The
position
property of a FileStream object
determines where data is read or written on the next read or write
method.
Before a read or write operation, set the
position
property
to any valid position in the file.
For example, the following code writes the string
"hello"
(in
UTF encoding) at position 8 in the file:
var myFile = air.File.documentsDirectory;
myFile = myFile.resolvePath("AIR Test/test.txt");
var myFileStream = new air.FileStream();
myFileStream.open(myFile, air.FileMode.UPDATE);
myFileStream.position = 8;
myFileStream.writeUTFBytes("hello");
When you first open a FileStream object, the
position
property
is set to 0.
Before a read operation, the value of
position
must
be at least 0 and less than the number of bytes in the file (which
are existing positions in the file).
The value of the
position
property is modified
only in the following conditions:
-
When you explicitly set the
position
property.
-
When you call a read method.
-
When you call a write method.
When you call a read or write method of a FileStream object,
the
position
property is immediately incremented
by the number of bytes that you read or write. Depending on the
read method you use, the
position
property is either incremented
by the number of bytes you specify to read or by the number of bytes
available. When you call a read or write method subsequently, it
reads or writes starting at the new position.
var myFile = air.File.documentsDirectory;
myFile = myFile.resolvePath("AIR Test/test.txt");
var myFileStream = new air.FileStream();
myFileStream.open(myFile, air.FileMode.UPDATE);
myFileStream.position = 4000;
alert(myFileStream.position); // 4000
myFileStream.writeBytes(myByteArray, 0, 200);
alert(myFileStream.position); // 4200
There is, however, one exception: for a FileStream opened in
append mode, the
position
property is not changed
after a call to a write method. (In append mode, data is always
written to the end of the file, independent of the value of the
position
property.)
For a file opened for asynchronous operations, the write operation
does not complete before the next line of code is executed. However,
you can call multiple asynchronous methods sequentially, and the
runtime executes them in order:
var myFile = air.File.documentsDirectory;
myFile = myFile.resolvePath("AIR Test/test.txt");
var myFileStream = new air.FileStream();
myFileStream.openAsync(myFile, air.FileMode.WRITE);
myFileStream.writeUTFBytes("hello");
myFileStream.writeUTFBytes("world");
myFileStream.addEventListener(air.Event.CLOSE, closeHandler);
myFileStream.close();
air.trace("started.");
closeHandler(event)
{
air.trace("finished.");
}
The trace output for this code is the following:
started.
finished.
You
can
specify the
position
value immediately
after you call a read or write method (or at any time), and the
next read or write operation will take place starting at that position.
For example, note that the following code sets the
position
property
right after a call to the
writeBytes()
operation,
and the
position
is set to that value (300) even
after the write operation completes:
var myFile = air.File.documentsDirectory.resolvePath("AIR Test/test.txt");
var myFileStream = new air.FileStream();
myFileStream.openAsync(myFile, air.FileMode.UPDATE);
myFileStream.position = 4000;
air.trace(myFileStream.position); // 4000
myFileStream.writeBytes(myByteArray, 0, 200);
myFileStream.position = 300;
air.trace(myFileStream.position); // 300