=new File[10];` is not required, as it will be overwritten by the next line! – Veger Feb 20 '12 at 10:08
3

nice usage of java.io.FileFilter as seen on https://stackoverflow.com/a/286001/146745

File fl = new File(dir);
File[] files = fl.listFiles(new FileFilter() {          
    public boolean accept(File file) {
        return file.isFile();
    }
});
Community
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andrej
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  • http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/io/File.html#listFiles%28%29 public File[] listFiles() Returns an array of abstract pathnames denoting the files in the directory denoted by this abstract pathname. – andrej Oct 12 '15 at 20:00
3
    static File mainFolder = new File("Folder");
    public static void main(String[] args) {

        lf.getFiles(lf.mainFolder);
    }
    public void getFiles(File f) {
        File files[];
        if (f.isFile()) {
            String name=f.getName();

        } else {
            files = f.listFiles();
            for (int i = 0; i < files.length; i++) {
                getFiles(files[i]);
            }
        }
    }
Casey
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3

I think this is good way to read all the files in a folder and sub folder's

private static void addfiles (File input,ArrayList<File> files)
{
    if(input.isDirectory())
    {
        ArrayList <File> path = new ArrayList<File>(Arrays.asList(input.listFiles()));
        for(int i=0 ; i<path.size();++i)
        {
            if(path.get(i).isDirectory())
            {
                addfiles(path.get(i),files);
            }
            if(path.get(i).isFile())
            {
                files.add(path.get(i));
            }
        }
    }
    if(input.isFile())
    {
        files.add(input);
    }
}
Mohammad
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3

Simple example that works with Java 1.7 to recursively list files in directories specified on the command-line:

import java.io.File;

public class List {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        for (String f : args) {
            listDir(f);
        }
    }

    private static void listDir(String dir) {
        File f = new File(dir);
        File[] list = f.listFiles();

        if (list == null) {
            return;
        }

        for (File entry : list) {
            System.out.println(entry.getName());
            if (entry.isDirectory()) {
                listDir(entry.getAbsolutePath());
            }
        }
    }
}
pdp
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3

While I do agree with Rich, Orian and the rest for using:

    final File keysFileFolder = new File(<path>); 
    File[] fileslist = keysFileFolder.listFiles();

    if(fileslist != null)
    {
        //Do your thing here...
    }

for some reason all the examples here uses absolute path (i.e. all the way from root, or, say, drive letter (C:\) for windows..)

I'd like to add that it is possible to use relative path as-well. So, if you're pwd (current directory/folder) is folder1 and you want to parse folder1/subfolder, you simply write (in the code above instead of ):

    final File keysFileFolder = new File("subfolder");
JamesC
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2
package com;


import java.io.File;

/**
 *
 * @author ?Mukesh
 */
public class ListFiles {

     static File mainFolder = new File("D:\\Movies");

     public static void main(String[] args)
     {
         ListFiles lf = new ListFiles();
         lf.getFiles(lf.mainFolder);

         long fileSize = mainFolder.length();
             System.out.println("mainFolder size in bytes is: " + fileSize);
             System.out.println("File size in KB is : " + (double)fileSize/1024);
             System.out.println("File size in MB is :" + (double)fileSize/(1024*1024));
     }
     public void getFiles(File f){
         File files[];
         if(f.isFile())
             System.out.println(f.getAbsolutePath());
         else{
             files = f.listFiles();
             for (int i = 0; i < files.length; i++) {
                 getFiles(files[i]);
             }
         }
     }
}
Victor Stafusa
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Mukesh Jha
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2
void getFiles(){
        String dirPath = "E:/folder_name";
        File dir = new File(dirPath);
        String[] files = dir.list();
        if (files.length == 0) {
            System.out.println("The directory is empty");
        } else {
            for (String aFile : files) {
                System.out.println(aFile);
            }
        }
    }
Vignesh Subramanian
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Subhojit Das
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2

Java 8 Files.walk(..) is good when you are soore it will not throw Avoid Java 8 Files.walk(..) termination cause of ( java.nio.file.AccessDeniedException ) .

Here is a safe solution , not though so elegant as Java 8Files.walk(..) :

int[] count = {0};
try {
    Files.walkFileTree(Paths.get(dir.getPath()), new HashSet<FileVisitOption>(Arrays.asList(FileVisitOption.FOLLOW_LINKS)),
            Integer.MAX_VALUE, new SimpleFileVisitor<Path>() {
                @Override
                public FileVisitResult visitFile(Path file , BasicFileAttributes attrs) throws IOException {
                    System.out.printf("Visiting file %s\n", file);
                    ++count[0];

                    return FileVisitResult.CONTINUE;
                }

                @Override
                public FileVisitResult visitFileFailed(Path file , IOException e) throws IOException {
                    System.err.printf("Visiting failed for %s\n", file);

                    return FileVisitResult.SKIP_SUBTREE;
                }

                @Override
                public FileVisitResult preVisitDirectory(Path dir , BasicFileAttributes attrs) throws IOException {
                     System.out.printf("About to visit directory %s\n", dir);
                    return FileVisitResult.CONTINUE;
                }
            });
} catch (IOException e) {
    // TODO Auto-generated catch block
    e.printStackTrace();
}
GOXR3PLUS
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2

There are many good answers above, here's a different approach: In a maven project, everything you put in the resources folder is copied by default in the target/classes folder. To see what is available at runtime

 ClassLoader contextClassLoader = 
 Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader();
    URL resource = contextClassLoader.getResource("");
    File file = new File(resource.toURI());
    File[] files = file.listFiles();
    for (File f : files) {
        System.out.println(f.getName());
    }

Now to get the files from a specific folder, let's say you have a folder called 'res' in your resources folder, just replace:

URL resource = contextClassLoader.getResource("res");

If you want to have access in your com.companyName package then:

contextClassLoader.getResource("com.companyName");
moldovean
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1

Just to expand on the accepted answer I store the filenames to an ArrayList (instead of just dumping them to System.out.println) I created a helper class "MyFileUtils" so it could be imported by other projects:

class MyFileUtils {
    public static void loadFilesForFolder(final File folder, List<String> fileList){
        for (final File fileEntry : folder.listFiles()) {
            if (fileEntry.isDirectory()) {
                loadFilesForFolder(fileEntry, fileList);
            } else {
                fileList.add( fileEntry.getParent() + File.separator + fileEntry.getName() );
            }
        }
    }
}

I added the full path to the file name. You would use it like this:

import MyFileUtils;

List<String> fileList = new ArrayList<String>();
final File folder = new File("/home/you/Desktop");
MyFileUtils.loadFilesForFolder(folder, fileList);

// Dump file list values
for (String fileName : fileList){
    System.out.println(fileName);
}

The ArrayList is passed by "value", but the value is used to point to the same ArrayList object living in the JVM Heap. In this way, each recursion call adds filenames to the same ArrayList (we are NOT creating a new ArrayList on each recursive call).

Salvador Valencia
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1

You can put the file path to argument and create a list with all the filepaths and not put it the list manually. Then use a for loop and a reader. Example for txt files:

public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException{    
File[] files = new File(args[0].replace("\\", "\\\\")).listFiles(new FilenameFilter() { @Override public boolean accept(File dir, String name) { return name.endsWith(".txt"); } });
    ArrayList<String> filedir = new ArrayList<String>();
    String FILE_TEST = null;
    for (i=0; i<files.length; i++){
            filedir.add(files[i].toString());
            CSV_FILE_TEST=filedir.get(i) 

        try(Reader testreader = Files.newBufferedReader(Paths.get(FILE_TEST));
            ){
              //write your stuff
                 }}}
Aris Mist
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1
package com.commandline.folder;

import java.io.File;
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.nio.file.Path;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
import java.util.stream.Stream;

public class FolderReadingDemo {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        String str = args[0];
        final File folder = new File(str);
//      listFilesForFolder(folder);
        listFilesForFolder(str);
    }

    public static void listFilesForFolder(String str) {
        try (Stream<Path> paths = Files.walk(Paths.get(str))) {
            paths.filter(Files::isRegularFile).forEach(System.out::println);
        } catch (Exception e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
    }

    public static void listFilesForFolder(final File folder) {
        for (final File fileEntry : folder.listFiles()) {
            if (fileEntry.isDirectory()) {
                listFilesForFolder(fileEntry);
            } else {
                System.out.println(fileEntry.getName());
            }
        }
    }

}
0
import java.io.File;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;

public class AvoidNullExp {

public static void main(String[] args) {

    List<File> fileList =new ArrayList<>();
     final File folder = new File("g:/master");
     new AvoidNullExp().listFilesForFolder(folder, fileList);
}

    public void listFilesForFolder(final File folder,List<File> fileList) {
        File[] filesInFolder = folder.listFiles();
        if (filesInFolder != null) {
            for (final File fileEntry : filesInFolder) {
                if (fileEntry.isDirectory()) {
                    System.out.println("DIR : "+fileEntry.getName());
                listFilesForFolder(fileEntry,fileList);
            } else {
                System.out.println("FILE : "+fileEntry.getName());
                fileList.add(fileEntry);
            }
         }
        }
     }


}
0
/**
 * Function to read all mp3 files from sdcard and store the details in an
 * ArrayList
 */


public ArrayList<HashMap<String, String>> getPlayList() 
    {
        ArrayList<HashMap<String, String>> songsList=new ArrayList<>();
        File home = new File(MEDIA_PATH);

        if (home.listFiles(new FileExtensionFilter()).length > 0) {
            for (File file : home.listFiles(new FileExtensionFilter())) {
                HashMap<String, String> song = new HashMap<String, String>();
                song.put(
                        "songTitle",
                        file.getName().substring(0,
                                (file.getName().length() - 4)));
                song.put("songPath", file.getPath());

                // Adding each song to SongList
                songsList.add(song);
            }
        }
        // return songs list array
        return songsList;
    }

    /**
     * Class to filter files which have a .mp3 extension
     * */
    class FileExtensionFilter implements FilenameFilter 
    {
        @Override
        public boolean accept(File dir, String name) {
            return (name.endsWith(".mp3") || name.endsWith(".MP3"));
        }
    }

You can filter any textfiles or any other extension ..just replace it with .MP3

0az
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AndroidGeek
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  • 262
0

list down files from Test folder present inside class path

import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;

public class Hello {

    public static void main(final String[] args) throws IOException {

        System.out.println("List down all the files present on the server directory");
        File file1 = new File("/prog/FileTest/src/Test");
        File[] files = file1.listFiles();
        if (null != files) {
            for (int fileIntList = 0; fileIntList < files.length; fileIntList++) {
                String ss = files[fileIntList].toString();
                if (null != ss && ss.length() > 0) {
                    System.out.println("File: " + (fileIntList + 1) + " :" + ss.substring(ss.lastIndexOf("\\") + 1, ss.length()));
                }
            }
        }


    }


}
shree
  • 1
0

This will Read Specified file extension files in given path(looks sub folders also)

public static Map<String,List<File>> getFileNames(String 
dirName,Map<String,List<File>> filesContainer,final String fileExt){
    String dirPath = dirName;
    List<File>files = new ArrayList<>();
    Map<String,List<File>> completeFiles = filesContainer; 
    if(completeFiles == null) {
        completeFiles = new HashMap<>();
    }
    File file = new File(dirName);

    FileFilter fileFilter = new FileFilter() {
        @Override
        public boolean accept(File file) {
            boolean acceptFile = false;
            if(file.isDirectory()) {
                acceptFile = true;
            }else if (file.getName().toLowerCase().endsWith(fileExt))
              {
                acceptFile = true;
              }
            return acceptFile;
        }
    };
    for(File dirfile : file.listFiles(fileFilter)) {
        if(dirfile.isFile() && 
dirfile.getName().toLowerCase().endsWith(fileExt)) {
            files.add(dirfile);
        }else if(dirfile.isDirectory()) {
            if(!files.isEmpty()) {
                completeFiles.put(dirPath, files);  
            }

getFileNames(dirfile.getAbsolutePath(),completeFiles,fileExt);
        }
    }
    if(!files.isEmpty()) {
        completeFiles.put(dirPath, files);  
    }
    return completeFiles;
}
Katta Nagarjuna
  • 1,510
  • 2
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  • 12
0

This will work fine:

private static void addfiles(File inputValVal, ArrayList<File> files)
{
  if(inputVal.isDirectory())
  {
    ArrayList <File> path = new ArrayList<File>(Arrays.asList(inputVal.listFiles()));

    for(int i=0; i<path.size(); ++i)
    {
        if(path.get(i).isDirectory())
        {
            addfiles(path.get(i),files);
        }
        if(path.get(i).isFile())
        {
            files.add(path.get(i));
        }
     }

    /*  Optional : if you need to have the counts of all the folders and files you can create 2 global arrays 
        and store the results of the above 2 if loops inside these arrays */
   }

   if(inputVal.isFile())
   {
     files.add(inputVal);
   }

}
Ashraf.Shk786
  • 570
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0

Given a baseDir, lists out all the files and directories below it, written iteratively.

    public static List<File> listLocalFilesAndDirsAllLevels(File baseDir) {

    List<File>  collectedFilesAndDirs   = new ArrayList<>();
    Deque<File> remainingDirs           = new ArrayDeque<>();

    if(baseDir.exists()) {
        remainingDirs.add(baseDir);

        while(!remainingDirs.isEmpty()) {
            File dir = remainingDirs.removeLast();
            List<File> filesInDir = Arrays.asList(dir.listFiles());
            for(File fileOrDir : filesInDir)  {
                collectedFilesAndDirs.add(fileOrDir);
                if(fileOrDir.isDirectory()) {
                    remainingDirs.add(fileOrDir);
                }
            }
        }
    }

    return collectedFilesAndDirs;
}
WillDev10
  • 21
  • 3
0

We can use org.apache.commons.io.FileUtils, use listFiles() mehtod to read all the files in a given folder.

eg:

FileUtils.listFiles(directory, {"array of extension"}, true)

This read all the files in the given directory with given extensions, we can pass multiple extensions in the array and read recursively within the folder(true parameter).

Vishal Vijayan
  • 288
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-1

to prevent Nullpointerexceptions on the listFiles() function and recursivly get all files from subdirectories too..

 public void listFilesForFolder(final File folder,List<File> fileList) {
    File[] filesInFolder = folder.listFiles();
    if (filesInFolder != null) {
        for (final File fileEntry : filesInFolder) {
            if (fileEntry.isDirectory()) {
            listFilesForFolder(fileEntry,fileList);
        } else {
            fileList.add(fileEntry);
        }
     }
    }
 }

 List<File> fileList = new List<File>();
 final File folder = new File("/home/you/Desktop");
 listFilesForFolder(folder);
muenchnair
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-3
import java.io.File;


public class Test {

public void test1() {
    System.out.println("TEST 1");
}

public static void main(String[] args) throws SecurityException, ClassNotFoundException{

    File actual = new File("src");
    File list[] = actual.listFiles();
    for(int i=0; i<list.length; i++){
        String substring = list[i].getName().substring(0, list[i].getName().indexOf("."));
        if(list[i].isFile() && list[i].getName().contains(".java")){
                if(Class.forName(substring).getMethods()[0].getName().contains("main")){
                    System.out.println("CLASS NAME "+Class.forName(substring).getName());
                }

         }
    }

}
}

Just pass your folder it will tell you main class about the method.

Bo Persson
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Abhilash Ranjan
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