Hello world/Newline omission: Difference between revisions
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In other words, the Fortran approach for output was <carriage control><output text> rather than the <output text><carriage control> sequence, that now has to be suppressed by the "advance = 'no'" facility. |
In other words, the Fortran approach for output was <carriage control><output text> rather than the <output text><carriage control> sequence, that now has to be suppressed by the "advance = 'no'" facility. |
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=={{header|FreeBASIC}}== |
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<lang freebasic> |
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' FB 1.05.0 Win64 |
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Print "Goodbye, World!"; '' the trailing semi-colon suppresses the new line |
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Sleep |
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</lang> |
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=={{header|Frink}}== |
=={{header|Frink}}== |
Revision as of 11:06, 24 October 2016
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
Some languages automatically insert a newline after outputting a string, unless measures are taken to prevent its output.
- Task
Display the string Goodbye, World!
without a trailing newline.
- Related tasks
ACL2
<lang lisp>(cw "Goodbye, World!")</lang>
Ada
<lang ada> with Ada.Text_IO;
procedure Goodbye_World is begin
Ada.Text_IO.Put("Goodbye, World!");
end Goodbye_World; </lang>
ALGOL 68
This works with Algol68 Genie 2.8.2 and above. Earlier versions appended a gratuitous newline on unflushed output when the program terminated. <lang algol68>BEGIN
print ("Goodbye, World!")
END</lang>
ATS
<lang ATS>implement main0 () = print "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
AutoHotkey
<lang AHK>DllCall("AllocConsole") FileAppend, Goodbye`, World!, CONOUT$ ; No newline outputted MsgBox</lang>
AutoIt
<lang AutoIt> ConsoleWrite("Goodbye, World!") </lang>
AWK
<lang AWK> BEGIN { printf("Goodbye, World!") } </lang>
Axe
<lang axe>Disp "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
BASIC
<lang basic>10 REM The trailing semicolon prevents a newline 20 PRINT "Goodbye, World!";</lang>
Applesoft BASIC
<lang ApplesoftBasic>PRINT "GOODBYE, WORLD!";</lang>
BASIC256
Output all on a single line. <lang BASIC256>print "Goodbye,"; print " "; print "World!";</lang>
Batch File
Under normal circumstances, when delayed expansion is disabled
The quoted form guarantees there are no hidden trailing spaces after World!
<lang dos><nul set/p"=Goodbye, World!"
<nul set/p=Goodbye, World!</lang>
If delayed expansion is enabled, then the ! must be escaped
Escape once if quoted form, twice if unquoted.
<lang dos>setlocal enableDelayedExpansion
<nul set/p"=Goodbye, World^!"
<nul set/p=Goodbye, World^^^!</lang>
BBC BASIC
<lang bbcbasic> REM BBC BASIC accepts the standard trailing semicolon:
PRINT "Goodbye World!"; REM One could also output the characters individually: GW$ = "Goodbye World!" FOR i% = 1 TO LEN(GW$) VDU ASCMID$(GW$, i%) NEXT</lang>
beeswax
<lang bweeswax>_`Goodbye, World!</lang>
beeswax prints everything without appending a newline character. beeswax has an instruction to explicitely print a newline character: N
.
Bracmat
<lang bracmat>put$"Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Brainf***
One option was to copy the code from the regular Hello World version and omit the last period, but one of the nicer things about the language is that no matter how simple your program is, if it's more than a few characters long, it's probably unique. So here's yet another version of Goodbye, World in Brainf***. <lang bf>>+++++[>++++>+>+>++++>>+++<<<+<+<++[>++>+++>+++>++++>+>+[<]>>-]<-]>> +.>>+..<.--.++>>+.<<+.>>>-.>++.[<]++++[>++++<-]>.>>.+++.------.<-.[>]<+.[-] [G oo d b y e , W o r l d !]</lang>
C
In C, we do not get a newline unless we embed one: <lang c>#include <stdio.h>
- include <stdlib.h>
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
(void) printf("Goodbye, World!"); /* No automatic newline */ return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}</lang>
However ISO C leaves it up to implementations to define whether or not the last line of a text stream requires a new-line. This means that the C can be targetted to environments where this task is impossible to implement, at least with a direct text stream manipulation like this.
C#
<lang csharp>using System;
class Program {
static void Main(string[] args) { //Using Console.WriteLine() will append a newline Console.WriteLine("Goodbye, World!");
//Using Console.Write() will not append a newline Console.Write("Goodbye, World!"); }
}</lang>
C++
<lang cpp>#include <iostream>
int main() {
std::cout << "Goodbye, World!"; return 0;
}</lang>
Clipper
<lang Clipper>?? "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Clojure
<lang clojure>(print "Goodbye, World!")</lang>
COBOL
<lang cobol>IDENTIFICATION DIVISION. PROGRAM-ID. GOODBYE-WORLD.
PROCEDURE DIVISION. DISPLAY 'Goodbye, World!'
WITH NO ADVANCING
END-DISPLAY . STOP RUN.</lang>
CoffeeScript
Node JS: <lang coffeescript>process.stdout.write "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Common Lisp
<lang lisp>(princ "Goodbye, World!")</lang>
Creative Basic
<lang Creative Basic> 'In a window
DEF Win:WINDOW DEF Close:CHAR DEF ScreenSizeX,ScreenSizeY:INT
GETSCREENSIZE(ScreenSizeX,ScreenSizeY)
WINDOW Win,0,0,ScreenSizeX,ScreenSizeY,0,0,"Goodbye program",MainHandler
PRINT Win,"Goodbye, World!" 'Prints in the upper left corner of the window (position 0,0). PRINT"Win," I ride off into the sunset."
'There does not appear to be a means of starting a new line when printing in a window, other than by using the MOVE command. 'Therefore, both sentences here will print on the same line, i.e., in the same vertical position.
WAITUNTIL Close=1
CLOSEWINDOW Win
END
SUB MainHandler
IF @CLASS=@IDCLOSEWINDOW THEN Close=1
RETURN
'In the console
OPENCONSOLE
'Insert a trailing comma. PRINT"Goodbye, World!", PRINT" I ride off into the sunset."
PRINT:PRINT"Press any key to end."
DO:UNTIL INKEY$<>""
CLOSECONSOLE
'Since this a Cbasic console program. END </lang>
D
<lang D>import std.stdio;
void main() {
write("Goodbye, World!");
}</lang>
Déjà Vu
<lang dejavu>!print\ "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Delphi
<lang Delphi>program Project1;
{$APPTYPE CONSOLE}
begin
Write('Goodbye, World!');
end.</lang>
DWScript
<lang Delphi>Print('Goodbye, World!');</lang>
Dylan.NET
One Line version: <lang Dylan.NET>Console::Write("Goodbye, World!")</lang> Goodbye World Program: <lang Dylan.NET> //compile using the new dylan.NET v, 11.5.1.2 or later //use mono to run the compiler
- refstdasm mscorlib.dll
import System
assembly gdbyeex exe ver 1.2.0.0
class public Program
method public static void main() Console::Write("Goodbye, World!") end method
end class </lang>
EchoLisp
<lang lisp> (begin
(write "GoodBye, World") (write "Next on same line"))
</lang>
Elixir
<lang elixir> IO.write "Goodbye, World!" </lang>
Emacs Lisp
<lang Emacs Lisp> (insert "Goodbye, World!")
</lang>
Output:
Goodbye, World!
Erlang
In erlang a newline must be specified in the format string. <lang erlang>io:format("Goodbye, world!").</lang>
ERRE
<lang ERRE> ....... PRINT("Goodbye, World!";) ....... </lang>
Euphoria
<lang euphoria>-- In Euphoria puts() does not insert a newline character after outputting a string puts(1,"Goodbye, world!")</lang>
F#
<lang fsharp> // A program that will run in the interpreter (fsi.exe) printf "Goodbye, World!";;
// A compiled program [<EntryPoint>] let main args =
printf "Goodbye, World!" 0
</lang>
Factor
<lang factor>USE: io "Goodbye, World!" write</lang>
Falcon
With the print() function: <lang falcon>print("Goodbye, World!")</lang> Or via "fast print": <lang falcon>>> "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Fantom
<lang fantom> class Main {
Void main() { echo("Goodbye, World!") }
} </lang>
FOCAL
FOCAL does not insert a newline unless we specifically request one. <lang focal>TYPE "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Forth
<lang Forth>\ The Forth word ." does not insert a newline character after outputting a string ." Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Fortran
<lang Fortran>program bye
write (*,'(a)',advance='no') 'Goodbye, World!'
end program bye</lang>
The "advance" facility was introduced with F90, as was the ability to specify format instructions (the '(A)'
part) without a separate FORMAT statement. Earlier, there was a common extension:
<lang Fortran> WRITE (6,1) "Goodbye, World!"
1 FORMAT (A,$) END</lang>
In this, the FORMAT instruction is to accept alphabetic text (the A) from the WRITE statement, followed by the special $ item (of no mnemonic form) which signified that there was not to be any new line action at the end of the output. This sort of thing is useful when writing a prompt to the screen so that the input of the response appears on the same screen line. The text could also have been incorporated into the FORMAT statement, which would be useful if there were many WRITE statements scattered about that were to send forth the same text.
These facilities only became of interest when, instead of card decks and lineprinters, I/O involved a keyboard and screen with both input and output appearing on the same screen. Thus, in earlier Fortran usage, the issue would not arise for output to a lineprinter, because it was already the case: a line written to the lineprinter was not followed by a end-of-line/start-new-line sort of action by the lineprinter. It stayed put on the line just written. It was the following output to the lineprinter that would state "advance one" (or two, or, no) lines at the start of its output. This was the "carriage control character", and a 1 signified "skip to top-of-form" which is to say, start a new page.
In other words, the Fortran approach for output was <carriage control><output text> rather than the <output text><carriage control> sequence, that now has to be suppressed by the "advance = 'no'" facility.
FreeBASIC
<lang freebasic> ' FB 1.05.0 Win64
Print "Goodbye, World!"; the trailing semi-colon suppresses the new line Sleep </lang>
Frink
<lang Frink>print["Goodbye, World!"]</lang>
gecho
<lang gecho>'Hello, <> 'world! print</lang>
GML
<lang lisp>show_message("Goodbye, World!")</lang>
Go
<lang go>package main
import "fmt"
func main() { fmt.Print("Goodbye, World!") }</lang>
Groovy
<lang groovy>print "Goodbye, world"</lang>
GUISS
In Graphical User Interface Support Script, we specify a newline, if we want one. The following will not produce a newline: <lang GUISS>Start,Programs,Accessories,Notepad,Type:Goodbye World[pling]</lang>
Harbour
<lang visualfoxpro>?? "Goodbye, world" or QQout( "Goodbye, world" ) </lang>
Haskell
<lang haskell>main = putStr "Goodbye, world"</lang>
Icon and Unicon
Native output in Icon and Unicon is performed via the write and writes procedures. The write procedure terminates each line with both a return and newline (for consistency across platforms). The writes procedure omits this. Additionally, the programming library has a series of printf procedures as well. <lang Icon>procedure main()
writes("Goodbye, World!")
end</lang>
Io
<lang io> write("Goodbye, World!") </lang>
IWBASIC
<lang IWBASIC> 'In a window
DEF Win:WINDOW DEF Close:CHAR DEF ScreenSizeX,ScreenSizeY:UINT
GETSCREENSIZE(ScreenSizeX,ScreenSizeY)
OPENWINDOW Win,0,0,ScreenSizeX,ScreenSizeY,NULL,NULL,"Goodbye program",&MainHandler
PRINT Win,"Goodbye, World!" 'Prints in upper left corner of the window (position 0,0). PRINT Win," You won't have this program to kick around anymore."
'There does not appear to be a means of starting a new line when printing in a window, other than by using the MOVE command. 'Therefore, both sentences here will print on the same line, i.e., in the same vertical position.
WAITUNTIL Close=1
CLOSEWINDOW Win
END
SUB MainHandler
IF @MESSAGE=@IDCLOSEWINDOW THEN Close=1
RETURN ENDSUB
'In the console
OPENCONSOLE
'by inserting a trailing comma. PRINT"Goodbye, World!", PRINT" You won't have this program to kick around anymore."
PRINT:PRINT
'A press any key to continue message is automatic in a program compiled as console only. 'I presume the compiler adds the code. CLOSECONSOLE
'Since this an IWBASIC console program. END </lang>
J
On a linux system, you can use 1!:3 because stdout is a file:
<lang j> 'Goodbye, World!' 1!:3 <'/proc/self/fd/1'
Goodbye, World! </lang>
However, J works in environments other than Linux, so...
Solution:prompt
from the misc package.
Example:<lang j> load 'general/misc/prompt'
prompt 'Goodbye, World!'
Goodbye, World!</lang> Notes: J programs are normally run from a REPL, or session manager, which comes in several flavors. The traditional commandline-based terminal (jconsole), one of several desktop applications (jqt for the current version of J, jgtk and jwd for older but still supported versions), a web-based frontend (jhs), and various mobile apps (J for iOS, Android).
The specific session manager being used changes the context and therefore answer to this task. For example, when using J from a browser (including mobile browsers) newlines are omitted by default. Further, J provides strong tools for coalescing results and manipulating them prior to output, so newline elimination would typically happen before output rather than after.
With that said, prompt
handles the most common cases (using binary output for jconsole, so no newline is appended; adjusting the REPL prompt in the desktop apps to to elide the newline which is normally included by default, etc).
For truly automated processes, you'd almost always want this kind of functionality (omitting the newline when printing) in a file- or stream-oriented application. For those cases, the simple text 1!:3 file
will append the text to the referenced file verbatim, without inserting any extra newlines.
So, if a J programmer were asked to solve this task, the right approach would be to ask why that is needed, and then craft a solution appropriate to that situation.
Jack
<lang jack>class Main {
function void main () { do Output.printString("Goodbye, World!");und return; }
}</lang>
Java
<lang java>public class HelloWorld {
public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.print("Goodbye, World!"); }
}</lang>
JavaScript
Node JS: <lang javascript>process.stdout.write("Goodbye, World!");</lang>
jq
The "-j" command-line option suppresses the newline that would otherwise be printed, e.g. if "$" is the command-line prompt: <lang sh>$ jq -n -j '"Goodbye, World!"' Goodbye, World!$ </lang> The trailing "$" is the command-line prompt.
Similarly: <lang sh>$ echo '"Goodbye, World!"' | jq -j Goodbye, World!$ </lang>
Julia
Julia provides a println
function which appends a newline, and a print
function which doesn't:
<lang julia>print("Goodbye, World!")</lang>
Kotlin
<lang scala>fun main(args: Array<String>) = print("Goodbye, World!")</lang>
Lasso
Lasso provides a stdoutnl
method that prints a trailing newline, and a stdout
method that does not:
<lang lasso>stdout("Goodbye, World!")</lang>
LFE
<lang lisp> (io:format "Goodbye, World") </lang>
Liberty BASIC
A trailing semicolon prevents a newline <lang lb>print "Goodbye, World!"; </lang>
Limbo
<lang limbo>implement HelloWorld;
include "sys.m"; sys: Sys; include "draw.m";
HelloWorld: module { init: fn(nil: ref Draw->Context, nil: list of string); };
init(nil: ref Draw->Context, nil: list of string) { sys = load Sys Sys->PATH; sys->print("Goodbye, World!"); # No automatic newline. }</lang>
Logtalk
No action is necessary to avoid an unwanted newline. <lang logtalk>
- - object(error_message).
% the initialization/1 directive argument is automatically executed % when the object is compiled loaded into memory: :- initialization(write('Goodbye, World!')).
- - end_object.
</lang>
Lua
<lang lua>io.write("Goodbye, World!")</lang>
m4
(Quoted) text is issued verbatim, "dnl" suppresses all input until and including the next newline. Simply creating an input without a trailing newline would of course accomplish the same task.
<lang m4>`Goodbye, World!'dnl</lang>
Maple
<lang Maple> printf( "Goodbye, World!" ); </lang>
Mathematica / Wolfram Language
<lang Mathematica>NotebookWrite[EvaluationNotebook[], "Goodbye, World!"]</lang> Another one that works in scripts: <lang Mathematica>WriteString[$Output, "Goodbye, World!"]</lang>
MATLAB / Octave
<lang Matlab> fprintf('Goodbye, World!');</lang>
mIRC Scripting Language
<lang mirc>echo -ag Goodbye, World!</lang>
ML/I
Simple solution
In ML/I, if there isn't a newline in the input, there won't be one in the output; so a simple solution is this (although it's hard to see that there isn't a newline). <lang ML/I>Goodbye, World!</lang>
More sophisticated solution
To make it clearer, we can define an ML/I skip to delete itself and an immediately following newline. <lang ML/I>MCSKIP " WITH " NL Goodbye, World!""</lang>
Nemerle
<lang Nemerle>using System.Console;
module Hello {
// as with C#, Write() does not append a newline Write("Goodbye, world!");
// equivalently Write("Goodbye, "); Write("world!");
}</lang>
NetRexx
<lang NetRexx>/* NetRexx */ options replace format comments java crossref symbols binary
say 'Goodbye, World!\-' </lang>
NewLISP
<lang NewLISP>(print "Goodbye, World!")</lang>
Nim
<lang nim>stdout.write "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Oberon-2
<lang oberon2> MODULE HelloWorld; IMPORT Out; BEGIN
Out.String("Goodbye, world!")
END HelloWorld. </lang>
Objeck
<lang objeck> bundle Default {
class SayGoodbye { function : Main(args : String[]) ~ Nil { "Goodbye, World!"->Print(); } }
} </lang>
OCaml
In OCaml, the function print_endline
prints a string followed by a newline character on the standard output and flush the standard output. And the function print_string
just prints a string with nothing additional.
<lang ocaml>print_string "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Oforth
<lang Oforth>"Goodbye, World!" print</lang>
OOC
To omit the trailing newline use print instead of println: <lang ooc>main: func {
"Goodbye, World!" print()
}</lang>
Oxygene
<lang oxygene> namespace HelloWorld;
interface
type
HelloWorld = class public class method Main; end;
implementation
class method HelloWorld.Main; begin
Console.Write('Farewell, '); Console.Write('cruel '); Console.WriteLine('world!');
end;
end. </lang>
>HelloWorld.exe Farewell, cruel world!
Panoramic
<lang Panoramic> rem insert a trailing semicolon. print "Goodbye, World!"; print " Nice having known you."</lang>
PARI/GP
<lang parigp>print1("Goodbye, World!")</lang>
Pascal
<lang pascal>program NewLineOmission(output);
begin
write('Goodbye, World!');
end.</lang> Output:
% ./NewLineOmission Goodbye, World!%
PASM
<lang pasm>print "Goodbye World!" # Newlines do not occur unless we embed them end</lang>
Perl
<lang perl>print "Goodbye, World!"; # A newline does not occur automatically</lang>
Perl 6
A newline is not added automatically to print or printf <lang perl6>print "Goodbye, World!"; printf "%s", "Goodbye, World!";</lang>
Phix
<lang Phix>puts(1,"Goodbye, World!")</lang>
PHL
Printf doesn't add newline automatically.
<lang phl>module helloworld_noln; extern printf;
@Integer main [
printf("Goodbye, World!"); return 0;
]</lang>
PicoLisp
<lang PicoLisp>(prin "Goodbye, World!")</lang>
Pict
<lang pict>(pr "Hello World!");</lang>
PL/I
<lang PL/I> put ('Goodbye, World!'); </lang>
PowerShell
<lang PowerShell>Write-Host -NoNewLine "Goodbye, " Write-Host -NoNewLine "World!"</lang>
- Output:
Goodbye, World!PS C:\>
PureBasic
<lang PureBasic>OpenConsole() Print("Goodbye, World!") Input() ;wait for enter key to be pressed</lang>
Python
<lang python>import sys sys.stdout.write("Goodbye, World!")</lang>
<lang python>print("Goodbye, World!", end="")</lang>
Ra
<lang Ra> class HelloWorld **Prints "Goodbye, World!" without a new line**
on start
print "Goodbye, World!" without new line </lang>
Racket
<lang Racket>#lang racket (display "Goodbye, World!")</lang>
REBOL
<lang REBOL>prin "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Red
<lang Red>prin "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Retro
<lang Retro>"Goodbye, World!" puts</lang>
REXX
It should be noted that upon a REXX program completion, any text left pending without a C/R (or newline) is followed by a
blank line so as to not leave the state of the terminal with malformed "text lines" (which can be followed by other text
(lines) from a calling program(s), or the operating system (shell) which is usually some sort of a "prompt" text string.
<lang rexx>/*REXX pgm displays a "Goodbye, World!" without a trailing newline. */
call charout ,'Goodbye, World!'</lang>
Ring
<lang ring>see "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Ruby
<lang ruby>print "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Run BASIC
<lang RunBasic>print "Goodbye, World!";</lang>
Rust
<lang rust>fn main () {
print!("Goodbye, World!");
}</lang>
Salmon
<lang Salmon>print("Goodbye, World!");</lang>
Scala
Ad hoc REPL solution
Ad hoc solution as REPL script. Type this in a REPL session: <lang Scala>print("Goodbye, World!")</lang>
Scheme
<lang scheme>(display "Goodbye, World!")</lang>
Seed7
<lang seed7>$ include "seed7_05.s7i";
const proc: main is func
begin write("Goodbye, World!"); end func;</lang>
Sidef
<lang ruby>print "Goodbye, World!";</lang> or: <lang ruby>"%s".printf("Goodbye, World!");</lang>
Smalltalk
<lang smalltalk> Transcript show: 'Goodbye, World!'. </lang>
Standard ML
<lang sml>print "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Swift
<lang swift>print("Goodbye, World!", terminator: "")</lang>
<lang swift>print("Goodbye, World!")</lang>
Tcl
<lang tcl>puts -nonewline "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Transact-SQL
As an output statement <lang Transact-SQL> PRINT 'Goodby, World!'</lang> or: As a result set <lang Transact-SQL> select 'Goodby, World!'</lang>
TUSCRIPT
<lang tuscript> $$ MODE TUSCRIPT PRINT "Goodbye, World!" </lang> Output:
Goodbye, World!
TXR
Possible using access to standard output stream via TXR Lisp: <lang bash>$ txr -e '(put-string "Goodbye, world!")' Goodbye, world!$</lang>
UNIX Shell
The echo command is not portable, and echo -n
is not guaranteed to prevent a newline from occuring. With the original Bourne Shell, echo -n "Goodbye, World!"
prints -n Goodbye, World!
with a newline. So use a printf instead.
<lang bash>printf "Goodbye, World!" # This works. There is no newline. printf %s "-hyphens and % signs" # Use %s with arbitrary strings.</lang>
Unfortunately, older systems where you have to rely on vanilla Bourne shell may not have a printf command, either. It's possible that there is no command available to complete the task, but only on very old systems. For the rest, one of these two should work:
<lang bash>echo -n 'Goodbye, World!'</lang> or <lang bash>echo 'Goodbye, World!\c'</lang>
The print command, from the Korn Shell, would work well, but most shells have no print command. (With pdksh, print is slightly faster than printf because print runs a built-in command, but printf forks an external command. With ksh93 and zsh, print and printf are both built-in commands.)
<lang bash>print -n "Goodbye, World!" print -nr -- "-hyphens and \backslashes"</lang>
C Shell
C Shell does support echo -n
and omits the newline.
<lang csh>echo -n "Goodbye, World!" echo -n "-hyphens and \backslashes"</lang>
Ursa
Ursa doesn't output a newline to an I/O device by default, so simply omitting an endl object at the end of the output stream is all that's needed. <lang ursa>out "goodbye world!" console</lang>
Vim Script
<lang vim>echon "Goodbye, World!"</lang>
Web 68
Use the command 'tang -V hello.w68', then 'chmod +x hello.a68', then './hello.a68'
<lang web68>@ @a@=#!/usr/bin/a68g -nowarn@>@\BEGIN print("Hello World") END</lang>
Wren
<lang wren>System.write("Goodbye, World!")</lang>
XLISP
Either <lang scheme>(display "Goodbye, World!")</lang> or <lang lisp>(princ "Goodbye, World!")</lang>
XPL0
<lang XPL0>code Text=12; Text(0, "Goodbye, World!")</lang>
zkl
<lang zkl>print("Goodbye, World!"); Console.write("Goodbye, World!");</lang>
ZX Spectrum Basic
<lang basic>10 REM The trailing semicolon prevents a newline 20 PRINT "Goodbye, World!";</lang>
- Programming Tasks
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- Gecho examples needing attention
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- PASM
- Perl
- Perl 6
- Phix
- PHL
- PicoLisp
- Pict
- PL/I
- PowerShell
- PureBasic
- Python
- Ra
- Racket
- REBOL
- Red
- Retro
- REXX
- Ring
- Ruby
- Run BASIC
- Rust
- Salmon
- Scala
- Scheme
- Seed7
- Sidef
- Smalltalk
- Standard ML
- Swift
- Tcl
- Transact-SQL
- Transact-SQL examples needing attention
- TUSCRIPT
- TXR
- UNIX Shell
- C Shell
- Ursa
- Vim Script
- Web 68
- Web 68 examples needing attention
- Wren
- XLISP
- XPL0
- Zkl
- ZX Spectrum Basic
- PHP/Omit