WriteLn
Write variable to a text file or standard output and append newline
Declaration
Source position: system.fpd line 72
procedure WriteLn(V1: Type1);
procedure WriteLn(V1: Type1; V2: type2);
procedure WriteLn(V1: Type1; V2: Type2; V3: Type3);
procedure WriteLn(var F: Text; V1: Type1);
procedure WriteLn(var F: Text; V1: Type1; V2: type2);
procedure WriteLn(var F: Text; V1: Type1; V2: Type2; V3: Type3);
Description
WriteLn does the same as Write for text files, and emits a Carriage Return - LineFeed character pair after that. If the parameter F is omitted, standard output is assumed. If no variables are specified, a newline character sequence is emitted, resulting in a new line in the file F.
Remark
The newline character is determined by the slinebreak constant. !!!
Remark
When writing string variables, no codepage conversions are done. The string is copied as-is to the file descriptor. In particular, for console output, it is the programmer's responsibility to make sure that the codepage of the string matches the codepage of the console. !!!
More details can be found in the Write description.
Errors
If an error occurs, a run-time error is generated. This behavior can be controlled with the {$I} switch.
See also
Name | Description |
---|---|
Blockwrite | Write data from memory to an untyped file |
Read | Read from a text file into variable |
Readln | Read from a text file into variable and goto next line |
slinebreak | Alias for LineEnding |
Write | Write variable to a text file or standard output |
Example
Program Example75;
{ Program to demonstrate the Write(ln) function. }
Var
F : File of Longint;
L : Longint;
begin
Write ('This is on the first line ! '); { No CR/LF pair! }
Writeln ('And this too...');
Writeln ('But this is already on the second line...');
Assign (f,'test.tmp');
Rewrite (f);
For L:=1 to 10 do
write (F,L); { No writeln allowed here ! }
Close (f);
end.