Description Usage Arguments Details See Also
Write text lines to a connection.
1 | writeLines(text, con = stdout(), sep = "\n", useBytes = FALSE)
|
text |
A character vector |
con |
A connection object or a character string. |
sep |
character string. A string to be written to the connection after each line of text. |
useBytes |
logical. See ‘Details’. |
If the con
is a character string, the function calls
file
to obtain a file connection which is opened for
the duration of the function call.
If the connection is open it is written from its current position.
If it is not open, it is opened for the duration of the call in
"wt"
mode and then closed again.
Normally writeLines
is used with a text-mode connection, and the
default separator is converted to the normal separator for that
platform (LF on Unix/Linux, CRLF on Windows). For more control, open
a binary connection and specify the precise value you want written to
the file in sep
. For even more control, use
writeChar
on a binary connection.
useBytes
is for expert use. Normally (when false) character
strings with marked encodings are converted to the current encoding
before being passed to the connection (which might do further
re-encoding). useBytes = TRUE
suppresses the re-encoding of
marked strings so they are passed byte-by-byte to the connection:
this can be useful when strings have already been re-encoded by
e.g. iconv
. (It is invoked automatically for strings
with marked encoding "bytes"
.)
connections
, writeChar
, writeBin
,
readLines
, cat
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