On Sun, Sep 28, 2014 at 02:16:29PM +0000, "Nordlöw" via Digitalmars-d-learn wrote: > I thought > > int main(string[] args) > { > import std.stdio; > write(`Press enter to continue: `); > stdout.flush; > auto line = readln(); > writeln("Read ", line); > return 0; > } > > would function as a good prompting but it doesn't. > > I outputs the string given to write *after* I've pressed return. Why?
It's an OS limitation. If you're on Posix, you need to switch your terminal to cbreak mode, otherwise the program doesn't actually receive any data until after you press Return. I'm not sure what the Windows equivalent is, but a similar thing happens there -- the input line is buffered by the OS and the program doesn't see it until Return is pressed. You might be interested in Adam Ruppe's terminal.d library, that handles such low-level details for you: https://github.com/adamdruppe/arsd/blob/master/terminal.d T -- People who are more than casually interested in computers should have at least some idea of what the underlying hardware is like. Otherwise the programs they write will be pretty weird. -- D. Knuth