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Groovy 2 Cookbook

You're reading from   Groovy 2 Cookbook Java and Groovy go together like ham and eggs, and this book is a great opportunity to learn how to exploit Groovy 2 to the full. Packed with recipes, both intermediate and advanced, it's a great way to speed up and modernize your programming.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849519366
Length 394 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Luciano Fiandesio Luciano Fiandesio
Author Profile Icon Luciano Fiandesio
Luciano Fiandesio
Andrey Adamovich Andrey Adamovich
Author Profile Icon Andrey Adamovich
Andrey Adamovich
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Groovy 2 Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Getting Started with Groovy 2. Using Groovy Ecosystem FREE CHAPTER 3. Using Groovy Language Features 4. Working with Files in Groovy 5. Working with XML in Groovy 6. Working with JSON in Groovy 7. Working with Databases in Groovy 8. Working with Web Services in Groovy 9. Metaprogramming and DSLs in Groovy 10. Concurrent Programming in Groovy Index

Reading data from a ZIP file


Reading from a ZIP file with Groovy is a simple affair. This recipe shows you how to read the contents of a ZIP file without having to extract the content first.

Getting ready

Groovy doesn't have any GDK class to deal with ZIP files so we have to approach the problem by using one of the JDK alternatives. Nevertheless, we can "groovify" the code quite a lot in order to achieve simplicity and elegance.

How to do it...

Let's assume we have a ZIP file named archive.zip containing a bunch of text files.

  1. The following code iterates through the ZIP entries and prints the name of the file as well as the content:

    def dumpZipContent(File zipFIle) {
      def zf = new java.util.zip.ZipFile(zipFIle)
      zf.entries().findAll { !it.directory }.each {
        println it.name
        println zf.getInputStream(it).text
      }
    }
    dumpZipContent(new File('archive.zip'))
  2. The output may look as follows:

    a/b.txt
    This is text file!
    c/d.txt
    This is another text file!
    

How it works...

The dumpZipContent function...

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