In Proc::Async§
See primary documentation in context for method print
method print(Proc::Async: Str() , : = )
Write the text data in $str
to the standard input stream of the external program, encoding it as UTF-8.
Returns a Promise
that will be kept once the data has fully landed in the input buffer of the external program.
The Proc::Async
object must be created for writing (with Proc::Async.new(:w, $path, @args)
). Otherwise an X::Proc::Async::OpenForWriting
exception will the thrown.
start
must have been called before calling method print, otherwise an X::Proc::Async::MustBeStarted
exception is thrown.
In IO::Socket::Async§
See primary documentation in context for method print
method print(IO::Socket::Async: Str --> Promise)
Attempt to send $str
on the IO::Socket::Async
that will have been obtained indirectly via connect
or listen
, returning a Promise
that will be kept with the number of bytes sent or broken if there was an error sending.
In Independent routines§
See primary documentation in context for sub print
multi print(** --> True)multi print(Junction --> True)
Prints the given text on standard output (the $*OUT
filehandle), coercing non-Str
objects to Str
by calling .Str
method. Junction
arguments autothread and the order of printed strings is not guaranteed.
print "Hi there!\n"; # OUTPUT: «Hi there!»print "Hi there!"; # OUTPUT: «Hi there!»print [1, 2, 3]; # OUTPUT: «1 2 3»print "Hello" | "Goodbye"; # OUTPUT: «HelloGoodbye»
To print text and include the trailing newline, use put
.
In Mu§
See primary documentation in context for method print
multi method print(--> Bool)
Prints value to $*OUT
after stringification using .Str
method without adding a newline at end.
"abc\n".print; # OUTPUT: «abc»
In role IO::Socket§
See primary documentation in context for method print
method print(IO::Socket: Str(Cool) )
Writes the supplied string to the socket, thus sending it to other end of the connection. The binary version is method write.
Fails if the socket is not connected.
In IO::Handle§
See primary documentation in context for method print
multi method print(** --> True)multi method print(Junction --> True)
Writes the given @text
to the handle, coercing any non-Str
objects to Str
by calling .Str
method on them. Junction
arguments autothread and the order of printed strings is not guaranteed. See write to write bytes.
Attempting to call this method when the handle is in binary mode will result in X::IO::BinaryMode
exception being thrown.
my = 'path/to/file'.IO.open: :w;.print: 'some text';.close;