I am studying Rust and upon working on the Guessing Game I found this odd behaviour:
use std::io;
fn main() {
println!("Welcome!");
let mut input = String::new();
print!("Please type something:"); // this line is not printed UNTIL the Enter key is pressed
io::stdin()
.read_line(&mut input)
.expect("Failed to read input!");
println!("Bye!");
}
The following happens:
Welcome! is printed
Please type something: is NOT printed
If you type some text and press Enter, you will see your text followed by Please type something:Bye!
How can I print a message to the standard output and have the input being printed on the same line?
For instance:
Please enter your name:
(user types Chuck Norris)
Please enter your name: Chuck Norris
From the docs for std::print:
Note that stdout is frequently line-buffered by default so it may be necessary to use io::stdout().flush() to ensure the output is emitted immediately.
So looks like you need to call io::stdout().flush().
Related
I am studying Rust and upon working on the Guessing Game I found this odd behaviour:
use std::io;
fn main() {
println!("Welcome!");
let mut input = String::new();
print!("Please type something:"); // this line is not printed UNTIL the Enter key is pressed
io::stdin()
.read_line(&mut input)
.expect("Failed to read input!");
println!("Bye!");
}
The following happens:
Welcome! is printed
Please type something: is NOT printed
If you type some text and press Enter, you will see your text followed by Please type something:Bye!
How can I print a message to the standard output and have the input being printed on the same line?
For instance:
Please enter your name:
(user types Chuck Norris)
Please enter your name: Chuck Norris
From the docs for std::print:
Note that stdout is frequently line-buffered by default so it may be necessary to use io::stdout().flush() to ensure the output is emitted immediately.
So looks like you need to call io::stdout().flush().
I am studying Rust and upon working on the Guessing Game I found this odd behaviour:
use std::io;
fn main() {
println!("Welcome!");
let mut input = String::new();
print!("Please type something:"); // this line is not printed UNTIL the Enter key is pressed
io::stdin()
.read_line(&mut input)
.expect("Failed to read input!");
println!("Bye!");
}
The following happens:
Welcome! is printed
Please type something: is NOT printed
If you type some text and press Enter, you will see your text followed by Please type something:Bye!
How can I print a message to the standard output and have the input being printed on the same line?
For instance:
Please enter your name:
(user types Chuck Norris)
Please enter your name: Chuck Norris
From the docs for std::print:
Note that stdout is frequently line-buffered by default so it may be necessary to use io::stdout().flush() to ensure the output is emitted immediately.
So looks like you need to call io::stdout().flush().
I am studying Rust and upon working on the Guessing Game I found this odd behaviour:
use std::io;
fn main() {
println!("Welcome!");
let mut input = String::new();
print!("Please type something:"); // this line is not printed UNTIL the Enter key is pressed
io::stdin()
.read_line(&mut input)
.expect("Failed to read input!");
println!("Bye!");
}
The following happens:
Welcome! is printed
Please type something: is NOT printed
If you type some text and press Enter, you will see your text followed by Please type something:Bye!
How can I print a message to the standard output and have the input being printed on the same line?
For instance:
Please enter your name:
(user types Chuck Norris)
Please enter your name: Chuck Norris
From the docs for std::print:
Note that stdout is frequently line-buffered by default so it may be necessary to use io::stdout().flush() to ensure the output is emitted immediately.
So looks like you need to call io::stdout().flush().
This question already has an answer here:
print! macro not executed until pressing Enter
(1 answer)
Closed 1 year ago.
I'm trying to print on the same line because I want the input question to be inline like 'enter something: input goes here'. Similiar to python's input("input: ").
If I try to do it, the print! text doesnt display, it displays after I've pressed enter.
I've tried flushing the buffer.
print!("enter some thing: ");
let mut input = String::new();
std::io::stdin().read_line(&mut input).expect("Failed to read line");
println!("{}", input);
Above code output will be:
hello
enter some thing: hello
Why does that happen?
The print! adds the text to be printed to a buffer, but doesn't flush that buffer to output it to the terminal right away, to improve performance when you are printing lots of things.
You said you tried flushing the buffer (as suggested in this question), but perhaps you didn't flush it at the right place? You need to flush it before reading from stdin. This works for me:
use std::io::Write;
print!("enter some thing: ");
std::io::stdout().flush().unwrap();
let mut input = String::new();
std::io::stdin().read_line(&mut input).expect("Failed to read line");
print!("{}", input);
Example run:
$ ./x
enter some thing: pie
pie
The macro println! in Rust always leaves a newline character at the end of each output. For example
println!("Enter the number : ");
io::stdin().read_line(&mut num);
gives the output
Enter the number :
56
I don't want the user's input 56 to be on a new line. How do I do this?
It's trickier than it would seem at first glance. Other answers mention the print! macro but it's not quite that simple. You'll likely need to flush stdout, as it may not be written to the screen immediately. flush() is a trait method that is part of std::io::Write so that needs to be in scope for it to work (this is a pretty easy early mistake).
use std::io;
use std::io::Write; // <--- bring flush() into scope
fn main() {
println!("I'm picking a number between 1 and 100...");
print!("Enter a number: ");
io::stdout().flush().unwrap();
let mut val = String::new();
io::stdin().read_line(&mut val)
.expect("Error getting guess");
println!("You entered {}", val);
}
You can use the print! macro instead.
print!("Enter the number : ");
io::stdin().read_line(&mut num);
Beware:
Note that stdout is frequently line-buffered by default so it may be necessary to use io::stdout().flush() to ensure the output is emitted immediately.
Don't use the print/ln!-macros. Use write/ln!-macros.
It is more verbose, but print/ln! are problematic for using in command-line apps where their output might get piped or redirected to other apps, which is characteristic for Unix environments.
There is used always the same (only once requested and "buffered") stdout-device, but the stdout-device of the system is changed for piping/redirecting. So for each output to stdout you have to request the current stdout-device (std::io::stdout()). This can be done with write/ln!-macros.
So to say print/ln! is broken and there is an open issue since years.