I am using the following to get the URL of this particular file, but it returns null. Does anyone have any suggestions as to the problem or an alternate way to do this?
URL url = ExchangeInterceptor.class.getReso开发者_StackOverflow社区urce("GeoIP.dat");
For those who use Intellij Idea: check for Settings > Build, Execution, Deployment > Compiler > Resource patterns.
The setting contains all extensions that should be interpreted as resources. If an extension does not comply to any pattern here, class.getResource will return null for resources using this extension.
The path is relative to the classpath root and if you don't give an absolute path, it is looking in the same package as the class you're using (in this case ExchangeInterceptor
). To find something in the root use /GeoIP.dat
.
Use the getResource
method of the class' ClassLoader
URL url = ExchangeInterceptor.class.getClassLoader().getResource("GeoIP.dat");
I solved this problem by pointing out the resource root
on IDEA.
Initially the directory was so and the icon was a plain folder icon
Before
Right click
on a directory (or just the project name) -> Mark directory As
-> Resource Root
.
After
Recompile & rejoice :P
I've faced with the similar problem. From Java SE API for getResource(String name) :
If the name begins with a '/' ('\u002f'), then the absolute name of the resource is the portion of the name following the '/'.
So I've added '/'
before my directory : MyClass.class.getResource("/dir_name/")
.
In your case try to add '/'
before your file name:
URL url = ExchangeInterceptor.class.getResource("/GeoIP.dat");
If you're using Gradle and IntelliJ, and changing Resource patterns
didn't work, and your resource roots are set correctly...you can try this:
Settings > Build, Execution, Delpoyment > Build Tools > Gradle > Runner > Delegate IDE build/run actions to gradle
. (IntelliJ 2017.3.3)
Source: https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-176738#comment=27-2518612
Just in case someone still has problems to understand that:
.getResource() grants you access to the local bin folder. That means, your resources need to be located in YourProject/bin/package/. The root folder is YourProject/bin/ and can be accssed by adding the prefix / to the String argument, like iirekm said.
No, that is the right way afaik. Make sure the resource is on your classpath. This is often the cause of these types of problems.
While using IntelliJ, I generated the project as a JavaFX app and then added maven framework support to it. Turns out, I then placed my resource in src/main/resources
and had to add ./
behind every resource name that while using them in the code.
Also as stated in a previous answer, only loading the resource by a classLoader worked.
So for me, the final URL loading was done using:
URL url = getClass().getClassLoader().getResource(String.format(".%ssample.fxml", File.separatorChar));
The File.separatorChar
returns /
on *nix and \
on windows.
This is my example solution. Work for me.
The project structure:
• Source Packages
• game
• Game.java
• game.images
• tas_right.png
In the game class:
URL path=this.getClass().getClassLoader().getResource("images/tas_right.png")
Where do you have put this GeoIP.dat? In the same package as ExchangeInterceptor, or in the "root" package. If in the same package, your code is OK, if in the root - add '/' prefix.
Maybe you're using M2Eclipse? If configured incorrectly, it also may result in such problems. Another cause of such problems may be: misconfigured classloaders, misconfigured OSGi, ...
The file needs to be in the classpath, e.g.: -
bin/my/package/GeoIP.dat
The / prefix seems to be a lie. The following would work.
URL url = ExchangeInterceptor.class.getResource("my/package/GeoIP.dat");
I suspect the issue is that you do not have the file in the classpath.
I was able to fix it by adding "./" to the beginning of the file like this:
getClass().getClassLoader().getResource("./file.txt")
Instead of having the resource file in the same folder as your source files, create a resources
folder parallel to the java
source folder.
Before:
- src
- main
- java
- MyClass.java
- file.bin
- file.txt
- java
- main
After:
- src
- main
- java
- MyClass.java
- resources
- file.bin
- file.txt
- java
- main
I use Intellij version Ultimate 2019.3
Go to
Settings -> Compiler -> Resource patterns.
Click ok. Rerun Application/Server.
In my case, i included the jks in the project!
say you have :
titleLabel.setIcon(new ImageIcon(getClass().getResource("/uz/assets/icon.png")));//wrong !!
rightclick on the folder(mine is assets
) an set Mark Directory as Resources
if you dont see that rightclick on project name and pickup Open module settings
Rightclick on resorces folder(assets
in my case)
and select 'Resources'
Now go back to the above java instruction and remove path BUT leave /
like:
titleLabel.setIcon(new ImageIcon(getClass().getResource("/icon.png")));// correct one
A warning to all using the Path
or Paths
classes in Java: if you are on the god forsaken operating system known as Windows you will not be able to use Path.of
or Paths.get
as this will put backslashes in your path which Java will attempt to load and promptly fail. Instead use this:
Path.of(paths...).toString().replace(File.separator, "/")
You should always use this as it is OS independent. If anyone has a better or built in way please comment, I was unable to find one.
Strangely effective in my case (IJ 2022.1.4) was: close project (for example, quit IDEA), delete the /.idea folder completely (egg, rm -rd .idea
), open project. When it re-imports the project, it runs as expected. Note: you loose about everything not included in gradle configs.
I realized using new File(location) works just fine in #dev and can also access files outside the /project folder
In case of eclipse.
Just a hint. Your code could be correct, but your jre configuration not. I ran into the the same error, nothing helped, until i checked the eclipse settings.
Make sure, that you set your execution environment right.
Preferences -> Java -> Installed JREs -> use "jdk..." as compatible JRE
First, you need to make sure you are accessing the right file on the right path. You can verify that by getClass().getResource("GeoIP.dat").getAbsolutePath().
Secondly, the path specifier is case-sensitive, so make sure your file is not named "geoIP.dat" or "GeoIP.DAT".
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