LINE INPUT

From QB64 Phoenix Edition Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The LINE INPUT statement requests a STRING keyboard entry from a program user.


Syntax

LINE INPUT [;] "[text prompt or question]"{,|;} stringVariable$
LINE INPUT ; stringVariable$


Parameters

  • A semicolon immediately after LINE INPUT stops the cursor after the entry and prevents screen roll on the lowest two screen rows.
  • text prompt or question is optional, but quotes are necessary unless just a semicolon is used before the stringVariable$.
  • Requires only one string variable to hold the entire text entry.


Description

  • Cannot use numerical type variables or comma separated variable lists for multiple entries.
  • Allows commas and quotation marks in the user input, unlike INPUT where commas denote extra input values and quotes delimit strings.
  • The statement halts the program until an entry is made. Pressing Enter ends the entry and code execution resumes.
  • LINE INPUT does not trim off leading or trailing spaces in the string entry like INPUT string returns.
  • Use VAL to convert string numbers and &O (octal), &H (hexadecimal) or &B (binary) prefixed entries into numerical values.
  • Use _DEST _CONSOLE before LINE INPUT statements to receive input from a console window.
  • Note: QB64 will not remove CHR$(0) from the end of LINE INPUT string return values like QBasic did.


Examples

Example: Preventing screen roll after an input entry on the bottom 2 screen rows.

SCREEN 12

COLOR 14: LOCATE 29, 2 '          place dursor at beginning of prompt liine
PRINT "Enter a name to search for... "; 'print prompt on screen
COLOR 15: LINE INPUT ; "", name$ '       get search name from user
LOCATE 29, 2: PRINT SPC(78); '       erase previous prompt
n$ = UCASE$(name$) '                 convert search name to upper case
COLOR 14'                        change foreground color to yellow
LOCATE 29, 2: PRINT "Searching..."; 'print message
SLEEP








Enter a name to search for...
Explanation: The red semicolon after LINE INPUT acts like a semicolon after a PRINT, which keeps the print cursor on the same row.


See also



Navigation:
Main Page with Articles and Tutorials
Keyword Reference - Alphabetical
Keyword Reference - By usage