io_lib
Module
io_lib
Module Summary
I/O library functions.
Description
This module contains functions for converting to and from strings (lists of characters). They are used for implementing the functions in the io module. There is no guarantee that the character lists returned from some of the functions are flat, they can be deep lists. Function lists:flatten/1 can be used for flattening deep lists.
Data Types
chars() = [char() | chars()]continuation()A continuation as returned by fread/3.
depth() = -1 | integer() >= 0fread_error() =
atom |
based |
character |
float |
format |
input |
integer |
string |
unsignedfread_item() = string() | atom() | integer() | float()latin1_string() = [unicode:latin1_char()]format_spec() =
#{control_char := char(),
args := [any()],
width := none | integer(),
adjust := left | right,
precision := none | integer(),
pad_char := char(),
encoding := unicode | latin1,
strings := boolean()}Where:
-
control_charis the type of control sequence:$P,$w, and so on. -
argsis a list of the arguments used by the control sequence, or an empty list if the control sequence does not take any arguments. -
widthis the field width. -
adjustis the adjustment. -
precisionis the precision of the printed argument. -
pad_charis the padding character. -
encodingis set totrueif translation modifiertis present. -
stringsis set tofalseif modifierlis present.
Exports
chars() Types
For details, see scan_format/2.
Types
Returns true if Term is a flat list of characters in the Unicode range, otherwise false.
Types
Returns true if Term is a, possibly deep, list of characters in the Unicode range, otherwise false.
Types
Returns true if Term is a, possibly deep, list of characters in the ISO Latin-1 range, otherwise false.
chars() chars() Types
Returns a character list that represents Data formatted in accordance with Format. For a detailed description of the available formatting options, see io:fwrite/1,2,3. If the format string or argument list contains an error, a fault is generated.
If and only if the Unicode translation modifier is used in the format string (that is, ~ts or ~tc), the resulting list can contain characters beyond the ISO Latin-1 character range (that is, numbers > 255). If so, the result is still an ordinary Erlang string(), and can well be used in any context where Unicode data is allowed.
Types
Tries to read String in accordance with the control sequences in Format. For a detailed description of the available formatting options, see io:fread/3. It is assumed that String contains whole lines.
The function returns:
{ok, InputList, LeftOverChars}-
The string was read.
InputListis the list of successfully matched and read items, andLeftOverCharsare the input characters not used. {more, RestFormat, Nchars, InputStack}-
The string was read, but more input is needed to complete the original format string.
RestFormatis the remaining format string,Ncharsis the number of characters scanned, andInputStackis the reversed list of inputs matched up to that point. {error, What}-
The read operation failed and parameter
Whatgives a hint about the error.
Example:
3> io_lib:fread("~f~f~f", "15.6 17.3e-6 24.5").
{ok,[15.6,1.73e-5,24.5],[]}
Types
This is the re-entrant formatted reader. The continuation of the first call to the functions must be []. For a complete description of how the re-entrant input scheme works, see Armstrong, Virding, Williams: 'Concurrent Programming in Erlang', Chapter 13.
The function returns:
{done, Result, LeftOverChars}-
The input is complete. The result is one of the following:
{ok, InputList}-
The string was read.
InputListis the list of successfully matched and read items, andLeftOverCharsare the remaining characters. eof-
End of file was encountered.
LeftOverCharsare the input characters not used. {error, What}-
An error occurred and parameter
Whatgives a hint about the error.
{more, Continuation}-
More data is required to build a term.
Continuationmust be passed tofread/3when more data becomes available.
Types
Returns the indentation if String has been printed, starting at StartIndent.
Types
Returns true if Term is a flat list of characters in the ISO Latin-1 range, otherwise false.
Returns a character list that represents a new line character.
chars() chars() Types
Returns a list of characters that represents Term, but breaks representations longer than one line into many lines and indents each line sensibly. Also tries to detect and output lists of printable characters as strings.
-
Columnis the starting column; defaults to 1. -
LineLengthis the maximum line length; defaults to 80. -
Depthis the maximum print depth; defaults to -1, which means no limitation.
Types
Returns true if Term is a flat list of printable ISO Latin-1 characters, otherwise false.
Types
Returns true if Term is a flat list of printable characters, otherwise false.
What is a printable character in this case is determined by startup flag +pc to the Erlang VM; see io:printable_range/0 and erl(1).
Types
Returns true if Term is a flat list of printable Unicode characters, otherwise false.
Types
Returns a list corresponding to the specified format string, where control sequences have been replaced with corresponding tuples. This list can be passed to:
-
build_text/1to have the same effect asformat(Format, Args) -
unscan_format/1to get the corresponding pair ofFormatandArgs(with every*and corresponding argument expanded to numeric values)
A typical use of this function is to replace unbounded-size control sequences like ~w and ~p with the depth-limited variants ~W and ~P before formatting to text in, for example, a logger.
Types
For details, see scan_format/2.
chars() chars() chars() Types
Returns a character list that represents Term. Argument Depth controls the depth of the structures written. When the specified depth is reached, everything below this level is replaced by "...". Depth defaults to -1, which means no limitation.
Example:
1> lists:flatten(io_lib:write({1,[2],[3],[4,5],6,7,8,9})).
"{1,[2],[3],[4,5],6,7,8,9}"
2> lists:flatten(io_lib:write({1,[2],[3],[4,5],6,7,8,9}, 5)).
"{1,[2],[3],[...],...}"
chars() Types
Returns the list of characters needed to print atom Atom.
latin1_string() Types
Returns the list of characters needed to print atom Atom. Non-Latin-1 characters are escaped.
chars() Types
Returns the list of characters needed to print a character constant in the Unicode character set.
latin1_string() Types
Returns the list of characters needed to print a character constant in the Unicode character set. Non-Latin-1 characters are escaped.
latin1_string() Types
Returns the list of characters needed to print a character constant in the ISO Latin-1 character set.
latin1_string() Types
Returns the list of characters needed to print Latin1String as a string.
chars() Types
Returns the list of characters needed to print String as a string.
latin1_string() Types
Returns the list of characters needed to print String as a string. Non-Latin-1 characters are escaped.
© 2010–2017 Ericsson AB
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.