IntBuffer compact() method in Java


The buffer can be compacted using the compact() method in the class java.nio.IntBuffer. This method does not require a parameter and it returns the new compacted IntBuffer with the same content as the original buffer. If the buffer is read-only, then the ReadOnlyBufferException is thrown.

A program that demonstrates this is given as follows −

Example

 Live Demo

import java.nio.*;
import java.util.*;
public class Demo {
   public static void main(String[] args) {
      int n = 5;
      try {
         IntBuffer buffer = IntBuffer.allocate(n);
         buffer.put(3);
         buffer.put(7);
         buffer.put(5);
         System.out.println("The Original IntBuffer is: " + Arrays.toString(buffer.array()));
         System.out.println("The position is: " + buffer.position());
         System.out.println("The limit is: " + buffer.limit());
         IntBuffer bufferCompact = buffer.compact();
         System.out.println("
The Compacted IntBuffer is: " + Arrays.toString(bufferCompact.array()));          System.out.println("The position is: " + bufferCompact.position());          System.out.println("The limit is: " + bufferCompact.limit());       } catch (IllegalArgumentException e) {          System.out.println("Error!!! IllegalArgumentException");       } catch (ReadOnlyBufferException e) {          System.out.println("Error!!! ReadOnlyBufferException");       }    } }

The output of the above program is as follows −

Output

The Original IntBuffer is: [3, 7, 5, 0, 0]
The position is: 3
The limit is: 5
The Compacted IntBuffer is: [0, 0, 5, 0, 0]
The position is: 2
The limit is: 5

Samual Sam
Samual Sam

Learning faster. Every day.

Updated on: 30-Jul-2019

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