Name
print()
Description
The print() function writes to the console area, the black rectangle
 at the bottom of the Processing environment. This function is often helpful
 for looking at the data a program is producing. The companion function
 println() works like print(), but creates a new line of text
 for each call to the function. More than one parameter can be passed into the
 function by separating them with commas. Alternatively, individual elements
 can be separated with quotes ("") and joined with the addition operator
 (+).
 
 Using print() on an object will output null, a memory location
 that may look like "@10be08," or the result of the toString() method
 from the object that's being printed. Advanced users who want more useful
 output when calling print() on their own classes can add a
 toString() method to the class that returns a String.
 
 Note that the console is relatively slow. It works well for occasional
 messages, but does not support high-speed, real-time output (such as at 60
 frames per second). It should also be noted, that a print() within a for loop
 can sometimes lock up the program, and cause the sketch to freeze.
Examples
String s = "The size is "; int w = 1920; int h = 1080; print(s); print(w, "x", h); // This program writes to the console: // The size is 1920 x 1080print("begin- "); float f = 0.3; int i = 1024; print("f is " + f + " and i is " + 1024); String s = " -end"; println(s); // This program writes to the console: // "begin- f is 0.3 and i is 1024 -end"
Syntax
print(what)print(variables)
Parameters
what(byte, boolean, char, int, float, String)data to print to consolevariables(Object[])list of data, separated by commas
Return
void
Related

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.