Python print() Function
Definition and Usage
The print() function prints the specified message to the screen, or other standard output device.
The message can be a string, or any other object, the object will be converted into a string before written to the screen.
Syntax
print(object(s),
sep=separator, end=end, file=file, flush=flush)
Parameter Values
| Parameter | Description |
|---|---|
| object(s) | Any object, and as many as you like. Will be converted to string before printed |
| sep='separator' | Optional. Specify how to separate the objects, if there is more than one. Default is ' ' |
| end='end' | Optional. Specify what to print at the end. Default is '\n' (line feed) |
| file | Optional. An object with a write method. Default is sys.stdout |
| flush | Optional. A Boolean, specifying if the output is flushed (True) or buffered (False). Default is False |
More Examples
Example
Print two messages, and specify the separator:
print("Hello", "how are you?", sep="---")
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