Following system colour scheme Selected dark colour scheme Selected light colour scheme

Python Enhancement Proposals

PEP 214 – Extended Print Statement

Author:
Barry Warsaw <barry at python.org>
Status:
Final
Type:
Standards Track
Created:
24-Jul-2000
Python-Version:
2.0
Post-History:
16-Aug-2000

Table of Contents

Introduction

This PEP describes a syntax to extend the standard ‘print’ statement so that it can be used to print to any file-like object, instead of the default sys.stdout. This PEP tracks the status and ownership of this feature. It contains a description of the feature and outlines changes necessary to support the feature. This PEP summarizes discussions held in mailing list forums, and provides URLs for further information, where appropriate. The CVS revision history of this file contains the definitive historical record.

Proposal

This proposal introduces a syntax extension to the print statement, which allows the programmer to optionally specify the output file target. An example usage is as follows:

print >> mylogfile, 'this message goes to my log file'

Formally, the syntax of the extended print statement is:

print_stmt: ... | '>>' test [ (',' test)+ [','] ] )

where the ellipsis indicates the original print_stmt syntax unchanged. In the extended form, the expression just after >> must yield an object with a write() method (i.e. a file-like object). Thus these two statements are equivalent:

print 'hello world'
print >> sys.stdout, 'hello world'

As are these two statements:

print
print >> sys.stdout

These two statements are syntax errors:

print ,
print >> sys.stdout,

Justification

‘print’ is a Python keyword and introduces the print statement as described in section 6.6 of the language reference manual [1]. The print statement has a number of features:

  • it auto-converts the items to strings
  • it inserts spaces between items automatically
  • it appends a newline unless the statement ends in a comma

The formatting that the print statement performs is limited; for more control over the output, a combination of sys.stdout.write(), and string interpolation can be used.

The print statement by definition outputs to sys.stdout. More specifically, sys.stdout must be a file-like object with a write() method, but it can be rebound to redirect output to files other than specifically standard output. A typical idiom is:

save_stdout = sys.stdout
try:
    sys.stdout = mylogfile
    print 'this message goes to my log file'
finally:
    sys.stdout = save_stdout

The problem with this approach is that the binding is global, and so affects every statement inside the try: clause. For example, if we added a call to a function that actually did want to print to stdout, this output too would get redirected to the logfile.

This approach is also very inconvenient for interleaving prints to various output streams, and complicates coding in the face of legitimate try/except or try/finally clauses.

Reference Implementation

A reference implementation, in the form of a patch against the Python 2.0 source tree, is available on SourceForge’s patch manager [2]. This approach adds two new opcodes, PRINT_ITEM_TO and PRINT_NEWLINE_TO, which simply pop the file like object off the top of the stack and use it instead of sys.stdout as the output stream.

(This reference implementation has been adopted in Python 2.0.)

Alternative Approaches

An alternative to this syntax change has been proposed (originally by Moshe Zadka) which requires no syntax changes to Python. A writeln() function could be provided (possibly as a builtin), that would act much like extended print, with a few additional features:

def writeln(*args, **kws):
    import sys
    file = sys.stdout
    sep = ' '
    end = '\n'
    if kws.has_key('file'):
        file = kws['file']
        del kws['file']
    if kws.has_key('nl'):
        if not kws['nl']:
            end = ' '
        del kws['nl']
    if kws.has_key('sep'):
        sep = kws['sep']
        del kws['sep']
    if kws:
        raise TypeError('unexpected keywords')
    file.write(sep.join(map(str, args)) + end)

writeln() takes a three optional keyword arguments. In the context of this proposal, the relevant argument is ‘file’ which can be set to a file-like object with a write() method. Thus:

print >> mylogfile, 'this goes to my log file'

would be written as:

writeln('this goes to my log file', file=mylogfile)

writeln() has the additional functionality that the keyword argument ‘nl’ is a flag specifying whether to append a newline or not, and an argument ‘sep’ which specifies the separator to output in between each item.

More Justification by the BDFL

The proposal has been challenged on the newsgroup. One series of challenges doesn’t like ‘>>’ and would rather see some other symbol.

  • Challenge: Why not one of these?
    print in stderr items,....
    print + stderr items,.......
    print[stderr] items,.....
    print to stderr items,.....
    

    Response: If we want to use a special symbol (print <symbol> expression), the Python parser requires that it is not already a symbol that can start an expression – otherwise it can’t decide which form of print statement is used. (The Python parser is a simple LL(1) or recursive descent parser.)

    This means that we can’t use the “keyword only in context trick” that was used for “import as”, because an identifier can start an expression. This rules out +stderr, [sterr], and to stderr. It leaves us with binary operator symbols and other miscellaneous symbols that are currently illegal here, such as ‘import’.

    If I had to choose between ‘print in file’ and ‘print >> file’ I would definitely choose ‘>>’. In part because ‘in’ would be a new invention (I know of no other language that uses it, while ‘>>’ is used in sh, awk, Perl, and C++), in part because ‘>>’, being non-alphabetic, stands out more so is more likely to catch the reader’s attention.

  • Challenge: Why does there have to be a comma between the file and the rest?

    Response: The comma separating the file from the following expression is necessary! Of course you want the file to be an arbitrary expression, not just a single word. (You definitely want to be able to write print >>sys.stderr.) Without the expression the parser wouldn’t be able to distinguish where that expression ends and where the next one begins, e.g.

    print >>i +1, 2
    print >>a [1], 2
    print >>f (1), 2
    
  • Challenge: Why do you need a syntax extension? Why not writeln(file, item, …)?

    Response: First of all, this is lacking a feature of the print statement: the trailing comma to print which suppresses the final newline. Note that ‘print a,’ still isn’t equivalent to ‘sys.stdout.write(a)’ – print inserts a space between items, and takes arbitrary objects as arguments; write() doesn’t insert a space and requires a single string.

    When you are considering an extension for the print statement, it’s not right to add a function or method that adds a new feature in one dimension (where the output goes) but takes away in another dimension (spaces between items, and the choice of trailing newline or not). We could add a whole slew of methods or functions to deal with the various cases but that seems to add more confusion than necessary, and would only make sense if we were to deprecate the print statement altogether.

    I feel that this debate is really about whether print should have been a function or method rather than a statement. If you are in the function camp, of course adding special syntax to the existing print statement is not something you like. I suspect the objection to the new syntax comes mostly from people who already think that the print statement was a bad idea. Am I right?

    About 10 years ago I debated with myself whether to make the most basic from of output a function or a statement; basically I was trying to decide between “print(item, …)” and “print item, …”. I chose to make it a statement because printing needs to be taught very early on, and is very important in the programs that beginners write. Also, because ABC, which lead the way for so many things, made it a statement. In a move that’s typical for the interaction between ABC and Python, I changed the name from WRITE to print, and reversed the convention for adding newlines from requiring extra syntax to add a newline (ABC used trailing slashes to indicate newlines) to requiring extra syntax (the trailing comma) to suppress the newline. I kept the feature that items are separated by whitespace on output.

    Full example: in ABC,

    WRITE 1
    WRITE 2/
    

    has the same effect as:

    print 1,
    print 2
    

    has in Python, outputting in effect “1 2n”.

    I’m not 100% sure that the choice for a statement was right (ABC had the compelling reason that it used statement syntax for anything with side effects, but Python doesn’t have this convention), but I’m also not convinced that it’s wrong. I certainly like the economy of the print statement. (I’m a rabid Lisp-hater – syntax-wise, not semantics-wise! – and excessive parentheses in syntax annoy me. Don’t ever write return(i) or if(x==y): in your Python code! :-)

    Anyway, I’m not ready to deprecate the print statement, and over the years we’ve had many requests for an option to specify the file.

  • Challenge: Why not > instead of >>?

    Response: To DOS and Unix users, >> suggests “append”, while > suggests “overwrite”; the semantics are closest to append. Also, for C++ programmers, >> and << are I/O operators.

  • Challenge: But in C++, >> is input and << is output!

    Response: doesn’t matter; C++ clearly took it from Unix and reversed the arrows. The important thing is that for output, the arrow points to the file.

  • Challenge: Surely you can design a println() function can do all what print>>file can do; why isn’t that enough?

    Response: I think of this in terms of a simple programming exercise. Suppose a beginning programmer is asked to write a function that prints the tables of multiplication. A reasonable solution is:

    def tables(n):
        for j in range(1, n+1):
            for i in range(1, n+1):
                print i, 'x', j, '=', i*j
            print
    

    Now suppose the second exercise is to add printing to a different file. With the new syntax, the programmer only needs to learn one new thing: print >> file, and the answer can be like this:

    def tables(n, file=sys.stdout):
        for j in range(1, n+1):
            for i in range(1, n+1):
                print >> file, i, 'x', j, '=', i*j
            print >> file
    

    With only a print statement and a println() function, the programmer first has to learn about println(), transforming the original program to using println():

    def tables(n):
        for j in range(1, n+1):
            for i in range(1, n+1):
                println(i, 'x', j, '=', i*j)
            println()
    

    and then about the file keyword argument:

    def tables(n, file=sys.stdout):
        for j in range(1, n+1):
            for i in range(1, n+1):
                println(i, 'x', j, '=', i*j, file=sys.stdout)
            println(file=sys.stdout)
    

    Thus, the transformation path is longer:

    (1) print
    (2) print >> file
    

    vs.

    (1) print
    (2) println()
    (3) println(file=...)
    

    Note: defaulting the file argument to sys.stdout at compile time is wrong, because it doesn’t work right when the caller assigns to sys.stdout and then uses tables() without specifying the file. This is a common problem (and would occur with a println() function too). The standard solution so far has been:

    def tables(n, file=None):
        if file is None:
            file = sys.stdout
        for j in range(1, n+1):
            for i in range(1, n+1):
                print >> file, i, 'x', j, '=', i*j
            print >> file
    

    I’ve added a feature to the implementation (which I would also recommend to println()) whereby if the file argument is None, sys.stdout is automatically used. Thus,

    print >> None, foo bar
    

    (or, of course, print >> x where x is a variable whose value is None) means the same as

    print foo, bar
    

    and the tables() function can be written as follows:

    def tables(n, file=None):
        for j in range(1, n+1):
            for i in range(1, n+1):
                print >> file, i, 'x', j, '=', i*j
            print >> file
    

References


Source: https://github.com/python/peps/blob/main/pep-0214.txt

Last modified: 2022-10-05 16:48:43 GMT