You need to do something like this:
PrintStream out = new PrintStream(new FileOutputStream("output.txt"));
System.setOut(out);
The second statement is the key. It changes the value of the supposedly "final" System.out
attribute to be the supplied PrintStream value.
There are analogous methods (setIn
and setErr
) for changing the standard input and error streams; refer to the java.lang.System
javadocs for details.
A more general version of the above is this:
PrintStream out = new PrintStream(
new FileOutputStream("output.txt", append), autoFlush);
System.setOut(out);
If append
is true
, the stream will append to an existing file instead of truncating it. If autoflush
is true
, the output buffer will be flushed whenever a byte array is written, one of the println
methods is called, or a
is written.
I'd just like to add that it is usually a better idea to use a logging subsystem like Log4j, Logback or the standard Java java.util.logging subsystem. These offer fine-grained logging control via runtime configuration files, support for rolling log files, feeds to system logging, and so on.
Alternatively, if you are not "logging" then consider the following:
With typical shells, you can redirecting standard output (or standard error) to a file on the command line; e.g.
$ java MyApp > output.txt
For more information, refer to a shell tutorial or manual entry.
You could change your application to use an out
stream passed as a method parameter or via a singleton or dependency injection rather than writing to System.out
.
Changing System.out
may cause nasty surprises for other code in your JVM that is not expecting this to happen. (A properly designed Java library will avoid depending on System.out
and System.err
, but you could be unlucky.)
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