
- Lua Tutorial
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- Lua Arrays
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- Lua Lists
- Lua - Lists
- Lua - Inserting Elements into Lists
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- Lua - Concatenate Lists
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- Lua - Sparse Lists
- Lua - Lists as Stacks
- Lua - Lists as Queues
- Lua - Functional Operations on Lists
- Lua - Immutable Lists
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- Lua - Metatables with Lists
- Lua Modules
- Lua - Modules
- Lua - Returning Functions from Modules
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- Lua Metatables
- Lua - Metatables
- Lua - Chaining Metatables
- Lua - Proxy Tables with Metatables
- Lua - Use Cases for Proxy Table
- Lua - Delegation and Tracing via Proxy Tables
- Lua - Metatables vs Metamethods
- Lua - Fallback Mechanisms in Metatables
- Lua - Fallback Cases for Indexing Metamethods
- Lua - Fallback Cases for Arithmetic and Comparison Metamethods
- Lua - Fallback Cases for Other Metamethods
- Lua - Customizing Behavior with Metatables
- Lua - Controlling Table Access
- Lua - Overloading Operators
- Lua - Customizing Comparisons
- Lua - Making a Table Callable
- Lua - Customizing String Representation
- Lua - Controlling Metatable Access
- Lua Coroutines
- Lua - Coroutines
- Lua - Coroutine Lifecycle
- Lua - Communication Between Coroutines
- Lua - Coroutines vs Threads
- Lua - Chaining Coroutines
- Lua - Chaining Coroutines With Scheduler
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- Lua - Coroutine Control Flow
- Lua - Nested Coroutines
- Lua File Handling
- Lua - File I/O
- Lua - Opening Files
- Lua - Modes for File Access
- Lua - Reading Files
- Lua - Writing Files
- Lua - Closing Files
- Lua - Renaming Files
- Lua - Deleting Files
- Lua - File Buffers and Flushing
- Lua - Reading Files Line by Line
- Lua - Binary File Handling
- Lua - File Positioning
- Lua - Appending to Files
- Lua - Error Handling in File Operations
- Lua - Checking if File exists
- Lua - Checking if File is Readable
- Lua - Checking if File is Writable
- Lua - Checking if File is ReadOnly
- Lua - File Descriptors
- Lua - Creating Temporary Files
- Lua - File Iterators
- Lua - Working with Large Files
- Lua Advanced
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- Lua - Garbage Collection
- Lua - Object Oriented
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- Sorting Algorithms
- Lua - Bubble Sort
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- Searching Algorithms
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- Lua - Binary Search
- Lua - Jump Search
- Lua - Interpolation Search
- Regular Expression
- Lua - Pattern Matching
- Lua - string.find() method
- Lua - string.gmatch() method
- Lua - string.gsub() method
- Lua Useful Resources
- Lua - Quick Guide
- Lua - Useful Resources
- Lua - Discussion
Lua - File Buffers and Flushing
In Lua, we can use buffering effectively in File I/O using setvbuf() and flush methods.
Syntax - setvbuf() method
file:setvbuf (mode, [size])
Where file represents the file handle returned by io.open() method and mode can accept following values−
no− no buffering. It means output operation result will appear immidiately without buffering.
full− full buffering. It means output operation result will appear when buffer is full or flush() method is called explicitly.
line− line buffering. It means output is buffered till new line is output.
size is an optional parameter. By default, Lua gives size an appropriate value as per system implementation. It represents the buffer size.
Syntax - flush() method
Simple Model
io.flush ()
flush() method saves any written data to the file.
Complete Model
file:flush ()
flush() method saves any written data to underlying file and file is the handle returned by io.open() method.
Example - Use of setvbuf() and flush() method in Simple Model
Let us now see how to write a file.
main.lua
-- write a file content function writeFile() -- Opens a file in write mode, -- create file if not present -- overwrite content of file if present f = io.open("example.txt","w") --set f as default output io.output(f) -- set the buffer size of 8K size = 2^13 f:setvbuf("full", size) -- write the contents io.write("Welcome to tutorialspoint.com", "\n") io.write("Simply Easy Learning", "\n") -- flush the written Output io.flush() -- close the file handle io.close(f) end -- write the file writeFile() print("Content written to the file successfully.")
Output
When the above code is built and executed, it produces the following result −
Content written to the file successfully.
Example - Use of setvbuf() and flush() method in Complete Model
Let us now see how to write a file.
main.lua
-- write a file content function writeFile() -- Opens a file in write mode, -- create file if not present -- overwrite content of file if present f = io.open("example.txt","w") -- set the buffer size of 8K size = 2^13 f:setvbuf("full", size) -- write the contents f:write("Welcome to tutorialspoint.com", "\n") f:write("Simply Easy Learning", "\n") -- flush the written Output f:flush() -- close the file handle f:close() end -- write the file writeFile() print("Content written to the file successfully.")
Output
When the above code is built and executed, it produces the following result −
Content written to the file successfully.