Common Lisp the Language, 2nd Edition


next up previous contents index
Next: Random-States Up: Data Types Previous: Pathnames

2.10. Streams

A stream is a source or sink of data, typically characters or bytes. Nearly all functions that perform I/O do so with respect to a specified stream. The function open takes a pathname and returns a stream connected to the file specified by the pathname. There are a number of standard streams that are used by default for various purposes. See chapter 21.

change_begin
X3J13 voted in January 1989 (STREAM-ACCESS)   to introduce subtypes of type stream: broadcast-stream, concatenated-stream, echo-stream, synonym-stream, string-stream, file-stream, and two-way-stream are disjoint subtypes of stream. Note particularly that a synonym stream is always and only of type synonym-stream, regardless of the type of the stream for which it is a synonym.
change_end


AI.Repository@cs.cmu.edu