What is the difference between calling Stream.Write and using a StreamWriter?
- by John Nelson
What is the difference between instantiating a Stream object, such as MemoryStream and calling the memoryStream.Write() method to write to the stream, and instantiating a StreamWriter object with the stream and calling streamWriter.Write()?
Consider the following scenario:
You have a method that takes a Stream, writes a value, and returns it. The stream is read from later on, so the position must be reset. There are two possible ways of doing it (both seem to work).
// Instantiate a MemoryStream somewhere
// - Passed to the following two methods
MemoryStream memoryStream = new MemoryStream();
// Not using a StreamWriter
private static Stream WriteToStream(Stream stream, string value)
{
stream.Write(Encoding.Default.GetBytes(value), 0, value.Length);
stream.Flush();
stream.Position = 0;
return stream;
}
// Using a StreamWriter
private static Stream WriteToStreamWithWriter(Stream stream, string value)
{
StreamWriter sw = new StreamWriter(stream);
sw.Write(value, 0, value.Length);
sw.Flush();
stream.Position = 0;
return stream;
}
This is partially a scope problem, as I don't want to close the stream after writing to it since it will be read from later. I also certainly don't want to dispose it either, because that will close my stream. The difference seems to be that not using a StreamWriter introduces a direct dependency on Encoding.Default, but I'm not sure that's a very big deal. What's the difference, if any?