Macro anstream::print

source ·
macro_rules! print {
    ($($arg:tt)*) => { ... };
}
Expand description

Prints to stdout.

Equivalent to the println! macro except that a newline is not printed at the end of the message.

Note that stdout is frequently line-buffered by default so it may be necessary to use std::io::Write::flush() to ensure the output is emitted immediately.

NOTE: The print! macro will lock the standard output on each call. If you call print! within a hot loop, this behavior may be the bottleneck of the loop. To avoid this, lock stdout with AutoStream::lock:

use std::io::Write as _;

let mut lock = anstream::stdout().lock();
write!(lock, "hello world").unwrap();

Use print! only for the primary output of your program. Use eprint! instead to print error and progress messages.

NOTE: Not all print! calls will be captured in tests like std::print!

  • Capturing will automatically be activated in test binaries
  • Otherwise, only when the test feature is enabled

§Panics

Panics if writing to stdout fails for any reason except broken pipe.

Writing to non-blocking stdout can cause an error, which will lead this macro to panic.

§Examples

use std::io::Write as _;
use anstream::print;
use anstream::stdout;

print!("this ");
print!("will ");
print!("be ");
print!("on ");
print!("the ");
print!("same ");
print!("line ");

stdout().flush().unwrap();

print!("this string has a newline, why not choose println! instead?\n");

stdout().flush().unwrap();