| [Overview][Constants][Types][Classes][Procedures and functions][Variables][Index] | 
Write variable to a text file or standard output and append newline
Source position: system.fpd line 71
procedure WriteLn(  | 
V1: Type1  | 
);  | 
V1: Type1;  | 
V2: type2  | 
);  | 
V1: Type1;  | 
V2: Type2;  | 
V3: Type3  | 
);  | 
var F: Text;  | 
V1: Type1  | 
);  | 
var F: Text;  | 
V1: Type1;  | 
V2: type2  | 
);  | 
var F: Text;  | 
V1: Type1;  | 
V2: Type2;  | 
V3: Type3  | 
);  | 
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.
If an error occurs, a run-time error is generated. This behavior can be controlled with the {$I} switch.
  | 
Write variable to a text file or standard output  | 
|
  | 
Read from a text file into variable  | 
|
  | 
Read from a text file into variable and goto next line  | 
|
  | 
Write data from memory to an untyped file  | 
|
  | 
Alias for LineEnding  | 
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.