I have a very strange problem. The following code gives different results when compiled as compared to running in ghci,
main = do
putStr "Please enter your name: "
name <- getLine
putStr ("Hello, " ++ name ++ ", how are you?")
When run it in ghci it does as one would expect,
Please enter your name: dglmoore
Hello, dglmoore, how are you?
However, when I compile the code to an executable it requires that I provide the input before any output is generated so I end up with this,
dglmoore
Please enter your name: Hello, dglmoore, how are you?
I've seen a similar problem before, but I cannot seem to find it again.
I am using ghc version 7.4.1 from the Haskell Platform version 2012.2.0.0.
Anyone have any idea why they give different results and how I can get both versions to do the "correct" thing?
It's a buffering issue. Usually IO is line buffered (i.e. the output doesn't actually show up on the screen until you print a new line or exceed the buffer size) unless you explicitly flush the buffer. In ghci it isn't, so the issue doesn't show up.
You can use hFlush stdout to flush stdout, causing the output to be printed to the screen, before you call getLine.
Alternatively you can use hSetBuffering NoBuffering to disable buffering altogether, removing the need for hFlush. That could have a negative impact on IO performance though.
Related
For some reason, Haskell on my machine does never return from any getLine call. For instance, I tried to run the following code straight from Learn You a Haskell for Great Good:
main = do
putStrLn "Hello, what's your name?"
name <- getLine
putStrLn ("Hey " ++ name ++ ", you rock!")
When I run it, the first line is printed, and I see my input when I type a name, however when I press Enter the program just blocks there and never prints the final line.
How should I fix this?
edit: I am running it from the Sublime IDE, maybe that has something to do with it
After doing a quick search on how Sublime runs programs, I found a youtube video (edit: and this SO post) which says that Sublime's "run program" functionality can only show output and isn't capable of reading input.
So it looks like you'll have to run your program from the command line or from within GHCi using :main. The latter might be the most convenient as Sublime actually supports a GHCi tab, so you can still do everything from within Sublime.
This seems to be a limitation in Sublime's Build command (assuming that this is what you're using).
Sublime executes the script using runhaskell, but apparently, it doesn't capture STDIN (which makes kind of sense - build results are usually read-only and not an interactive session).
Workaround: run your script from the command line with
runhaskell script.hs
and everything works as expected
Comming from Windows, I have recently installed linux distribution named Peppermint and Haskell-Platform via bash (ghc 7.10) but there must be something wrong with ghci stdin in ghci because :
interact $ take 0
throws an error but
interact $ take 1
does not.
Furthermore, if I use backspace, arrows or any other control button when writing into stdin, it enters the char symbol. For example backspace enters ^? into ghci instead of deleting the last char typed...
...#... ~ $ ghci
GHCi, version 7.10.3: http://www.haskell.org/ghc/ :? for help
Prelude> interact $ take 0
Prelude>
<stdin>: hGetChar: illegal operation (handle is closed)
...#... ~ $ ghci
GHCi, version 7.10.3: http://www.haskell.org/ghc/ :? for help
Prelude> readLn :: IO String
euoe^?^?^[[1;5C^[[D^[[B -- here I tried to delete 'euoe'
Regarding the control code literals, this is because you've managed to escape all of the line editors (readline, Haskeline) that would usually interpret your key presses.
I don't know the particulars, but invoking GHCi is something like starting a subshell with bash --noediting. This allows GHCi to receive raw key presses without interference from the readline library. This is done because Haskeline—which GHCi uses in place of readline—can be configured with things like tab completion for available functions more easily (you knew GHCi provided tab completion, right?).
Calling getLine from GHCi then effectively drops through a trap door and dodges Haskeline completely by going straight to stdin. There is, after all, only one stdin. You're now typing directly into an unbuffered terminal.
Getting back to your first concern, there being only one stdin is also why GHCi immediately keels over after printing the Prelude> prompt. interact (which uses hGetContents behind the scenes) claims that it will address all of the input that will ever come through the handle (stdin) as one big lazy String. Effectively there can be no remaining input on the handle that interact hasn't already claimed to deal with, so the handle is immediately put into a “semi-closed” state. It's not closed (there could still be more input that will be read as part of that lazy String interact gets!) but it is closed to any newcomers, otherwise input would get duplicated (interact and new readers of the handle such as getLine would get the same line!).
Back to GHCi, after having used interact, stdout is still fine so the prompt gets printed as usual, then GHCi leans on Haskeline to return a line for processing. Haskeline (as a line editor) calls a blocking getChar (iirc) to either add a character to the line or perform some line editing command and dies because it's addressing a semi-closed handle. Thus a weaker creature does fall and the great wheel of life rolls on.
I just wrote my first Haskell program, but there is an error that I cannot understand. I think it is right because I just wrote it like the example from a book. Could anyone help me please?
main = do
putStrLn "Hello, what's your name?"
name <- getLine
putStrLn ("Hey" ++ name ++ ", nice to meet you!")
The error message is:
parse error on input 'putStrLn'
It is strange.
Though it's impossible to tell from your posted code because SO converts tabs to spaces at least some of the time, the problem is likely that you input a literal tab character before putStrLn instead of four spaces as you did for the other two lines in your do block, or vice versa.
All of the statements in a do block must start with the exact same whitespace, and not just appear to line up visually. If you're using a text editor that can display literal tabs in a special way, set it up to do so; it will save you some headaches.
This question already has answers here:
IO happens out of order when using getLine and putStr
(3 answers)
Closed 8 years ago.
I'm encountering strange behaviour with IO, within compiled Haskell code. Here's what's going on:
-- MyScript.hs
main = do
putStr "Enter your name: "
a <- getLine
putStrLn (a ++ " - that's a nice name!")
I run this in GHCi by calling main and it works as one would expect, first printing Enter your name: and then doing whatever it's to do afterwards. However, when I compile it with GHC (With and without --make), it first prompts for a line, and then prints everything at once, like this:
$ ./MyScript
Jimmy Johnson
Enter your name: Jimmy Johnson - That's a nice name!
To clarify, I want it to occur in the following sequence:
$ ./MyFixedScript
Enter your name: Jimmy Johnson
Jimmy Johnson - That's a nice name!
Could someone explain why this happens as it is, and how to sequence the IO the way that I would expect it to.
Note also that I've tried changing the first line of the do statement to _ <- putStr "Enter your name: ", but that still doesn't work.
The IO actions are happening in the correct order, the problem lies in how input and output pipes work. The string "Enter your name: " is written to the output buffer by putStr before the getLine, but the buffer hasn't necessarily been flushed. Adding hFlush stdout after the putStr will flush the buffer.
import System.IO
-- MyScript.hs
main = do
putStr "Enter your name: "
hFlush stdout
a <- getLine
putStrLn (a ++ " - that's a nice name!")
I have the exact same problem today, and it appears that it worked well when I was using putStrLn but stopped when I changed it to putStr. As other people said, it's not related to Haskell or GHC but how IO are flushed. According to the System.IO documentation there are 3 buffering mode :
line-buffering: the entire output buffer is flushed whenever a newline is output, the buffer overflows, a System.IO.hFlush is issued, or the handle is closed.
block-buffering: the entire buffer is written out whenever it overflows, a System.IO.hFlush is issued, or the handle is closed.
no-buffering: output is written immediately, and never stored in the buffer.
The default buffering mode is said to besystem dependent, but it seems that normal program are in line-buffering mode, whereas GHCI is in no-buffering mode. This explain because using putStrLn or putStr will flush or not.
To solve your problem, you can use hFlush stdout to flush explictitey (see Cirdec answer) or change the buffering mode once by doing hSetBuffering stdout NoBuffering. Obvioulsly the NoBuffering mode is not optimal but is probably enough for small toy program.
I've recently started to learn Haskell. I have this code
module Main
where
import IO
main = do
hSetBuffering stdin LineBuffering
putStrLn "Please enter your name: "
name <- getLine
putStrLn ("Hello, " ++ name ++ ", how are you?")
I'm using the GHC compiler together with the notepad++ editor. The problem is the interaction goes like this:
Process started >>>
Vlad
Please enter your name:
Hello, Vlad, how are you?
<<< Process finished.
As you can see, output is only written after I input something. This was a bit unexpected, as I was sure the program would first ask for my name, then I'd get to enter it and then it would say hello. Well, that's exactly what happens if I run the exe manually, yet not if I run it with notepad++ and use its console wrapper...
How can I make notepad++ display the output when it should, and not all of it just before the program terminates? Is this even possible?
Try setting stdout to LineBuffering! Also, loading your program in ghci instead runnign the compiled version doesn't seem to need any buffering at all...
By the way, I didn't know about the console in NPP - thanks for pointing me to it!
I'm not familiar with notepad++, but a quick and hacky method would probably be to do
hFlush stdout
after each putStrLn. You could even make the following method:
nppPutStrLn s = putStrLn s >> hFlush stdout