The difference between sys.stdout.write and print?
print
is just a thin wrapper that formats the inputs (modifiable, but by default with a space between args and newline at the end) and calls the write function of a given object. By default this object is sys.stdout
, but you can pass a file using the "chevron" form. For example:
print >> open('file.txt', 'w'), 'Hello', 'World', 2+3
See: https://docs.python.org/2/reference/simple_stmts.html?highlight=print#the-print-statement
In Python 3.x, print
becomes a function, but it is still possible to pass something other than sys.stdout
thanks to the file
argument.
print('Hello', 'World', 2+3, file=open('file.txt', 'w'))
See https://docs.python.org/3/library/functions.html#print
In Python 2.6+, print
is still a statement, but it can be used as a function with
from __future__ import print_function
Update: Bakuriu commented to point out that there is a small difference between the print function and the print statement (and more generally between a function and a statement).
In case of an error when evaluating arguments:
print "something", 1/0, "other" #prints only something because 1/0 raise an Exception
print("something", 1/0, "other") #doesn't print anything. The function is not called
print
first converts the object to a string (if it is not already a string). It will also put a space before the object if it is not the start of a line and a newline character at the end.
When using stdout
, you need to convert the object to a string yourself (by calling "str", for example) and there is no newline character.
So
print 99
is equivalent to:
import sys
sys.stdout.write(str(99) + '\n')
Here's some sample code based on the book Learning Python by Mark Lutz that addresses your question:
import sys
temp = sys.stdout # store original stdout object for later
sys.stdout = open('log.txt', 'w') # redirect all prints to this log file
print("testing123") # nothing appears at interactive prompt
print("another line") # again nothing appears. it's written to log file instead
sys.stdout.close() # ordinary file object
sys.stdout = temp # restore print commands to interactive prompt
print("back to normal") # this shows up in the interactive prompt
Opening log.txt in a text editor will reveal the following:
testing123
another line
My question is whether or not there are situations in which
sys.stdout.write()
is preferable to
After finishing developing a script the other day, I uploaded it to a unix server. All my debug messages used print
statements, and these do not appear on a server log.
This is a case where you may need sys.stdout.write
instead.