void println();
(3) (since C++26) (4) (since C++26)Format args according to the format string fmt with appended '\n' (which means that each output ends with a new-line), and print the result to a stream.
1)Equivalent to
std::println(stdout, fmt, std::forward<Args>(args)...).
2)Equivalent to performing the following operations:
3) Equivalent to std::println(stdout).
If std::formatter<Ti, char> does not meet the BasicFormatter requirements for any Ti
in Args
(as required by std::make_format_args), the behavior is undefined.
Each replacement field has the following format:
{
arg-id (optional) }
(1) {
arg-id (optional) :
format-spec }
(2)
1) replacement field without a format specification
2) replacement field with a format specification
arg-id - specifies the index of the argument inargs
whose value is to be used for formatting; if it is omitted, the arguments are used in order.
The arg-id s in a format string must all be present or all be omitted. Mixing manual and automatic indexing is an error.
format-spec - the format specification defined by the std::formatter specialization for the corresponding argument. Cannot start with }.formatter
specializations.Although overloads (3,4) are added in C++26, all known implementations make them available in C++23 mode.
#include <print> int main() { // Each call to std::println ends with new-line std::println("Please"); // overload (1) std::println("enter"); // (1) std::print("pass"); std::print("word"); std::println(); // (3); valid since C++26; same effect as std::print("\n"); }
Output:
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