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NAME

       io - Standard I/O server interface functions.

DESCRIPTION

       This  module  provides an interface to standard Erlang I/O servers. The output functions all return ok if
       they are successful, or exit if they are not.

       All functions in this module have an optional parameter IoDevice. If included, it must be the  pid  of  a
       process that handles the I/O protocols. Normally, it is the IoDevice returned by file:open/2.

       For a description of the I/O protocols, see section The Erlang I/O Protocol in the User's Guide.

   Warning:
       As from Erlang/OTP R13A, data supplied to function put_chars/2 is to be in the unicode:chardata() format.
       This means that programs supplying binaries to this function must convert them to UTF-8 before trying  to
       output the data on an I/O device.

       If  an  I/O  device  is  set in binary mode, functions get_chars/2,3 and get_line/1,2 can return binaries
       instead of lists. The binaries are, as from Erlang/OTP R13A, encoded in UTF-8.

       To work with binaries in ISO Latin-1 encoding, use the file module instead.

       For conversion functions between character encodings, see the unicode module.

DATA TYPES

       device() = atom() | pid()

              An I/O device, either standard_io, standard_error, a  registered  name,  or  a  pid  handling  I/O
              protocols (returned from file:open/2).

       opt_pair() =
           {binary, boolean()} |
           {echo, boolean()} |
           {expand_fun, expand_fun()} |
           {encoding, encoding()}

       expand_fun() =
           fun((term()) -> {yes | no, string(), [string(), ...]})

       encoding() =
           latin1 | unicode | utf8 | utf16 | utf32 |
           {utf16, big | little} |
           {utf32, big | little}

       setopt() = binary | list | opt_pair()

       format() = atom() | string() | binary()

       location() = erl_anno:location()

       prompt() = atom() | unicode:chardata()

       server_no_data() = {error, ErrorDescription :: term()} | eof

              What the I/O server sends when there is no data.

EXPORTS

       columns() -> {ok, integer() >= 1} | {error, enotsup}

       columns(IoDevice) -> {ok, integer() >= 1} | {error, enotsup}

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()

              Retrieves  the  number of columns of the IoDevice (that is, the width of a terminal). The function
              succeeds for terminal devices and returns {error, enotsup} for all other I/O devices.

       format(Format) -> ok

       format(Format, Data) -> ok

       format(IoDevice, Format, Data) -> ok

       fwrite(Format) -> ok

       fwrite(Format, Data) -> ok

       fwrite(IoDevice, Format, Data) -> ok

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 Format = format()
                 Data = [term()]

              Writes the items in Data ([]) on the standard output (IoDevice) in accordance with Format.  Format
              contains  plain  characters  that  are  copied  to  the  output  device, and control sequences for
              formatting, see below. If Format is an atom or a binary, it is first converted to a list with  the
              aid of atom_to_list/1 or binary_to_list/1. Example:

              1> io:fwrite("Hello world!~n", []).
              Hello world!
              ok

              The general format of a control sequence is ~F.P.PadModC.

              The character C determines the type of control sequence to be used. It is the only required field.
              All of F, P, Pad, and Mod are optional. For example, to use a # for Pad but use the default values
              for F and P, you can write ~..#C.

                * F  is  the  field  width  of the printed argument. A negative value means that the argument is
                  left-justified within the field, otherwise right-justified. If no field  width  is  specified,
                  the  required  print width is used. If the field width specified is too small, the whole field
                  is filled with * characters.

                * P is the precision of the printed argument. A  default  value  is  used  if  no  precision  is
                  specified.  The interpretation of precision depends on the control sequences. Unless otherwise
                  specified, argument within is used to determine print width.

                * Pad is the padding character. This is the character used to pad the printed representation  of
                  the  argument so that it conforms to the specified field width and precision. Only one padding
                  character can be specified and, whenever applicable, it is used for both the field  width  and
                  precision. The default padding character is ' ' (space).

                * Mod  is  the  control  sequence  modifier.  This  is  one  or  more characters that change the
                  interpretation of Data. The current modifiers are t,  for  Unicode  translation,  and  l,  for
                  stopping p and P from detecting printable characters.

              If F, P, or Pad is a * character, the next argument in Data is used as the value. For example:

              1> io:fwrite("~*.*.0f~n",[9, 5, 3.14159265]).
              003.14159
              ok

              To use a literal * character as Pad, it must be passed as an argument:

              2> io:fwrite("~*.*.*f~n",[9, 5, $*, 3.14159265]).
              **3.14159
              ok

              Available control sequences:

                ~:
                  Character ~ is written.

                c:
                  The  argument is a number that is interpreted as an ASCII code. The precision is the number of
                  times the character is printed and defaults to the field width, which in turn defaults  to  1.
                  Example:

                1> io:fwrite("|~10.5c|~-10.5c|~5c|~n", [$a, $b, $c]).
                |     aaaaa|bbbbb     |ccccc|
                ok

                  If  the  Unicode translation modifier (t) is in effect, the integer argument can be any number
                  representing a valid Unicode codepoint, otherwise it is to be an integer less than or equal to
                  255, otherwise it is masked with 16#FF:

                2> io:fwrite("~tc~n",[1024]).
                \x{400}
                ok
                3> io:fwrite("~c~n",[1024]).
                ^@
                ok

                f:
                  The  argument  is  a float that is written as [-]ddd.ddd, where the precision is the number of
                  digits after the decimal point. The default precision is 6 and it cannot be < 1.

                e:
                  The argument is a float that is written as [-]d.ddde+-ddd, where the precision is  the  number
                  of digits written. The default precision is 6 and it cannot be < 2.

                g:
                  The  argument is a float that is written as f, if it is >= 0.1 and < 10000.0. Otherwise, it is
                  written in the e format. The precision is the number of significant digits. It defaults  to  6
                  and  is  not  to be < 2. If the absolute value of the float does not allow it to be written in
                  the f format with the desired number of significant digits,  it  is  also  written  in  the  e
                  format.

                s:
                  Prints  the  argument  with  the  string  syntax.  The  argument is, if no Unicode translation
                  modifier is present, an iolist(), a  binary(),  or  an  atom().  If  the  Unicode  translation
                  modifier  (t)  is  in effect, the argument is unicode:chardata(), meaning that binaries are in
                  UTF-8. The characters are printed without  quotes.  The  string  is  first  truncated  by  the
                  specified  precision  and  then padded and justified to the specified field width. The default
                  precision is the field width.

                  This format can be used for printing any object  and  truncating  the  output  so  it  fits  a
                  specified field:

                1> io:fwrite("|~10w|~n", [{hey, hey, hey}]).
                |**********|
                ok
                2> io:fwrite("|~10s|~n", [io_lib:write({hey, hey, hey})]).
                |{hey,hey,h|
                3> io:fwrite("|~-10.8s|~n", [io_lib:write({hey, hey, hey})]).
                |{hey,hey  |
                ok

                  A  list  with integers > 255 is considered an error if the Unicode translation modifier is not
                  specified:

                4> io:fwrite("~ts~n",[[1024]]).
                \x{400}
                ok
                5> io:fwrite("~s~n",[[1024]]).
                ** exception error: bad argument
                     in function  io:format/3
                        called as io:format(<0.53.0>,"~s~n",[[1024]])

                w:
                  Writes data with the standard syntax. This is used to output Erlang terms. Atoms  are  printed
                  within  quotes  if  they  contain embedded non-printable characters. Atom characters > 255 are
                  escaped unless the Unicode translation modifier (t) is used. Floats are printed accurately  as
                  the shortest, correctly rounded string.

                p:
                  Writes  the  data  with  standard syntax in the same way as ~w, but breaks terms whose printed
                  representation is longer than one line into many lines and indents each line  sensibly.  Left-
                  justification is not supported. It also tries to detect flat lists of printable characters and
                  output these as strings. For example:

                1> T = [{attributes,[[{id,age,1.50000},{mode,explicit},
                {typename,"INTEGER"}], [{id,cho},{mode,explicit},{typename,'Cho'}]]},
                {typename,'Person'},{tag,{'PRIVATE',3}},{mode,implicit}].
                ...
                2> io:fwrite("~w~n", [T]).
                [{attributes,[[{id,age,1.5},{mode,explicit},{typename,
                [73,78,84,69,71,69,82]}],[{id,cho},{mode,explicit},{typena
                me,'Cho'}]]},{typename,'Person'},{tag,{'PRIVATE',3}},{mode
                ,implicit}]
                ok
                3> io:fwrite("~62p~n", [T]).
                [{attributes,[[{id,age,1.5},
                               {mode,explicit},
                               {typename,"INTEGER"}],
                              [{id,cho},{mode,explicit},{typename,'Cho'}]]},
                 {typename,'Person'},
                 {tag,{'PRIVATE',3}},
                 {mode,implicit}]
                ok

                  The field width specifies the maximum line length. It defaults to 80. The precision  specifies
                  the  initial  indentation of the term. It defaults to the number of characters printed on this
                  line in the same call to write/1 or format/1,2,3. For example, using T above:

                4> io:fwrite("Here T = ~62p~n", [T]).
                Here T = [{attributes,[[{id,age,1.5},
                                        {mode,explicit},
                                        {typename,"INTEGER"}],
                                       [{id,cho},
                                        {mode,explicit},
                                        {typename,'Cho'}]]},
                          {typename,'Person'},
                          {tag,{'PRIVATE',3}},
                          {mode,implicit}]
                ok

                  As from Erlang/OTP 21.0, a field width of value 0 can be used for specifying that  a  line  is
                  infinitely long, which means that no line breaks are inserted. For example:

                5> io:fwrite("~0p~n", [lists:seq(1, 30)]).
                [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30]
                ok

                  When  the  modifier l is specified, no detection of printable character lists takes place, for
                  example:

                6> S = [{a,"a"}, {b, "b"}], io:fwrite("~15p~n", [S]).
                [{a,"a"},
                 {b,"b"}]
                ok
                7> io:fwrite("~15lp~n", [S]).
                [{a,[97]},
                 {b,[98]}]
                ok

                  The Unicode translation modifier t specifies how to treat characters outside the Latin-1 range
                  of  codepoints,  in  atoms,  strings, and binaries. For example, printing an atom containing a
                  character > 255:

                8> io:fwrite("~p~n",[list_to_atom([1024])]).
                ok
                9> io:fwrite("~tp~n",[list_to_atom([1024])]).
                ok

                  By default, Erlang only detects lists of characters in the Latin-1 range as strings,  but  the
                  +pc unicode flag can be used to change this (see printable_range/0 for details). For example:

                10> io:fwrite("~p~n",[[214]]).
                "Ö"
                ok
                11> io:fwrite("~p~n",[[1024]]).
                [1024]
                ok
                12> io:fwrite("~tp~n",[[1024]]).
                [1024]
                ok

                  but if Erlang was started with +pc unicode:

                13> io:fwrite("~p~n",[[1024]]).
                [1024]
                ok
                14> io:fwrite("~tp~n",[[1024]]).
                "Ѐ"
                ok

                  Similarly,  binaries  that  look  like UTF-8 encoded strings are output with the binary string
                  syntax if the t modifier is specified:

                15> io:fwrite("~p~n", [<<208,128>>]).
                <<208,128>>
                ok
                16> io:fwrite("~tp~n", [<<208,128>>]).
                <<"Ѐ"/utf8>>
                ok
                17> io:fwrite("~tp~n", [<<128,128>>]).
                <<128,128>>
                ok

                W:
                  Writes data in the same way as ~w, but takes an extra argument that is the  maximum  depth  to
                  which  terms are printed. Anything below this depth is replaced with .... For example, using T
                  above:

                8> io:fwrite("~W~n", [T,9]).
                [{attributes,[[{id,age,1.5},{mode,explicit},{typename,...}],
                [{id,cho},{mode,...},{...}]]},{typename,'Person'},
                {tag,{'PRIVATE',3}},{mode,implicit}]
                ok

                  If the maximum depth is reached, it cannot be read in the resultant  output.  Also,  the  ,...
                  form  in  a  tuple  denotes  that there are more elements in the tuple but these are below the
                  print depth.

                P:
                  Writes data in the same way as ~p, but takes an extra argument that is the  maximum  depth  to
                  which terms are printed. Anything below this depth is replaced with ..., for example:

                9> io:fwrite("~62P~n", [T,9]).
                [{attributes,[[{id,age,1.5},{mode,explicit},{typename,...}],
                              [{id,cho},{mode,...},{...}]]},
                 {typename,'Person'},
                 {tag,{'PRIVATE',3}},
                 {mode,implicit}]
                ok

                B:
                  Writes an integer in base 2-36, the default base is 10. A leading dash is printed for negative
                  integers.

                  The precision field selects base, for example:

                1> io:fwrite("~.16B~n", [31]).
                1F
                ok
                2> io:fwrite("~.2B~n", [-19]).
                -10011
                ok
                3> io:fwrite("~.36B~n", [5*36+35]).
                5Z
                ok

                X:
                  Like B, but takes an extra argument that is a prefix to insert before the  number,  but  after
                  the leading dash, if any.

                  The prefix can be a possibly deep list of characters or an atom. Example:

                1> io:fwrite("~X~n", [31,"10#"]).
                10#31
                ok
                2> io:fwrite("~.16X~n", [-31,"0x"]).
                -0x1F
                ok

                #:
                  Like B, but prints the number with an Erlang style #-separated base prefix. Example:

                1> io:fwrite("~.10#~n", [31]).
                10#31
                ok
                2> io:fwrite("~.16#~n", [-31]).
                -16#1F
                ok

                b:
                  Like B, but prints lowercase letters.

                x:
                  Like X, but prints lowercase letters.

                +:
                  Like #, but prints lowercase letters.

                n:
                  Writes a new line.

                i:
                  Ignores the next term.

              The function returns:

                ok:
                  The formatting succeeded.

              If an error occurs, there is no output. Example:

              1> io:fwrite("~s ~w ~i ~w ~c ~n",['abc def', 'abc def', {foo, 1},{foo, 1}, 65]).
              abc def 'abc def'  {foo,1} A
              ok
              2> io:fwrite("~s", [65]).
              ** exception error: bad argument
                   in function  io:format/3
                      called as io:format(<0.53.0>,"~s","A")

              In  this example, an attempt was made to output the single character 65 with the aid of the string
              formatting directive "~s".

       fread(Prompt, Format) -> Result

       fread(IoDevice, Prompt, Format) -> Result

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 Prompt = prompt()
                 Format = format()
                 Result =
                     {ok, Terms :: [term()]} |
                     {error, {fread, FreadError :: io_lib:fread_error()}} |
                     server_no_data()
                 server_no_data() = {error, ErrorDescription :: term()} | eof

              Reads characters from the standard input (IoDevice), prompting  it  with  Prompt.  Interprets  the
              characters  in  accordance  with  Format.  Format  contains  control  sequences  that  directs the
              interpretation of the input.

              Format can contain the following:

                * Whitespace characters (Space, Tab, and Newline) that cause input to be read to the  next  non-
                  whitespace character.

                * Ordinary characters that must match the next input character.

                * Control sequences, which have the general format ~*FMC, where:

                  * Character  *  is an optional return suppression character. It provides a method to specify a
                    field that is to be omitted.

                  * F is the field width of the input field.

                  * M is an optional translation modifier (of which t is the  only  supported,  meaning  Unicode
                    translation).

                  * C determines the type of control sequence.

                  Unless  otherwise specified, leading whitespace is ignored for all control sequences. An input
                  field cannot be more than one line wide.

                  Available control sequences:

                  ~:
                    A single ~ is expected in the input.

                  d:
                    A decimal integer is expected.

                  u:
                    An unsigned integer in base 2-36 is expected. The field width parameter is used  to  specify
                    base. Leading whitespace characters are not skipped.

                  -:
                    An  optional  sign  character  is  expected.  A sign character - gives return value -1. Sign
                    character + or none gives 1. The  field  width  parameter  is  ignored.  Leading  whitespace
                    characters are not skipped.

                  #:
                    An integer in base 2-36 with Erlang-style base prefix (for example, "16#ffff") is expected.

                  f:
                    A floating point number is expected. It must follow the Erlang floating point number syntax.

                  s:
                    A  string  of  non-whitespace  characters is read. If a field width has been specified, this
                    number of characters are read and all trailing whitespace characters are stripped. An Erlang
                    string (list of characters) is returned.

                    If  Unicode  translation  is  in effect (~ts), characters > 255 are accepted, otherwise not.
                    With the translation modifier, the returned list can as a consequence also contain  integers
                    > 255:

                  1> io:fread("Prompt> ","~s").
                  Prompt> <Characters beyond latin1 range not printable in this medium>
                  {error,{fread,string}}
                  2> io:fread("Prompt> ","~ts").
                  Prompt> <Characters beyond latin1 range not printable in this medium>
                  {ok,[[1091,1085,1080,1094,1086,1076,1077]]}

                  a:
                    Similar to s, but the resulting string is converted into an atom.

                  c:
                    The number of characters equal to the field width are read (default is 1) and returned as an
                    Erlang string. However, leading and trailing whitespace characters are not omitted  as  they
                    are with s. All characters are returned.

                    The Unicode translation modifier works as with s:

                  1> io:fread("Prompt> ","~c").
                  Prompt> <Character beyond latin1 range not printable in this medium>
                  {error,{fread,string}}
                  2> io:fread("Prompt> ","~tc").
                  Prompt> <Character beyond latin1 range not printable in this medium>
                  {ok,[[1091]]}

                  l:
                    Returns  the  number  of  characters  that  have  been  scanned  up to that point, including
                    whitespace characters.

                  The function returns:

                  {ok, Terms}:
                    The read was successful and Terms is the list of successfully matched and read items.

                  eof:
                    End of file was encountered.

                  {error, FreadError}:
                    The reading failed and FreadError gives a hint about the error.

                  {error, ErrorDescription}:
                    The read operation failed and parameter ErrorDescription gives a hint about the error.

              Examples:

              20> io:fread('enter>', "~f~f~f").
              enter>1.9 35.5e3 15.0
              {ok,[1.9,3.55e4,15.0]}
              21> io:fread('enter>', "~10f~d").
              enter>     5.67899
              {ok,[5.678,99]}
              22> io:fread('enter>', ":~10s:~10c:").
              enter>:   alan   :   joe    :
              {ok, ["alan", "   joe    "]}

       get_chars(Prompt, Count) -> Data | server_no_data()

       get_chars(IoDevice, Prompt, Count) -> Data | server_no_data()

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 Prompt = prompt()
                 Count = integer() >= 0
                 Data = string() | unicode:unicode_binary()
                 server_no_data() = {error, ErrorDescription :: term()} | eof

              Reads Count characters from standard input (IoDevice), prompting it with Prompt.

              The function returns:

                Data:
                  The input characters. If the I/O device supports Unicode, the data can represent codepoints  >
                  255  (the  latin1  range).  If  the I/O server is set to deliver binaries, they are encoded in
                  UTF-8 (regardless of whether the I/O device supports Unicode).

                eof:
                  End of file was encountered.

                {error, ErrorDescription}:
                  Other (rare) error condition, such as {error, estale} if reading from an NFS file system.

       get_line(Prompt) -> Data | server_no_data()

       get_line(IoDevice, Prompt) -> Data | server_no_data()

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 Prompt = prompt()
                 Data = string() | unicode:unicode_binary()
                 server_no_data() = {error, ErrorDescription :: term()} | eof

              Reads a line from the standard input (IoDevice), prompting it with Prompt.

              The function returns:

                Data:
                  The characters in the line terminated by a line feed (or end  of  file).  If  the  I/O  device
                  supports  Unicode,  the  data  can  represent  codepoints > 255 (the latin1 range). If the I/O
                  server is set to deliver binaries, they are encoded in UTF-8 (regardless of if the I/O  device
                  supports Unicode).

                eof:
                  End of file was encountered.

                {error, ErrorDescription}:
                  Other (rare) error condition, such as {error, estale} if reading from an NFS file system.

       getopts() -> [opt_pair()] | {error, Reason}

       getopts(IoDevice) -> [opt_pair()] | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 Reason = term()

              Requests all available options and their current values for a specific I/O device, for example:

              1> {ok,F} = file:open("/dev/null",[read]).
              {ok,<0.42.0>}
              2> io:getopts(F).
              [{binary,false},{encoding,latin1}]

              Here  the  file  I/O server returns all available options for a file, which are the expected ones,
              encoding and binary. However, the standard shell has some more options:

              3> io:getopts().
              [{expand_fun,#Fun<group.0.120017273>},
               {echo,true},
               {binary,false},
               {encoding,unicode}]

              This example is, as can be seen, run in an environment where the terminal supports  Unicode  input
              and output.

       nl() -> ok

       nl(IoDevice) -> ok

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()

              Writes new line to the standard output (IoDevice).

       parse_erl_exprs(Prompt) -> Result

       parse_erl_exprs(IoDevice, Prompt) -> Result

       parse_erl_exprs(IoDevice, Prompt, StartLocation) -> Result

       parse_erl_exprs(IoDevice, Prompt, StartLocation, Options) ->
                          Result

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 Prompt = prompt()
                 StartLocation = location()
                 Options = erl_scan:options()
                 Result = parse_ret()
                 parse_ret() =
                     {ok,
                      ExprList :: [erl_parse:abstract_expr()],
                      EndLocation :: location()} |
                     {eof, EndLocation :: location()} |
                     {error,
                      ErrorInfo :: erl_scan:error_info() | erl_parse:error_info(),
                      ErrorLocation :: location()} |
                     server_no_data()
                 server_no_data() = {error, ErrorDescription :: term()} | eof

              Reads  data  from  the  standard  input  (IoDevice),  prompting  it with Prompt. Starts reading at
              location StartLocation (1). Argument  Options  is  passed  on  as  argument  Options  of  function
              erl_scan:tokens/4.  The data is tokenized and parsed as if it was a sequence of Erlang expressions
              until a final dot (.) is reached.

              The function returns:

                {ok, ExprList, EndLocation}:
                  The parsing was successful.

                {eof, EndLocation}:
                  End of file was encountered by the tokenizer.

                eof:
                  End of file was encountered by the I/O server.

                {error, ErrorInfo, ErrorLocation}:
                  An error occurred while tokenizing or parsing.

                {error, ErrorDescription}:
                  Other (rare) error condition, such as {error, estale} if reading from an NFS file system.

              Example:

              25> io:parse_erl_exprs('enter>').
              enter>abc(), "hey".
              {ok, [{call,1,{atom,1,abc},[]},{string,1,"hey"}],2}
              26> io:parse_erl_exprs ('enter>').
              enter>abc("hey".
              {error,{1,erl_parse,["syntax error before: ",["'.'"]]},2}

       parse_erl_form(Prompt) -> Result

       parse_erl_form(IoDevice, Prompt) -> Result

       parse_erl_form(IoDevice, Prompt, StartLocation) -> Result

       parse_erl_form(IoDevice, Prompt, StartLocation, Options) -> Result

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 Prompt = prompt()
                 StartLocation = location()
                 Options = erl_scan:options()
                 Result = parse_form_ret()
                 parse_form_ret() =
                     {ok,
                      AbsForm :: erl_parse:abstract_form(),
                      EndLocation :: location()} |
                     {eof, EndLocation :: location()} |
                     {error,
                      ErrorInfo :: erl_scan:error_info() | erl_parse:error_info(),
                      ErrorLocation :: location()} |
                     server_no_data()
                 server_no_data() = {error, ErrorDescription :: term()} | eof

              Reads data from the standard input  (IoDevice),  prompting  it  with  Prompt.  Starts  reading  at
              location  StartLocation  (1).  Argument  Options  is  passed  on  as  argument Options of function
              erl_scan:tokens/4. The data is tokenized and parsed as if it was an Erlang form (one of the  valid
              Erlang expressions in an Erlang source file) until a final dot (.) is reached.

              The function returns:

                {ok, AbsForm, EndLocation}:
                  The parsing was successful.

                {eof, EndLocation}:
                  End of file was encountered by the tokenizer.

                eof:
                  End of file was encountered by the I/O server.

                {error, ErrorInfo, ErrorLocation}:
                  An error occurred while tokenizing or parsing.

                {error, ErrorDescription}:
                  Other (rare) error condition, such as {error, estale} if reading from an NFS file system.

       printable_range() -> unicode | latin1

              Returns the user-requested range of printable Unicode characters.

              The  user  can  request  a  range  of  characters that are to be considered printable in heuristic
              detection of strings by the shell and by the formatting functions. This is done by  supplying  +pc
              <range> when starting Erlang.

              The only valid values for <range> are latin1 and unicode. latin1 means that only code points < 256
              (except control characters, and so on) are considered printable. unicode means that all  printable
              characters in all Unicode character ranges are considered printable by the I/O functions.

              By  default, Erlang is started so that only the latin1 range of characters indicate that a list of
              integers is a string.

              The simplest way to use the setting is to call  io_lib:printable_list/1,  which  uses  the  return
              value of this function to decide if a list is a string of printable characters.

          Note:
              In  a  future  release,  this  function  may return more values and ranges. To avoid compatibility
              problems, it is recommended to use function io_lib:printable_list/1.

       put_chars(CharData) -> ok

       put_chars(IoDevice, CharData) -> ok

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 CharData = unicode:chardata()

              Writes the characters of CharData to the I/O server (IoDevice).

       read(Prompt) -> Result

       read(IoDevice, Prompt) -> Result

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 Prompt = prompt()
                 Result =
                     {ok, Term :: term()} | server_no_data() | {error, ErrorInfo}
                 ErrorInfo = erl_scan:error_info() | erl_parse:error_info()
                 server_no_data() = {error, ErrorDescription :: term()} | eof

              Reads a term Term from the standard input (IoDevice), prompting it with Prompt.

              The function returns:

                {ok, Term}:
                  The parsing was successful.

                eof:
                  End of file was encountered.

                {error, ErrorInfo}:
                  The parsing failed.

                {error, ErrorDescription}:
                  Other (rare) error condition, such as {error, estale} if reading from an NFS file system.

       read(IoDevice, Prompt, StartLocation) -> Result

       read(IoDevice, Prompt, StartLocation, Options) -> Result

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 Prompt = prompt()
                 StartLocation = location()
                 Options = erl_scan:options()
                 Result =
                     {ok, Term :: term(), EndLocation :: location()} |
                     {eof, EndLocation :: location()} |
                     server_no_data() |
                     {error, ErrorInfo, ErrorLocation :: location()}
                 ErrorInfo = erl_scan:error_info() | erl_parse:error_info()
                 server_no_data() = {error, ErrorDescription :: term()} | eof

              Reads  a  term  Term  from  IoDevice,  prompting  it  with  Prompt.  Reading  starts  at  location
              StartLocation. Argument Options is passed on as argument Options of function erl_scan:tokens/4.

              The function returns:

                {ok, Term, EndLocation}:
                  The parsing was successful.

                {eof, EndLocation}:
                  End of file was encountered.

                {error, ErrorInfo, ErrorLocation}:
                  The parsing failed.

                {error, ErrorDescription}:
                  Other (rare) error condition, such as {error, estale} if reading from an NFS file system.

       rows() -> {ok, integer() >= 1} | {error, enotsup}

       rows(IoDevice) -> {ok, integer() >= 1} | {error, enotsup}

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()

              Retrieves  the  number  of rows of IoDevice (that is, the height of a terminal). The function only
              succeeds for terminal devices, for all other I/O devices the function returns {error, enotsup}.

       scan_erl_exprs(Prompt) -> Result

       scan_erl_exprs(Device, Prompt) -> Result

       scan_erl_exprs(Device, Prompt, StartLocation) -> Result

       scan_erl_exprs(Device, Prompt, StartLocation, Options) -> Result

              Types:

                 Device = device()
                 Prompt = prompt()
                 StartLocation = location()
                 Options = erl_scan:options()
                 Result = erl_scan:tokens_result() | server_no_data()
                 server_no_data() = {error, ErrorDescription :: term()} | eof

              Reads data from the standard input  (IoDevice),  prompting  it  with  Prompt.  Reading  starts  at
              location  StartLocation  (1).  Argument  Options  is  passed  on  as  argument Options of function
              erl_scan:tokens/4. The data is tokenized as if it were a sequence of Erlang  expressions  until  a
              final dot (.) is reached. This token is also returned.

              The function returns:

                {ok, Tokens, EndLocation}:
                  The tokenization succeeded.

                {eof, EndLocation}:
                  End of file was encountered by the tokenizer.

                eof:
                  End of file was encountered by the I/O server.

                {error, ErrorInfo, ErrorLocation}:
                  An error occurred while tokenizing.

                {error, ErrorDescription}:
                  Other (rare) error condition, such as {error, estale} if reading from an NFS file system.

              Example:

              23> io:scan_erl_exprs('enter>').
              enter>abc(), "hey".
              {ok,[{atom,1,abc},{'(',1},{')',1},{',',1},{string,1,"hey"},{dot,1}],2}
              24> io:scan_erl_exprs('enter>').
              enter>1.0er.
              {error,{1,erl_scan,{illegal,float}},2}

       scan_erl_form(Prompt) -> Result

       scan_erl_form(IoDevice, Prompt) -> Result

       scan_erl_form(IoDevice, Prompt, StartLocation) -> Result

       scan_erl_form(IoDevice, Prompt, StartLocation, Options) -> Result

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 Prompt = prompt()
                 StartLocation = location()
                 Options = erl_scan:options()
                 Result = erl_scan:tokens_result() | server_no_data()
                 server_no_data() = {error, ErrorDescription :: term()} | eof

              Reads  data  from  the  standard  input  (IoDevice),  prompting  it with Prompt. Starts reading at
              location StartLocation (1). Argument  Options  is  passed  on  as  argument  Options  of  function
              erl_scan:tokens/4.  The  data  is  tokenized  as if it was an Erlang form (one of the valid Erlang
              expressions in an Erlang source file) until a final dot (.) is reached. This last  token  is  also
              returned.

              The return values are the same as for scan_erl_exprs/1,2,3,4.

       setopts(Opts) -> ok | {error, Reason}

       setopts(IoDevice, Opts) -> ok | {error, Reason}

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 Opts = [setopt()]
                 Reason = term()

              Set options for the standard I/O device (IoDevice).

              Possible  options and values vary depending on the I/O device. For a list of supported options and
              their current values on a specific I/O device, use function getopts/1.

              The options and values supported by the OTP I/O devices are as follows:

                binary, list, or {binary, boolean()}:
                  If set in binary mode (binary or {binary, true}), the I/O server sends binary data (encoded in
                  UTF-8)  as  answers  to  the  get_line,  get_chars,  and, if possible, get_until requests (for
                  details, see section The Erlang I/O Protocol) in the User's Guide). The  immediate  effect  is
                  that  get_chars/2,3  and get_line/1,2 return UTF-8 binaries instead of lists of characters for
                  the affected I/O device.

                  By default, all I/O devices in OTP are set in list mode. However, the I/O functions can handle
                  any  of  these  modes  and  so  should other, user-written, modules behaving as clients to I/O
                  servers.

                  This option is supported by the standard shell (group.erl), the 'oldshell' (user.erl), and the
                  file I/O servers.

                {echo, boolean()}:
                  Denotes  if  the  terminal  is to echo input. Only supported for the standard shell I/O server
                  (group.erl)

                {expand_fun, expand_fun()}:
                  Provides a function for tab-completion (expansion) like the Erlang  shell.  This  function  is
                  called  when  the  user presses the Tab key. The expansion is active when calling line-reading
                  functions, such as get_line/1,2.

                  The function is called with the current line, up to the cursor, as a reversed string. It is to
                  return  a  three-tuple: {yes|no, string(), [string(), ...]}. The first element gives a beep if
                  no, otherwise the expansion is silent; the second is a string that  will  be  entered  at  the
                  cursor  position; the third is a list of possible expansions. If this list is not empty, it is
                  printed and the current input line is written once again.

                  Trivial example (beep on anything except empty line, which is expanded to "quit"):

                fun("") -> {yes, "quit", []};
                   (_) -> {no, "", ["quit"]} end

                  This option is only supported by the standard shell (group.erl).

                {encoding, latin1 | unicode}:
                  Specifies how characters are input or output from or to the I/O  device,  implying  that,  for
                  example, a terminal is set to handle Unicode input and output or a file is set to handle UTF-8
                  data encoding.

                  The option does not affect how data is returned from the I/O functions or how it  is  sent  in
                  the  I/O  protocol,  it only affects how the I/O device is to handle Unicode characters to the
                  "physical" device.

                  The standard shell is set for unicode or latin1 encoding  when  the  system  is  started.  The
                  encoding  is  set  with  the  help  of the LANG or LC_CTYPE environment variables on Unix-like
                  system or by other means on other systems. So, the user can input Unicode characters  and  the
                  I/O  device  is  in  {encoding,  unicode}  mode if the I/O device supports it. The mode can be
                  changed, if the assumption of the runtime system is wrong, by setting this option.

                  The I/O device used when Erlang is started with the "-oldshell"  or  "-noshell"  flags  is  by
                  default  set  to  latin1 encoding, meaning that any characters > codepoint 255 are escaped and
                  that input is expected to be plain 8-bit ISO Latin-1. If the encoding is changed  to  Unicode,
                  input  and  output  from  the  standard file descriptors are in UTF-8 (regardless of operating
                  system).

                  Files can also be set in {encoding, unicode}, meaning that data is written and read as  UTF-8.
                  More encodings are possible for files, see below.

                  {encoding, unicode | latin1} is supported by both the standard shell (group.erl including werl
                  on Windows), the 'oldshell' (user.erl), and the file I/O servers.

                {encoding, utf8 | utf16 | utf32 | {utf16,big} | {utf16,little} | {utf32,big} | {utf32,little}}:
                  For disk files, the encoding can be set to various UTF variants. This has the effect that data
                  is expected to be read as the specified encoding from the file, and the data is written in the
                  specified encoding to the disk file.

                  {encoding, utf8} has the same effect as {encoding, unicode} on files.

                  The extended encodings are only supported on disk files (opened by function file:open/2).

       write(Term) -> ok

       write(IoDevice, Term) -> ok

              Types:

                 IoDevice = device()
                 Term = term()

              Writes term Term to the standard output (IoDevice).

STANDARD INPUT/OUTPUT

       All Erlang processes have a default standard I/O device. This device is used when no IoDevice argument is
       specified  in  the  function  calls in this module. However, it is sometimes desirable to use an explicit
       IoDevice argument that refers to the default I/O device. This is the case with functions that can  access
       either  a  file  or  the default I/O device. The atom standard_io has this special meaning. The following
       example illustrates this:

       27> io:read('enter>').
       enter>foo.
       {ok,foo}
       28> io:read(standard_io, 'enter>').
       enter>bar.
       {ok,bar}

       There is always a process registered under the name of user. This can be used for sending output  to  the
       user.

STANDARD ERROR

       In  certain  situations,  especially  when  the  standard  output  is redirected, access to an I/O server
       specific for error messages can be convenient. The I/O device standard_error can be used to direct output
       to  whatever  the current operating system considers a suitable I/O device for error output. Example on a
       Unix-like operating system:

       $ erl -noshell -noinput -eval 'io:format(standard_error,"Error: ~s~n",["error 11"]),'\
       'init:stop().' > /dev/null
       Error: error 11

ERROR INFORMATION

       The ErrorInfo mentioned in this module is the standard ErrorInfo structure that is returned from all  I/O
       modules. It has the following format:

       {ErrorLocation, Module, ErrorDescriptor}

       A string that describes the error is obtained with the following call:

       Module:format_error(ErrorDescriptor)