WriteExt in async_std::io::prelude - Rust (original) (raw)

pub trait WriteExt: Write {
    // Provided methods
    fn write<'a>(&'a mut self, buf: &'a [u8]) -> WriteFuture<'a, Self>
       where Self: Unpin { ... }
    fn flush(&mut self) -> FlushFuture<'_, Self>
       where Self: Unpin { ... }
    fn write_vectored<'a>(
        &'a mut self,
        bufs: &'a [IoSlice<'a>],
    ) -> WriteVectoredFuture<'a, Self>
       where Self: Unpin { ... }
    fn write_all<'a>(&'a mut self, buf: &'a [u8]) -> WriteAllFuture<'a, Self>
       where Self: Unpin { ... }
    fn write_fmt<'a>(
        &'a mut self,
        fmt: Arguments<'_>,
    ) -> WriteFmtFuture<'a, Self>
       where Self: Unpin { ... }
}

Expand description

Extension methods for Write.

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Writes some bytes into the byte stream.

Returns the number of bytes written from the start of the buffer.

If the return value is Ok(n) then it must be guaranteed that0 <= n <= buf.len(). A return value of 0 typically means that the underlying object is no longer able to accept bytes and will likely not be able to in the future as well, or that the buffer provided is empty.

§Examples
use async_std::fs::File;
use async_std::prelude::*;

let mut file = File::create("a.txt").await?;

let n = file.write(b"hello world").await?;

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Flushes the stream to ensure that all buffered contents reach their destination.

§Examples
use async_std::fs::File;
use async_std::prelude::*;

let mut file = File::create("a.txt").await?;

file.write_all(b"hello world").await?;
file.flush().await?;

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Like write, except that it writes from a slice of buffers.

Data is copied from each buffer in order, with the final buffer read from possibly being only partially consumed. This method must behave as a call to write with the buffers concatenated would.

The default implementation calls write with either the first nonempty buffer provided, or an empty one if none exists.

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Writes an entire buffer into the byte stream.

This method will continuously call write until there is no more data to be written or an error is returned. This method will not return until the entire buffer has been successfully written or such an error occurs.

§Examples
use async_std::fs::File;
use async_std::prelude::*;

let mut file = File::create("a.txt").await?;

file.write_all(b"hello world").await?;

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Writes a formatted string into this writer, returning any error encountered.

This method will continuously call write until there is no more data to be written or an error is returned. This future will not resolve until the entire buffer has been successfully written or such an error occurs.

§Examples
use async_std::io::prelude::*;
use async_std::fs::File;

let mut buffer = File::create("foo.txt").await?;

// this call
write!(buffer, "{:.*}", 2, 1.234567).await?;
// turns into this:
buffer.write_fmt(format_args!("{:.*}", 2, 1.234567)).await?;

This trait is not dyn compatible.

In older versions of Rust, dyn compatibility was called "object safety", so this trait is not object safe.

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