last day (16 days later) » 

13:41
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A: Prevent removing duplicates from ZipOutPutStream

sorifiendAssuming you are creating a new zip file rather than editing an existing zip archive, then you can iterate through your files list and if any duplicates are found you can note the new name in a HashMap or similar like so duplicateNameMap.put(oldNameString, newNameString);, then inside your zip me...

Thank you i will accept your solution but could you please cover the case which i added in my question recentlly ?
so basically the name should be incremented by 1 but not the first one
You can do this using substrings and a method to count the duplicates. I have edited my answer showing how it could work. Note that the HashMap now needs to have a String as the Key HashMap<String, String> duplicateNameMap = new HashMap<>();
@Catalina I already edited my question with the answer, and it does exactly what you want, including the file extension. If you want to include the "_" then just edit the fixDuplicateName method to have return "_"+count;. Please delete your other question.
Based on your other question, ff you are working directly with an array of strings then just replace files.get(i).getOriginalName() with files.get(i) and my answer will work as intended
it does not work at all
13:41
What does not work? Do you get any errors? Does it not give duplicate names? Note that I was unable to test the code because your files list is not a regular java.io.file, but uses some other library/package and I don't know what zip library you are using, however, the logic remains the same, you can easily alter it to suit?
Hello are you here
Now is not a good time for me to chat. Leave your comments here and explain what is not working. I will be back in 8h.
If the errors are not related to the original question the you can make a new question.
13:56
I only wanted to tell you that duplication checks was not a good idea, is there any possiblility to check the zip its self and change the name of the new file if the file exists in zip? similary to windows if you copy a file with same name then it changes the name automatically
 
2 hours later…
16:03
i accepted your answer, but could you please say me how to make a test for the zipoutputstream
 
4 hours later…
20:24
Yes you can do that, but you need to close/open the zip stream before every file to check for duplicates (You cant read from and write to the same file at the same time).
If you want to do all of this inside your while loop files.forEach(file -> {...}, then you can just move all the code there, and you will no longer need to store it in a hash map you can just fix the name as you go but you still need to track how many files have the same name so that they don't conflict, or you could use recursive method to check for duplicate names, and that the new name is also not a duplicate.
 
2 hours later…
22:26
Could u please update ur answer with this apprauch too?
Have a go at doing it yourself first, and if you get stuck then you can post a new question. Just remember to open/close your streams correctly, and to check for duplicate names, and make sure that the new name is also not a duplicate. You will be using simple substring logic and a method to check if the new name is not also a duplicate.
22:44
The problem is that i am really new with programming 😭
And i have to give this task to the university tomorrow
22:57
If I give you the answer then it might meet your deadline but doesn't help with learning and will hurt you in the long run. I will point you in the right direction though, to get the names of files in a zip you can use: java2novice.com/java-collections-and-util/zip/file-list and if your file that you are about to write is a duplicate then you can rename the file using the substrings idea I showed in my answer.
Remember that you need to close your output stream before opening the zip to check for duplicates, then you need to close it again after checking for duplicates and reopen the output stream to write your file to the zip.
Note that the way shown in my answer will be far more efficient unless you have thousands of duplicates. Why do you think it is not a good idea to check duplicates before writing to file?
Because of nested for loop and because it could cause side effict
And i have a question, what did you mean about java.io.file ? And that my files are not java io ?
The nested for loop is very very efficient, it will check each match exactly once and only loops through the files list once.
And i have a question, what did you mean about java.io.file ? And that my files are not java io ?
For the java.io.file you can just ignore my comment, I was just unable to test the code because you use file.getOriginalName() in your code, but I don't know what that is, because it is not a method of the normal Java File API, the normal method is file.getName(): docs.oracle.com/en/java/javase/15/docs/api/java.base/java/io/… so you must be using some other library or file type.
As long as file.getOriginalName() works for you then it does not change the answer, everything still works.
Thanks for ur time. I have really last question. Is it possible to check the results of zioOutputStream?
with unit test
23:35
Yes you can, see here: stackoverflow.com/questions/26399962/… or if you want to test it before the file is written then you need to wrap it all in a method that checks all the inputs (The file bytes, the name etc) and returns a result

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