macro_rules! println { () => { ... }; ($($arg:tt)*) => { ... }; }
Expand description
Prints to the standard output, with a newline.
On all platforms, the newline is the LINE FEED character (\n
/U+000A
) alone
(no additional CARRIAGE RETURN (\r
/U+000D
)).
Use the format!
syntax to write data to the standard output.
See std::fmt
for more information.
Use println!
only for the primary output of your program. Use
eprintln!
instead to print error and progress messages.
Panics
Panics if writing to io::stdout
fails.
Examples
use async_std::println;
println!().await; // prints just a newline
println!("hello there!").await;
println!("format {} arguments", "some").await;