Writes data to a sequential file.
Syntax
Write #filenumber, [outputlist]
The Write # statement syntax has these parts:
Part | Description |
filenumber | Required. Any valid file number. |
outputlist | Optional. One or more comma-delimited numeric expressions or string expressions to write to a file. |
Remarks
Data written with Write # is usually read from a file with Input #.
If you omit outputlist and include a comma after filenumber, a blank line is printed to the file. Multiple expressions can be separated with a space, a semicolon, or a comma. A space has the same effect as a semicolon.
When Write # is used to write data to a file, several universal assumptions are followed so the data can always be read and correctly interpreted using Input #, regardless of locale:
#TRUE#
or #FALSE#
is printed. The True and False keywords are not translated, regardless of locale.#NULL#
is written.#NULL#
is written to the file.#ERROR errorcode#
. The Error keyword is not translated, regardless of locale.Unlike the Print # statement, the Write # statement inserts commas between items and quotation marks around strings as they are written to the file. You don't have to put explicit delimiters in the list. Write # inserts a newline character, that is, a carriage return–linefeed (Chr(13) + Chr(10)), after it has written the final character in outputlist to the file.