// Writing files in Go follows similar patterns to the // ones we saw earlier for reading. package main import ( "bufio" "fmt" "io/ioutil" "os" ) func check(e error) { if e != nil { panic(e) } } func main() { // To start, here's how to dump a string (or just // bytes) into a file. d1 := []byte("hello\ngo\n") err := ioutil.WriteFile("/tmp/dat1", d1, 0644) check(err) // For more granular writes, open a file for writing. f, err := os.Create("/tmp/dat2") check(err) // It's idiomatic to defer a `Close` immediately // after opening a file. defer f.Close() // You can `Write` byte slices as you'd expect. d2 := []byte{115, 111, 109, 101, 10} n2, err := f.Write(d2) check(err) fmt.Printf("wrote %d bytes\n", n2) // A `WriteString` is also available. n3, err := f.WriteString("writes\n") fmt.Printf("wrote %d bytes\n", n3) // Issue a `Sync` to flush writes to stable storage. f.Sync() // `bufio` provides buffered writers in addition // to the buffered readers we saw earlier. w := bufio.NewWriter(f) n4, err := w.WriteString("buffered\n") fmt.Printf("wrote %d bytes\n", n4) // Use `Flush` to ensure all buffered operations have // been applied to the underlying writer. w.Flush() }