| parrotcode: Lua Input/Output Library | |
| Contents | Language Implementations | Lua |

lib/luaio.pir - Lua Input/Output Library

The I/O library provides two different styles for file manipulation. The first one uses implicit file descriptors, that is, there are operations to set a default input file and a default output file, and all input/output operations are over those default files. The second style uses explicit file descriptors.
When using implicit file descriptors,
all operations are supplied by table io.
When using explicit file descriptors,
the operation io.open returns a file descriptor and then all operations are supplied as methods by the file descriptor (see languages/lua/lib/luafile.pir).
The table io also provides three predefined file descriptors with their usual meanings from C: io.stdin,
io.stdout,
and io.stderr.
Unless otherwise stated, all I/O functions return nil on failure (plus an error message as a second result) and some value different from nil on success.
See "Lua 5.1 Reference Manual", section 5.7 "Input and Ouput Facilities", http://www.lua.org/manual/5.1/manual.html#5.7.

io.close ([file])file:close().
Without a file,
closes the default output file.io.flush ()file:flush over the default output file.io.input ([file])io.lines ([filename]) for line in io.lines(filename) do ... end
io.lines() (without a file name) is equivalent to io.input():lines(), that is, it iterates over the lines of the default input file. In this case it does not close the file when the loop ends.io.open (filename [, mode])mode. It returns a new file handle, or, in case of errors, nil plus an error message.mode string can be any of the following:mode string may also have a b at the end, which is needed in some systems to open the file in binary mode. This string is exactly what is used in the standard C function fopen.io.output ([file])io.input, but operates over the default output file.io.popen ([prog [, mode]])prog in a separated process and returns a file handle that you can use to read data from this program (if mode is "r", the default) or to write data to this program (if mode is "w").io.read (format1, ...)io.input():read.io.tmpfile ()io.type (obj)obj is a valid file handle. Returns the string "file" if obj is an open file handle, "closed file" if obj is a closed file handle, and nil if obj is not a file handle.io.write (value1, ...)io.output():write.
Francois Perrad.
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