Next: Noweb reference syntax, Previous: Header arguments, Up: Working With Source Code [Contents][Index]
The way in which results are handled depends on whether a
session is invoked, as well as on whether :results
value or :results output is used. The
following table shows the table possibilities. For a full listing
of the possible results header arguments see results.
| Non-session | Session | |
:results value |
value of last expression | value of last expression |
:results output |
contents of STDOUT | concatenation of interpreter output |
Note: With :results value, the result in both
:session and non-session is returned to Org mode as
a table (a one- or two-dimensional vector of strings or numbers)
when appropriate.
:results
valueThis is the default. Internally, the value is obtained by
wrapping the code in a function definition in the external
language, and evaluating that function. Therefore, code should be
written as if it were the body of such a function. In particular,
note that Python does not automatically return a value from a
function unless a return statement is present, and
so a ‘return’ statement will usually be
required in Python.
This is the only one of the four evaluation contexts in which the code is automatically wrapped in a function definition.
:results
outputThe code is passed to the interpreter as an external process, and the contents of the standard output stream are returned as text. (In certain languages this also contains the error output stream; this is an area for future work.)
:results
valueThe code is passed to an interpreter running as an interactive
Emacs inferior process. Only languages which provide tools for
interactive evaluation of code have session support, so some
language (e.g., C and ditaa) do not support the
:session header argument, and in other languages
(e.g., Python and Haskell) which have limitations on the code
which may be entered into interactive sessions, those limitations
apply to the code in code blocks using the :session
header argument as well.
Unless the :results output option is supplied
(see below) the result returned is the result of the last
evaluation performed by the interpreter. (This is obtained in a
language-specific manner: the value of the variable
_ in Python and Ruby, and the value of
.Last.value in R).
:results
outputThe code is passed to the interpreter running as an
interactive Emacs inferior process. The result returned is the
concatenation of the sequence of (text) output from the
interactive interpreter. Notice that this is not necessarily the
same as what would be sent to STDOUT if the same
code were passed to a non-interactive interpreter running as an
external process. For example, compare the following two
blocks:
#+BEGIN_SRC python :results output print "hello" 2 print "bye" #+END_SRC #+RESULTS: : hello : bye
In non-session mode, the “2” is not printed and does not appear.
#+BEGIN_SRC python :results output :session print "hello" 2 print "bye" #+END_SRC #+RESULTS: : hello : 2 : bye
But in :session mode, the interactive interpreter
receives input “2” and prints out its value,
“2”. (Indeed, the other print statements are
unnecessary here).
Next: Noweb reference syntax, Previous: Header arguments, Up: Working With Source Code [Contents][Index]