17db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:mod:`string` --- Common string operations 27db96d56Sopenharmony_ci========================================== 37db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 47db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. module:: string 57db96d56Sopenharmony_ci :synopsis: Common string operations. 67db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 77db96d56Sopenharmony_ci**Source code:** :source:`Lib/string.py` 87db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 97db96d56Sopenharmony_ci-------------- 107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. seealso:: 137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci :ref:`textseq` 157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci :ref:`string-methods` 177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 187db96d56Sopenharmony_ciString constants 197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci---------------- 207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 217db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe constants defined in this module are: 227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: ascii_letters 257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The concatenation of the :const:`ascii_lowercase` and :const:`ascii_uppercase` 277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci constants described below. This value is not locale-dependent. 287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: ascii_lowercase 317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The lowercase letters ``'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz'``. This value is not 337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci locale-dependent and will not change. 347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: ascii_uppercase 377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The uppercase letters ``'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ'``. This value is not 397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci locale-dependent and will not change. 407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: digits 437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The string ``'0123456789'``. 457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: hexdigits 487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The string ``'0123456789abcdefABCDEF'``. 507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: octdigits 537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The string ``'01234567'``. 557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: punctuation 587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci String of ASCII characters which are considered punctuation characters 607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci in the ``C`` locale: ``!"#$%&'()*+,-./:;<=>?@[\]^_`{|}~``. 617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: printable 637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci String of ASCII characters which are considered printable. This is a 657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci combination of :const:`digits`, :const:`ascii_letters`, :const:`punctuation`, 667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci and :const:`whitespace`. 677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. data:: whitespace 707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci A string containing all ASCII characters that are considered whitespace. 727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci This includes the characters space, tab, linefeed, return, formfeed, and 737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci vertical tab. 747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. _string-formatting: 777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 787db96d56Sopenharmony_ciCustom String Formatting 797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci------------------------ 807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 817db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe built-in string class provides the ability to do complex variable 827db96d56Sopenharmony_cisubstitutions and value formatting via the :meth:`~str.format` method described in 837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:pep:`3101`. The :class:`Formatter` class in the :mod:`string` module allows 847db96d56Sopenharmony_ciyou to create and customize your own string formatting behaviors using the same 857db96d56Sopenharmony_ciimplementation as the built-in :meth:`~str.format` method. 867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Formatter 897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The :class:`Formatter` class has the following public methods: 917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. method:: format(format_string, /, *args, **kwargs) 937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The primary API method. It takes a format string and 957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci an arbitrary set of positional and keyword arguments. 967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci It is just a wrapper that calls :meth:`vformat`. 977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. versionchanged:: 3.7 997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci A format string argument is now :ref:`positional-only 1007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci <positional-only_parameter>`. 1017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. method:: vformat(format_string, args, kwargs) 1037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci This function does the actual work of formatting. It is exposed as a 1057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci separate function for cases where you want to pass in a predefined 1067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci dictionary of arguments, rather than unpacking and repacking the 1077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci dictionary as individual arguments using the ``*args`` and ``**kwargs`` 1087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci syntax. :meth:`vformat` does the work of breaking up the format string 1097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci into character data and replacement fields. It calls the various 1107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci methods described below. 1117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci In addition, the :class:`Formatter` defines a number of methods that are 1137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci intended to be replaced by subclasses: 1147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. method:: parse(format_string) 1167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Loop over the format_string and return an iterable of tuples 1187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci (*literal_text*, *field_name*, *format_spec*, *conversion*). This is used 1197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci by :meth:`vformat` to break the string into either literal text, or 1207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci replacement fields. 1217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The values in the tuple conceptually represent a span of literal text 1237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci followed by a single replacement field. If there is no literal text 1247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci (which can happen if two replacement fields occur consecutively), then 1257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci *literal_text* will be a zero-length string. If there is no replacement 1267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci field, then the values of *field_name*, *format_spec* and *conversion* 1277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci will be ``None``. 1287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. method:: get_field(field_name, args, kwargs) 1307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Given *field_name* as returned by :meth:`parse` (see above), convert it to 1327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci an object to be formatted. Returns a tuple (obj, used_key). The default 1337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci version takes strings of the form defined in :pep:`3101`, such as 1347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci "0[name]" or "label.title". *args* and *kwargs* are as passed in to 1357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci :meth:`vformat`. The return value *used_key* has the same meaning as the 1367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci *key* parameter to :meth:`get_value`. 1377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. method:: get_value(key, args, kwargs) 1397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Retrieve a given field value. The *key* argument will be either an 1417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci integer or a string. If it is an integer, it represents the index of the 1427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci positional argument in *args*; if it is a string, then it represents a 1437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci named argument in *kwargs*. 1447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The *args* parameter is set to the list of positional arguments to 1467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci :meth:`vformat`, and the *kwargs* parameter is set to the dictionary of 1477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci keyword arguments. 1487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci For compound field names, these functions are only called for the first 1507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci component of the field name; subsequent components are handled through 1517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci normal attribute and indexing operations. 1527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci So for example, the field expression '0.name' would cause 1547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci :meth:`get_value` to be called with a *key* argument of 0. The ``name`` 1557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci attribute will be looked up after :meth:`get_value` returns by calling the 1567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci built-in :func:`getattr` function. 1577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci If the index or keyword refers to an item that does not exist, then an 1597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci :exc:`IndexError` or :exc:`KeyError` should be raised. 1607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. method:: check_unused_args(used_args, args, kwargs) 1627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Implement checking for unused arguments if desired. The arguments to this 1647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci function is the set of all argument keys that were actually referred to in 1657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci the format string (integers for positional arguments, and strings for 1667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci named arguments), and a reference to the *args* and *kwargs* that was 1677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci passed to vformat. The set of unused args can be calculated from these 1687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci parameters. :meth:`check_unused_args` is assumed to raise an exception if 1697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci the check fails. 1707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. method:: format_field(value, format_spec) 1727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci :meth:`format_field` simply calls the global :func:`format` built-in. The 1747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci method is provided so that subclasses can override it. 1757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. method:: convert_field(value, conversion) 1777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Converts the value (returned by :meth:`get_field`) given a conversion type 1797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci (as in the tuple returned by the :meth:`parse` method). The default 1807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci version understands 's' (str), 'r' (repr) and 'a' (ascii) conversion 1817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci types. 1827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. _formatstrings: 1857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1867db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFormat String Syntax 1877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci-------------------- 1887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1897db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe :meth:`str.format` method and the :class:`Formatter` class share the same 1907db96d56Sopenharmony_cisyntax for format strings (although in the case of :class:`Formatter`, 1917db96d56Sopenharmony_cisubclasses can define their own format string syntax). The syntax is 1927db96d56Sopenharmony_cirelated to that of :ref:`formatted string literals <f-strings>`, but it is 1937db96d56Sopenharmony_ciless sophisticated and, in particular, does not support arbitrary expressions. 1947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 1957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. index:: 1967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci single: {} (curly brackets); in string formatting 1977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci single: . (dot); in string formatting 1987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci single: [] (square brackets); in string formatting 1997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci single: ! (exclamation); in string formatting 2007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci single: : (colon); in string formatting 2017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2027db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFormat strings contain "replacement fields" surrounded by curly braces ``{}``. 2037db96d56Sopenharmony_ciAnything that is not contained in braces is considered literal text, which is 2047db96d56Sopenharmony_cicopied unchanged to the output. If you need to include a brace character in the 2057db96d56Sopenharmony_ciliteral text, it can be escaped by doubling: ``{{`` and ``}}``. 2067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2077db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe grammar for a replacement field is as follows: 2087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. productionlist:: format-string 2107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci replacement_field: "{" [`field_name`] ["!" `conversion`] [":" `format_spec`] "}" 2117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci field_name: arg_name ("." `attribute_name` | "[" `element_index` "]")* 2127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci arg_name: [`identifier` | `digit`+] 2137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci attribute_name: `identifier` 2147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci element_index: `digit`+ | `index_string` 2157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci index_string: <any source character except "]"> + 2167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci conversion: "r" | "s" | "a" 2177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci format_spec: <described in the next section> 2187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2197db96d56Sopenharmony_ciIn less formal terms, the replacement field can start with a *field_name* that specifies 2207db96d56Sopenharmony_cithe object whose value is to be formatted and inserted 2217db96d56Sopenharmony_ciinto the output instead of the replacement field. 2227db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe *field_name* is optionally followed by a *conversion* field, which is 2237db96d56Sopenharmony_cipreceded by an exclamation point ``'!'``, and a *format_spec*, which is preceded 2247db96d56Sopenharmony_ciby a colon ``':'``. These specify a non-default format for the replacement value. 2257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2267db96d56Sopenharmony_ciSee also the :ref:`formatspec` section. 2277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2287db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe *field_name* itself begins with an *arg_name* that is either a number or a 2297db96d56Sopenharmony_cikeyword. If it's a number, it refers to a positional argument, and if it's a keyword, 2307db96d56Sopenharmony_ciit refers to a named keyword argument. If the numerical arg_names in a format string 2317db96d56Sopenharmony_ciare 0, 1, 2, ... in sequence, they can all be omitted (not just some) 2327db96d56Sopenharmony_ciand the numbers 0, 1, 2, ... will be automatically inserted in that order. 2337db96d56Sopenharmony_ciBecause *arg_name* is not quote-delimited, it is not possible to specify arbitrary 2347db96d56Sopenharmony_cidictionary keys (e.g., the strings ``'10'`` or ``':-]'``) within a format string. 2357db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe *arg_name* can be followed by any number of index or 2367db96d56Sopenharmony_ciattribute expressions. An expression of the form ``'.name'`` selects the named 2377db96d56Sopenharmony_ciattribute using :func:`getattr`, while an expression of the form ``'[index]'`` 2387db96d56Sopenharmony_cidoes an index lookup using :func:`__getitem__`. 2397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. versionchanged:: 3.1 2417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The positional argument specifiers can be omitted for :meth:`str.format`, 2427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci so ``'{} {}'.format(a, b)`` is equivalent to ``'{0} {1}'.format(a, b)``. 2437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. versionchanged:: 3.4 2457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The positional argument specifiers can be omitted for :class:`Formatter`. 2467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2477db96d56Sopenharmony_ciSome simple format string examples:: 2487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci "First, thou shalt count to {0}" # References first positional argument 2507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci "Bring me a {}" # Implicitly references the first positional argument 2517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci "From {} to {}" # Same as "From {0} to {1}" 2527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci "My quest is {name}" # References keyword argument 'name' 2537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci "Weight in tons {0.weight}" # 'weight' attribute of first positional arg 2547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci "Units destroyed: {players[0]}" # First element of keyword argument 'players'. 2557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2567db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe *conversion* field causes a type coercion before formatting. Normally, the 2577db96d56Sopenharmony_cijob of formatting a value is done by the :meth:`__format__` method of the value 2587db96d56Sopenharmony_ciitself. However, in some cases it is desirable to force a type to be formatted 2597db96d56Sopenharmony_cias a string, overriding its own definition of formatting. By converting the 2607db96d56Sopenharmony_civalue to a string before calling :meth:`__format__`, the normal formatting logic 2617db96d56Sopenharmony_ciis bypassed. 2627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2637db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThree conversion flags are currently supported: ``'!s'`` which calls :func:`str` 2647db96d56Sopenharmony_cion the value, ``'!r'`` which calls :func:`repr` and ``'!a'`` which calls 2657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:func:`ascii`. 2667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2677db96d56Sopenharmony_ciSome examples:: 2687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci "Harold's a clever {0!s}" # Calls str() on the argument first 2707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci "Bring out the holy {name!r}" # Calls repr() on the argument first 2717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci "More {!a}" # Calls ascii() on the argument first 2727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2737db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe *format_spec* field contains a specification of how the value should be 2747db96d56Sopenharmony_cipresented, including such details as field width, alignment, padding, decimal 2757db96d56Sopenharmony_ciprecision and so on. Each value type can define its own "formatting 2767db96d56Sopenharmony_cimini-language" or interpretation of the *format_spec*. 2777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2787db96d56Sopenharmony_ciMost built-in types support a common formatting mini-language, which is 2797db96d56Sopenharmony_cidescribed in the next section. 2807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2817db96d56Sopenharmony_ciA *format_spec* field can also include nested replacement fields within it. 2827db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThese nested replacement fields may contain a field name, conversion flag 2837db96d56Sopenharmony_ciand format specification, but deeper nesting is 2847db96d56Sopenharmony_cinot allowed. The replacement fields within the 2857db96d56Sopenharmony_ciformat_spec are substituted before the *format_spec* string is interpreted. 2867db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThis allows the formatting of a value to be dynamically specified. 2877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2887db96d56Sopenharmony_ciSee the :ref:`formatexamples` section for some examples. 2897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. _formatspec: 2927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2937db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFormat Specification Mini-Language 2947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 2957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 2967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci"Format specifications" are used within replacement fields contained within a 2977db96d56Sopenharmony_ciformat string to define how individual values are presented (see 2987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:ref:`formatstrings` and :ref:`f-strings`). 2997db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThey can also be passed directly to the built-in 3007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:func:`format` function. Each formattable type may define how the format 3017db96d56Sopenharmony_cispecification is to be interpreted. 3027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3037db96d56Sopenharmony_ciMost built-in types implement the following options for format specifications, 3047db96d56Sopenharmony_cialthough some of the formatting options are only supported by the numeric types. 3057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3067db96d56Sopenharmony_ciA general convention is that an empty format specification produces 3077db96d56Sopenharmony_cithe same result as if you had called :func:`str` on the value. A 3087db96d56Sopenharmony_cinon-empty format specification typically modifies the result. 3097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3107db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe general form of a *standard format specifier* is: 3117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. productionlist:: format-spec 3137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci format_spec: [[`fill`]`align`][`sign`]["z"]["#"]["0"][`width`][`grouping_option`]["." `precision`][`type`] 3147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci fill: <any character> 3157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci align: "<" | ">" | "=" | "^" 3167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci sign: "+" | "-" | " " 3177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci width: `digit`+ 3187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci grouping_option: "_" | "," 3197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci precision: `digit`+ 3207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci type: "b" | "c" | "d" | "e" | "E" | "f" | "F" | "g" | "G" | "n" | "o" | "s" | "x" | "X" | "%" 3217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3227db96d56Sopenharmony_ciIf a valid *align* value is specified, it can be preceded by a *fill* 3237db96d56Sopenharmony_cicharacter that can be any character and defaults to a space if omitted. 3247db96d56Sopenharmony_ciIt is not possible to use a literal curly brace ("``{``" or "``}``") as 3257db96d56Sopenharmony_cithe *fill* character in a :ref:`formatted string literal 3267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci<f-strings>` or when using the :meth:`str.format` 3277db96d56Sopenharmony_cimethod. However, it is possible to insert a curly brace 3287db96d56Sopenharmony_ciwith a nested replacement field. This limitation doesn't 3297db96d56Sopenharmony_ciaffect the :func:`format` function. 3307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3317db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe meaning of the various alignment options is as follows: 3327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. index:: 3347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci single: < (less); in string formatting 3357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci single: > (greater); in string formatting 3367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci single: = (equals); in string formatting 3377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci single: ^ (caret); in string formatting 3387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 3407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | Option | Meaning | 3417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +=========+==========================================================+ 3427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'<'`` | Forces the field to be left-aligned within the available | 3437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | space (this is the default for most objects). | 3447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 3457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'>'`` | Forces the field to be right-aligned within the | 3467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | available space (this is the default for numbers). | 3477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 3487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'='`` | Forces the padding to be placed after the sign (if any) | 3497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | but before the digits. This is used for printing fields | 3507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | in the form '+000000120'. This alignment option is only | 3517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | valid for numeric types. It becomes the default for | 3527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | numbers when '0' immediately precedes the field width. | 3537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 3547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'^'`` | Forces the field to be centered within the available | 3557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | space. | 3567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 3577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3587db96d56Sopenharmony_ciNote that unless a minimum field width is defined, the field width will always 3597db96d56Sopenharmony_cibe the same size as the data to fill it, so that the alignment option has no 3607db96d56Sopenharmony_cimeaning in this case. 3617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3627db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe *sign* option is only valid for number types, and can be one of the 3637db96d56Sopenharmony_cifollowing: 3647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. index:: 3667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci single: + (plus); in string formatting 3677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci single: - (minus); in string formatting 3687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci single: space; in string formatting 3697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 3717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | Option | Meaning | 3727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +=========+==========================================================+ 3737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'+'`` | indicates that a sign should be used for both | 3747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | positive as well as negative numbers. | 3757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 3767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'-'`` | indicates that a sign should be used only for negative | 3777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | numbers (this is the default behavior). | 3787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 3797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | space | indicates that a leading space should be used on | 3807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | positive numbers, and a minus sign on negative numbers. | 3817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 3827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. index:: single: z; in string formatting 3857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3867db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe ``'z'`` option coerces negative zero floating-point values to positive 3877db96d56Sopenharmony_cizero after rounding to the format precision. This option is only valid for 3887db96d56Sopenharmony_cifloating-point presentation types. 3897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. versionchanged:: 3.11 3917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Added the ``'z'`` option (see also :pep:`682`). 3927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. index:: single: # (hash); in string formatting 3947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3957db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe ``'#'`` option causes the "alternate form" to be used for the 3967db96d56Sopenharmony_ciconversion. The alternate form is defined differently for different 3977db96d56Sopenharmony_citypes. This option is only valid for integer, float and complex 3987db96d56Sopenharmony_citypes. For integers, when binary, octal, or hexadecimal output 3997db96d56Sopenharmony_ciis used, this option adds the respective prefix ``'0b'``, ``'0o'``, 4007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci``'0x'``, or ``'0X'`` to the output value. For float and complex the 4017db96d56Sopenharmony_cialternate form causes the result of the conversion to always contain a 4027db96d56Sopenharmony_cidecimal-point character, even if no digits follow it. Normally, a 4037db96d56Sopenharmony_cidecimal-point character appears in the result of these conversions 4047db96d56Sopenharmony_cionly if a digit follows it. In addition, for ``'g'`` and ``'G'`` 4057db96d56Sopenharmony_ciconversions, trailing zeros are not removed from the result. 4067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. index:: single: , (comma); in string formatting 4087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4097db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe ``','`` option signals the use of a comma for a thousands separator. 4107db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFor a locale aware separator, use the ``'n'`` integer presentation type 4117db96d56Sopenharmony_ciinstead. 4127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. versionchanged:: 3.1 4147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Added the ``','`` option (see also :pep:`378`). 4157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. index:: single: _ (underscore); in string formatting 4177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4187db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe ``'_'`` option signals the use of an underscore for a thousands 4197db96d56Sopenharmony_ciseparator for floating point presentation types and for integer 4207db96d56Sopenharmony_cipresentation type ``'d'``. For integer presentation types ``'b'``, 4217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci``'o'``, ``'x'``, and ``'X'``, underscores will be inserted every 4 4227db96d56Sopenharmony_cidigits. For other presentation types, specifying this option is an 4237db96d56Sopenharmony_cierror. 4247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. versionchanged:: 3.6 4267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Added the ``'_'`` option (see also :pep:`515`). 4277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci*width* is a decimal integer defining the minimum total field width, 4297db96d56Sopenharmony_ciincluding any prefixes, separators, and other formatting characters. 4307db96d56Sopenharmony_ciIf not specified, then the field width will be determined by the content. 4317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4327db96d56Sopenharmony_ciWhen no explicit alignment is given, preceding the *width* field by a zero 4337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci(``'0'``) character enables 4347db96d56Sopenharmony_cisign-aware zero-padding for numeric types. This is equivalent to a *fill* 4357db96d56Sopenharmony_cicharacter of ``'0'`` with an *alignment* type of ``'='``. 4367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. versionchanged:: 3.10 4387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Preceding the *width* field by ``'0'`` no longer affects the default 4397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci alignment for strings. 4407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4417db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe *precision* is a decimal integer indicating how many digits should be 4427db96d56Sopenharmony_cidisplayed after the decimal point for presentation types 4437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci``'f'`` and ``'F'``, or before and after the decimal point for presentation 4447db96d56Sopenharmony_citypes ``'g'`` or ``'G'``. For string presentation types the field 4457db96d56Sopenharmony_ciindicates the maximum field size - in other words, how many characters will be 4467db96d56Sopenharmony_ciused from the field content. The *precision* is not allowed for integer 4477db96d56Sopenharmony_cipresentation types. 4487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4497db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFinally, the *type* determines how the data should be presented. 4507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4517db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe available string presentation types are: 4527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 4547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | Type | Meaning | 4557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +=========+==========================================================+ 4567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'s'`` | String format. This is the default type for strings and | 4577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | may be omitted. | 4587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 4597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | None | The same as ``'s'``. | 4607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 4617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4627db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe available integer presentation types are: 4637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 4657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | Type | Meaning | 4667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +=========+==========================================================+ 4677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'b'`` | Binary format. Outputs the number in base 2. | 4687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 4697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'c'`` | Character. Converts the integer to the corresponding | 4707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | unicode character before printing. | 4717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 4727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'d'`` | Decimal Integer. Outputs the number in base 10. | 4737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 4747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'o'`` | Octal format. Outputs the number in base 8. | 4757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 4767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'x'`` | Hex format. Outputs the number in base 16, using | 4777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | lower-case letters for the digits above 9. | 4787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 4797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'X'`` | Hex format. Outputs the number in base 16, using | 4807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | upper-case letters for the digits above 9. | 4817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | In case ``'#'`` is specified, the prefix ``'0x'`` will | 4827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | be upper-cased to ``'0X'`` as well. | 4837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 4847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'n'`` | Number. This is the same as ``'d'``, except that it uses | 4857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | the current locale setting to insert the appropriate | 4867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | number separator characters. | 4877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 4887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | None | The same as ``'d'``. | 4897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 4907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4917db96d56Sopenharmony_ciIn addition to the above presentation types, integers can be formatted 4927db96d56Sopenharmony_ciwith the floating point presentation types listed below (except 4937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci``'n'`` and ``None``). When doing so, :func:`float` is used to convert the 4947db96d56Sopenharmony_ciinteger to a floating point number before formatting. 4957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4967db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe available presentation types for :class:`float` and 4977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:class:`~decimal.Decimal` values are: 4987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 4997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 5007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | Type | Meaning | 5017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +=========+==========================================================+ 5027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'e'`` | Scientific notation. For a given precision ``p``, | 5037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | formats the number in scientific notation with the | 5047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | letter 'e' separating the coefficient from the exponent. | 5057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | The coefficient has one digit before and ``p`` digits | 5067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | after the decimal point, for a total of ``p + 1`` | 5077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | significant digits. With no precision given, uses a | 5087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | precision of ``6`` digits after the decimal point for | 5097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | :class:`float`, and shows all coefficient digits | 5107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | for :class:`~decimal.Decimal`. If no digits follow the | 5117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | decimal point, the decimal point is also removed unless | 5127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | the ``#`` option is used. | 5137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 5147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'E'`` | Scientific notation. Same as ``'e'`` except it uses | 5157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | an upper case 'E' as the separator character. | 5167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 5177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'f'`` | Fixed-point notation. For a given precision ``p``, | 5187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | formats the number as a decimal number with exactly | 5197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | ``p`` digits following the decimal point. With no | 5207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | precision given, uses a precision of ``6`` digits after | 5217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | the decimal point for :class:`float`, and uses a | 5227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | precision large enough to show all coefficient digits | 5237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | for :class:`~decimal.Decimal`. If no digits follow the | 5247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | decimal point, the decimal point is also removed unless | 5257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | the ``#`` option is used. | 5267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 5277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'F'`` | Fixed-point notation. Same as ``'f'``, but converts | 5287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | ``nan`` to ``NAN`` and ``inf`` to ``INF``. | 5297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 5307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'g'`` | General format. For a given precision ``p >= 1``, | 5317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | this rounds the number to ``p`` significant digits and | 5327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | then formats the result in either fixed-point format | 5337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | or in scientific notation, depending on its magnitude. | 5347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | A precision of ``0`` is treated as equivalent to a | 5357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | precision of ``1``. | 5367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | | 5377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | The precise rules are as follows: suppose that the | 5387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | result formatted with presentation type ``'e'`` and | 5397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | precision ``p-1`` would have exponent ``exp``. Then, | 5407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | if ``m <= exp < p``, where ``m`` is -4 for floats and -6 | 5417db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | for :class:`Decimals <decimal.Decimal>`, the number is | 5427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | formatted with presentation type ``'f'`` and precision | 5437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | ``p-1-exp``. Otherwise, the number is formatted | 5447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | with presentation type ``'e'`` and precision ``p-1``. | 5457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | In both cases insignificant trailing zeros are removed | 5467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | from the significand, and the decimal point is also | 5477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | removed if there are no remaining digits following it, | 5487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | unless the ``'#'`` option is used. | 5497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | | 5507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | With no precision given, uses a precision of ``6`` | 5517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | significant digits for :class:`float`. For | 5527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | :class:`~decimal.Decimal`, the coefficient of the result | 5537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | is formed from the coefficient digits of the value; | 5547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | scientific notation is used for values smaller than | 5557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | ``1e-6`` in absolute value and values where the place | 5567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | value of the least significant digit is larger than 1, | 5577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | and fixed-point notation is used otherwise. | 5587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | | 5597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | Positive and negative infinity, positive and negative | 5607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | zero, and nans, are formatted as ``inf``, ``-inf``, | 5617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | ``0``, ``-0`` and ``nan`` respectively, regardless of | 5627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | the precision. | 5637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 5647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'G'`` | General format. Same as ``'g'`` except switches to | 5657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | ``'E'`` if the number gets too large. The | 5667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | representations of infinity and NaN are uppercased, too. | 5677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 5687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'n'`` | Number. This is the same as ``'g'``, except that it uses | 5697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | the current locale setting to insert the appropriate | 5707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | number separator characters. | 5717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 5727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | ``'%'`` | Percentage. Multiplies the number by 100 and displays | 5737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | in fixed (``'f'``) format, followed by a percent sign. | 5747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 5757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | None | For :class:`float` this is the same as ``'g'``, except | 5767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | that when fixed-point notation is used to format the | 5777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | result, it always includes at least one digit past the | 5787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | decimal point. The precision used is as large as needed | 5797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | to represent the given value faithfully. | 5807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | | 5817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | For :class:`~decimal.Decimal`, this is the same as | 5827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | either ``'g'`` or ``'G'`` depending on the value of | 5837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | ``context.capitals`` for the current decimal context. | 5847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | | 5857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | The overall effect is to match the output of :func:`str` | 5867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci | | as altered by the other format modifiers. | 5877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+ 5887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 5897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 5907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. _formatexamples: 5917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 5927db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFormat examples 5937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 5947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 5957db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThis section contains examples of the :meth:`str.format` syntax and 5967db96d56Sopenharmony_cicomparison with the old ``%``-formatting. 5977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 5987db96d56Sopenharmony_ciIn most of the cases the syntax is similar to the old ``%``-formatting, with the 5997db96d56Sopenharmony_ciaddition of the ``{}`` and with ``:`` used instead of ``%``. 6007db96d56Sopenharmony_ciFor example, ``'%03.2f'`` can be translated to ``'{:03.2f}'``. 6017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6027db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe new format syntax also supports new and different options, shown in the 6037db96d56Sopenharmony_cifollowing examples. 6047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6057db96d56Sopenharmony_ciAccessing arguments by position:: 6067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{0}, {1}, {2}'.format('a', 'b', 'c') 6087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'a, b, c' 6097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{}, {}, {}'.format('a', 'b', 'c') # 3.1+ only 6107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'a, b, c' 6117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{2}, {1}, {0}'.format('a', 'b', 'c') 6127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'c, b, a' 6137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{2}, {1}, {0}'.format(*'abc') # unpacking argument sequence 6147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'c, b, a' 6157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{0}{1}{0}'.format('abra', 'cad') # arguments' indices can be repeated 6167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'abracadabra' 6177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6187db96d56Sopenharmony_ciAccessing arguments by name:: 6197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> 'Coordinates: {latitude}, {longitude}'.format(latitude='37.24N', longitude='-115.81W') 6217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'Coordinates: 37.24N, -115.81W' 6227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> coord = {'latitude': '37.24N', 'longitude': '-115.81W'} 6237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> 'Coordinates: {latitude}, {longitude}'.format(**coord) 6247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'Coordinates: 37.24N, -115.81W' 6257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6267db96d56Sopenharmony_ciAccessing arguments' attributes:: 6277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> c = 3-5j 6297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> ('The complex number {0} is formed from the real part {0.real} ' 6307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... 'and the imaginary part {0.imag}.').format(c) 6317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'The complex number (3-5j) is formed from the real part 3.0 and the imaginary part -5.0.' 6327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> class Point: 6337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... def __init__(self, x, y): 6347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... self.x, self.y = x, y 6357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... def __str__(self): 6367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... return 'Point({self.x}, {self.y})'.format(self=self) 6377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... 6387db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> str(Point(4, 2)) 6397db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'Point(4, 2)' 6407db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6417db96d56Sopenharmony_ciAccessing arguments' items:: 6427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> coord = (3, 5) 6447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> 'X: {0[0]}; Y: {0[1]}'.format(coord) 6457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'X: 3; Y: 5' 6467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6477db96d56Sopenharmony_ciReplacing ``%s`` and ``%r``:: 6487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> "repr() shows quotes: {!r}; str() doesn't: {!s}".format('test1', 'test2') 6507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci "repr() shows quotes: 'test1'; str() doesn't: test2" 6517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6527db96d56Sopenharmony_ciAligning the text and specifying a width:: 6537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{:<30}'.format('left aligned') 6557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'left aligned ' 6567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{:>30}'.format('right aligned') 6577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ' right aligned' 6587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{:^30}'.format('centered') 6597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ' centered ' 6607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{:*^30}'.format('centered') # use '*' as a fill char 6617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci '***********centered***********' 6627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6637db96d56Sopenharmony_ciReplacing ``%+f``, ``%-f``, and ``% f`` and specifying a sign:: 6647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{:+f}; {:+f}'.format(3.14, -3.14) # show it always 6667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci '+3.140000; -3.140000' 6677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{: f}; {: f}'.format(3.14, -3.14) # show a space for positive numbers 6687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ' 3.140000; -3.140000' 6697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{:-f}; {:-f}'.format(3.14, -3.14) # show only the minus -- same as '{:f}; {:f}' 6707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci '3.140000; -3.140000' 6717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6727db96d56Sopenharmony_ciReplacing ``%x`` and ``%o`` and converting the value to different bases:: 6737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> # format also supports binary numbers 6757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> "int: {0:d}; hex: {0:x}; oct: {0:o}; bin: {0:b}".format(42) 6767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'int: 42; hex: 2a; oct: 52; bin: 101010' 6777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> # with 0x, 0o, or 0b as prefix: 6787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> "int: {0:d}; hex: {0:#x}; oct: {0:#o}; bin: {0:#b}".format(42) 6797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'int: 42; hex: 0x2a; oct: 0o52; bin: 0b101010' 6807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6817db96d56Sopenharmony_ciUsing the comma as a thousands separator:: 6827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{:,}'.format(1234567890) 6847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci '1,234,567,890' 6857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6867db96d56Sopenharmony_ciExpressing a percentage:: 6877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> points = 19 6897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> total = 22 6907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> 'Correct answers: {:.2%}'.format(points/total) 6917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'Correct answers: 86.36%' 6927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6937db96d56Sopenharmony_ciUsing type-specific formatting:: 6947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> import datetime 6967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> d = datetime.datetime(2010, 7, 4, 12, 15, 58) 6977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{:%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S}'.format(d) 6987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci '2010-07-04 12:15:58' 6997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7007db96d56Sopenharmony_ciNesting arguments and more complex examples:: 7017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> for align, text in zip('<^>', ['left', 'center', 'right']): 7037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... '{0:{fill}{align}16}'.format(text, fill=align, align=align) 7047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... 7057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'left<<<<<<<<<<<<' 7067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci '^^^^^center^^^^^' 7077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci '>>>>>>>>>>>right' 7087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> 7097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> octets = [192, 168, 0, 1] 7107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> '{:02X}{:02X}{:02X}{:02X}'.format(*octets) 7117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'C0A80001' 7127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> int(_, 16) 7137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 3232235521 7147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> 7157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> width = 5 7167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> for num in range(5,12): #doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE 7177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... for base in 'dXob': 7187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... print('{0:{width}{base}}'.format(num, base=base, width=width), end=' ') 7197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... print() 7207db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... 7217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 5 5 5 101 7227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 6 6 6 110 7237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7 7 7 111 7247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8 8 10 1000 7257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 9 9 11 1001 7267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 10 A 12 1010 7277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 11 B 13 1011 7287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. _template-strings: 7327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7337db96d56Sopenharmony_ciTemplate strings 7347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci---------------- 7357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7367db96d56Sopenharmony_ciTemplate strings provide simpler string substitutions as described in 7377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci:pep:`292`. A primary use case for template strings is for 7387db96d56Sopenharmony_ciinternationalization (i18n) since in that context, the simpler syntax and 7397db96d56Sopenharmony_cifunctionality makes it easier to translate than other built-in string 7407db96d56Sopenharmony_ciformatting facilities in Python. As an example of a library built on template 7417db96d56Sopenharmony_cistrings for i18n, see the 7427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci`flufl.i18n <https://flufli18n.readthedocs.io/en/latest/>`_ package. 7437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. index:: single: $ (dollar); in template strings 7457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7467db96d56Sopenharmony_ciTemplate strings support ``$``-based substitutions, using the following rules: 7477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* ``$$`` is an escape; it is replaced with a single ``$``. 7497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* ``$identifier`` names a substitution placeholder matching a mapping key of 7517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ``"identifier"``. By default, ``"identifier"`` is restricted to any 7527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci case-insensitive ASCII alphanumeric string (including underscores) that 7537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci starts with an underscore or ASCII letter. The first non-identifier 7547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci character after the ``$`` character terminates this placeholder 7557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci specification. 7567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* ``${identifier}`` is equivalent to ``$identifier``. It is required when 7587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci valid identifier characters follow the placeholder but are not part of the 7597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci placeholder, such as ``"${noun}ification"``. 7607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7617db96d56Sopenharmony_ciAny other appearance of ``$`` in the string will result in a :exc:`ValueError` 7627db96d56Sopenharmony_cibeing raised. 7637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7647db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe :mod:`string` module provides a :class:`Template` class that implements 7657db96d56Sopenharmony_cithese rules. The methods of :class:`Template` are: 7667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. class:: Template(template) 7697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci The constructor takes a single argument which is the template string. 7717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. method:: substitute(mapping={}, /, **kwds) 7747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Performs the template substitution, returning a new string. *mapping* is 7767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci any dictionary-like object with keys that match the placeholders in the 7777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci template. Alternatively, you can provide keyword arguments, where the 7787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci keywords are the placeholders. When both *mapping* and *kwds* are given 7797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci and there are duplicates, the placeholders from *kwds* take precedence. 7807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7817db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7827db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. method:: safe_substitute(mapping={}, /, **kwds) 7837db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7847db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Like :meth:`substitute`, except that if placeholders are missing from 7857db96d56Sopenharmony_ci *mapping* and *kwds*, instead of raising a :exc:`KeyError` exception, the 7867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci original placeholder will appear in the resulting string intact. Also, 7877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci unlike with :meth:`substitute`, any other appearances of the ``$`` will 7887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci simply return ``$`` instead of raising :exc:`ValueError`. 7897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci While other exceptions may still occur, this method is called "safe" 7917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci because it always tries to return a usable string instead of 7927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci raising an exception. In another sense, :meth:`safe_substitute` may be 7937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci anything other than safe, since it will silently ignore malformed 7947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci templates containing dangling delimiters, unmatched braces, or 7957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci placeholders that are not valid Python identifiers. 7967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 7987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. method:: is_valid() 7997db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8007db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Returns false if the template has invalid placeholders that will cause 8017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci :meth:`substitute` to raise :exc:`ValueError`. 8027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8037db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. versionadded:: 3.11 8047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. method:: get_identifiers() 8077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Returns a list of the valid identifiers in the template, in the order 8097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci they first appear, ignoring any invalid identifiers. 8107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. versionadded:: 3.11 8127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci :class:`Template` instances also provide one public data attribute: 8147db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8157db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. attribute:: template 8167db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8177db96d56Sopenharmony_ci This is the object passed to the constructor's *template* argument. In 8187db96d56Sopenharmony_ci general, you shouldn't change it, but read-only access is not enforced. 8197db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8207db96d56Sopenharmony_ciHere is an example of how to use a Template:: 8217db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8227db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> from string import Template 8237db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> s = Template('$who likes $what') 8247db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> s.substitute(who='tim', what='kung pao') 8257db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'tim likes kung pao' 8267db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> d = dict(who='tim') 8277db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> Template('Give $who $100').substitute(d) 8287db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Traceback (most recent call last): 8297db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... 8307db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ValueError: Invalid placeholder in string: line 1, col 11 8317db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> Template('$who likes $what').substitute(d) 8327db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Traceback (most recent call last): 8337db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ... 8347db96d56Sopenharmony_ci KeyError: 'what' 8357db96d56Sopenharmony_ci >>> Template('$who likes $what').safe_substitute(d) 8367db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 'tim likes $what' 8377db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8387db96d56Sopenharmony_ciAdvanced usage: you can derive subclasses of :class:`Template` to customize 8397db96d56Sopenharmony_cithe placeholder syntax, delimiter character, or the entire regular expression 8407db96d56Sopenharmony_ciused to parse template strings. To do this, you can override these class 8417db96d56Sopenharmony_ciattributes: 8427db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8437db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* *delimiter* -- This is the literal string describing a placeholder 8447db96d56Sopenharmony_ci introducing delimiter. The default value is ``$``. Note that this should 8457db96d56Sopenharmony_ci *not* be a regular expression, as the implementation will call 8467db96d56Sopenharmony_ci :meth:`re.escape` on this string as needed. Note further that you cannot 8477db96d56Sopenharmony_ci change the delimiter after class creation (i.e. a different delimiter must 8487db96d56Sopenharmony_ci be set in the subclass's class namespace). 8497db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8507db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* *idpattern* -- This is the regular expression describing the pattern for 8517db96d56Sopenharmony_ci non-braced placeholders. The default value is the regular expression 8527db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ``(?a:[_a-z][_a-z0-9]*)``. If this is given and *braceidpattern* is 8537db96d56Sopenharmony_ci ``None`` this pattern will also apply to braced placeholders. 8547db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8557db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. note:: 8567db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8577db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Since default *flags* is ``re.IGNORECASE``, pattern ``[a-z]`` can match 8587db96d56Sopenharmony_ci with some non-ASCII characters. That's why we use the local ``a`` flag 8597db96d56Sopenharmony_ci here. 8607db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8617db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. versionchanged:: 3.7 8627db96d56Sopenharmony_ci *braceidpattern* can be used to define separate patterns used inside and 8637db96d56Sopenharmony_ci outside the braces. 8647db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8657db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* *braceidpattern* -- This is like *idpattern* but describes the pattern for 8667db96d56Sopenharmony_ci braced placeholders. Defaults to ``None`` which means to fall back to 8677db96d56Sopenharmony_ci *idpattern* (i.e. the same pattern is used both inside and outside braces). 8687db96d56Sopenharmony_ci If given, this allows you to define different patterns for braced and 8697db96d56Sopenharmony_ci unbraced placeholders. 8707db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8717db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. versionadded:: 3.7 8727db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8737db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* *flags* -- The regular expression flags that will be applied when compiling 8747db96d56Sopenharmony_ci the regular expression used for recognizing substitutions. The default value 8757db96d56Sopenharmony_ci is ``re.IGNORECASE``. Note that ``re.VERBOSE`` will always be added to the 8767db96d56Sopenharmony_ci flags, so custom *idpattern*\ s must follow conventions for verbose regular 8777db96d56Sopenharmony_ci expressions. 8787db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8797db96d56Sopenharmony_ci .. versionadded:: 3.2 8807db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8817db96d56Sopenharmony_ciAlternatively, you can provide the entire regular expression pattern by 8827db96d56Sopenharmony_cioverriding the class attribute *pattern*. If you do this, the value must be a 8837db96d56Sopenharmony_ciregular expression object with four named capturing groups. The capturing 8847db96d56Sopenharmony_cigroups correspond to the rules given above, along with the invalid placeholder 8857db96d56Sopenharmony_cirule: 8867db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8877db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* *escaped* -- This group matches the escape sequence, e.g. ``$$``, in the 8887db96d56Sopenharmony_ci default pattern. 8897db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8907db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* *named* -- This group matches the unbraced placeholder name; it should not 8917db96d56Sopenharmony_ci include the delimiter in capturing group. 8927db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8937db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* *braced* -- This group matches the brace enclosed placeholder name; it should 8947db96d56Sopenharmony_ci not include either the delimiter or braces in the capturing group. 8957db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8967db96d56Sopenharmony_ci* *invalid* -- This group matches any other delimiter pattern (usually a single 8977db96d56Sopenharmony_ci delimiter), and it should appear last in the regular expression. 8987db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 8997db96d56Sopenharmony_ciThe methods on this class will raise :exc:`ValueError` if the pattern matches 9007db96d56Sopenharmony_cithe template without one of these named groups matching. 9017db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 9027db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 9037db96d56Sopenharmony_ciHelper functions 9047db96d56Sopenharmony_ci---------------- 9057db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 9067db96d56Sopenharmony_ci.. function:: capwords(s, sep=None) 9077db96d56Sopenharmony_ci 9087db96d56Sopenharmony_ci Split the argument into words using :meth:`str.split`, capitalize each word 9097db96d56Sopenharmony_ci using :meth:`str.capitalize`, and join the capitalized words using 9107db96d56Sopenharmony_ci :meth:`str.join`. If the optional second argument *sep* is absent 9117db96d56Sopenharmony_ci or ``None``, runs of whitespace characters are replaced by a single space 9127db96d56Sopenharmony_ci and leading and trailing whitespace are removed, otherwise *sep* is used to 9137db96d56Sopenharmony_ci split and join the words. 914