347 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
347 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
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PEP: 3101
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Title: Advanced String Formatting
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Talin <talin at acm.org>
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Status: Draft
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Type: Standards
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Content-Type: text/plain
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Created: 16-Apr-2006
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Python-Version: 3.0
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Post-History:
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Abstract
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This PEP proposes a new system for built-in string formatting
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operations, intended as a replacement for the existing '%' string
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formatting operator.
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Rationale
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Python currently provides two methods of string interpolation:
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- The '%' operator for strings.
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- The string.Template module.
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The scope of this PEP will be restricted to proposals for built-in
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string formatting operations (in other words, methods of the
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built-in string type). This does not obviate the need for more
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sophisticated string-manipulation modules in the standard library
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such as string.Template. In any case, string.Template will not be
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discussed here, except to say that the this proposal will most
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likely have some overlapping functionality with that module.
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The '%' operator is primarily limited by the fact that it is a
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binary operator, and therefore can take at most two arguments.
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One of those arguments is already dedicated to the format string,
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leaving all other variables to be squeezed into the remaining
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argument. The current practice is to use either a dictionary or a
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tuple as the second argument, but as many people have commented
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[1], this lacks flexibility. The "all or nothing" approach
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(meaning that one must choose between only positional arguments,
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or only named arguments) is felt to be overly constraining.
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Specification
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The specification will consist of 4 parts:
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- Specification of a set of methods to be added to the built-in
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string class.
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- Specification of a new syntax for format strings.
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- Specification of a new set of class methods to control the
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formatting and conversion of objects.
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- Specification of an API for user-defined formatting classes.
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String Methods
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The build-in string class will gain two new methods. The first
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method is 'format', and takes an arbitrary number of positional
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and keyword arguments:
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"The story of {0}, {1}, and {c}".format(a, b, c=d)
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Within a format string, each positional argument is identified
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with a number, starting from zero, so in the above example, 'a' is
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argument 0 and 'b' is argument 1. Each keyword argument is
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identified by its keyword name, so in the above example, 'c' is
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used to refer to the third argument.
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The result of the format call is an object of the same type
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(string or unicode) as the format string.
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Format Strings
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Brace characters ('curly braces') are used to indicate a
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replacement field within the string:
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"My name is {0}".format('Fred')
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The result of this is the string:
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"My name is Fred"
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Braces can be escaped using a backslash:
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"My name is {0} :-\{\}".format('Fred')
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Which would produce:
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"My name is Fred :-{}"
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The element within the braces is called a 'field'. Fields consist
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of a name, which can either be simple or compound, and an optional
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'conversion specifier'.
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Simple names are either names or numbers. If numbers, they must
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be valid decimal numbers; if names, they must be valid Python
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identifiers. A number is used to identify a positional argument,
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while a name is used to identify a keyword argument.
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Compound names are a sequence of simple names seperated by
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periods:
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"My name is {0.name} :-\{\}".format(dict(name='Fred'))
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Compound names can be used to access specific dictionary entries,
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array elements, or object attributes. In the above example, the
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'{0.name}' field refers to the dictionary entry 'name' within
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positional argument 0.
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Each field can also specify an optional set of 'conversion
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specifiers'. Conversion specifiers follow the field name, with a
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colon (':') character separating the two:
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"My name is {0:8}".format('Fred')
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The meaning and syntax of the conversion specifiers depends on the
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type of object that is being formatted, however many of the
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built-in types will recognize a standard set of conversion
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specifiers.
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The conversion specifier consists of a sequence of zero or more
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characters, each of which can consist of any printable character
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except for a non-escaped '}'. The format() method does not
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attempt to intepret the conversion specifiers in any way; it
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merely passes all of the characters between the first colon ':'
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and the matching right brace ('}') to the various underlying
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formatters (described later.)
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When using the 'fformat' variant, it is possible to omit the field
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name entirely, and simply include the conversion specifiers:
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"My name is {:pad(23)}"
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This syntax is used to send special instructions to the custom
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formatter object (such as instructing it to insert padding
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characters up to a given column.) The interpretation of this
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'empty' field is entirely up to the custom formatter; no
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standard interpretation will be defined in this PEP.
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If a custom formatter is not being used, then it is an error to
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omit the field name.
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Standard Conversion Specifiers
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For most built-in types, the conversion specifiers will be the
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same or similar to the existing conversion specifiers used with
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the '%' operator. Thus, instead of '%02.2x", you will say
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'{0:2.2x}'.
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There are a few differences however:
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- The trailing letter is optional - you don't need to say '2.2d',
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you can instead just say '2.2'. If the letter is omitted, the
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value will be converted into its 'natural' form (that is, the
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form that it take if str() or unicode() were called on it)
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subject to the field length and precision specifiers (if
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supplied).
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- Variable field width specifiers use a nested version of the {}
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syntax, allowing the width specifier to be either a positional
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or keyword argument:
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"{0:{1}.{2}d}".format(a, b, c)
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(Note: It might be easier to parse if these used a different
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type of delimiter, such as parens - avoiding the need to create
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a regex that handles the recursive case.)
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- The support for length modifiers (which are ignored by Python
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anyway) is dropped.
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For non-built-in types, the conversion specifiers will be specific
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to that type. An example is the 'datetime' class, whose
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conversion specifiers are identical to the arguments to the
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strftime() function:
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"Today is: {0:%x}".format(datetime.now())
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Controlling Formatting
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A class that wishes to implement a custom interpretation of its
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conversion specifiers can implement a __format__ method:
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class AST:
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def __format__(self, specifiers):
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...
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The 'specifiers' argument will be either a string object or a
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unicode object, depending on the type of the original format
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string. The __format__ method should test the type of the
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specifiers parameter to determine whether to return a string or
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unicode object. It is the responsibility of the __format__ method
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to return an object of the proper type.
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string.format() will format each field using the following steps:
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1) See if the value to be formatted has a __format__ method. If
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it does, then call it.
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2) Otherwise, check the internal formatter within string.format
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that contains knowledge of certain builtin types.
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3) Otherwise, call str() or unicode() as appropriate.
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User-Defined Formatting Classes
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The code that interprets format strings can be called explicitly
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from user code. This allows the creation of custom formatter
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classes that can override the normal formatting rules.
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The string and unicode classes will have a class method called
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'cformat' that does all the actual work of formatting; The
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format() method is just a wrapper that calls cformat.
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The parameters to the cformat function are:
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-- The format string (or unicode; the same function handles
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both.)
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-- A field format hook (see below)
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-- A tuple containing the positional arguments
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-- A dict containing the keyword arguments
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The cformat function will parse all of the fields in the format
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string, and return a new string (or unicode) with all of the
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fields replaced with their formatted values.
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For each field, the cformat function will attempt to call the
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field format hook with the following arguments:
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field_hook(value, conversion, buffer)
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The 'value' field corresponds to the value being formatted, which
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was retrieved from the arguments using the field name. (The
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field_hook has no control over the selection of values, only
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how they are formatted.)
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The 'conversion' argument is the conversion spec part of the
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field, which will be either a string or unicode object, depending
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on the type of the original format string.
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The 'buffer' argument is a Python array object, either a byte
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array or unicode character array. The buffer object will contain
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the partially constructed string; the field hook is free to modify
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the contents of this buffer if needed.
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The field_hook will be called once per field. The field_hook may
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take one of two actions:
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1) Return False, indicating that the field_hook will not
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process this field and the default formatting should be
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used. This decision should be based on the type of the
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value object, and the contents of the conversion string.
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2) Append the formatted field to the buffer, and return True.
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Alternate Syntax
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Naturally, one of the most contentious issues is the syntax of the
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format strings, and in particular the markup conventions used to
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indicate fields.
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Rather than attempting to exhaustively list all of the various
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proposals, I will cover the ones that are most widely used
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already.
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- Shell variable syntax: $name and $(name) (or in some variants,
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${name}). This is probably the oldest convention out there, and
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is used by Perl and many others. When used without the braces,
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the length of the variable is determined by lexically scanning
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until an invalid character is found.
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This scheme is generally used in cases where interpolation is
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implicit - that is, in environments where any string can contain
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interpolation variables, and no special subsitution function
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need be invoked. In such cases, it is important to prevent the
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interpolation behavior from occuring accidentally, so the '$'
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(which is otherwise a relatively uncommonly-used character) is
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used to signal when the behavior should occur.
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It is the author's opinion, however, that in cases where the
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formatting is explicitly invoked, that less care needs to be
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taken to prevent accidental interpolation, in which case a
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lighter and less unwieldy syntax can be used.
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- Printf and its cousins ('%'), including variations that add a
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field index, so that fields can be interpolated out of order.
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- Other bracket-only variations. Various MUDs (Multi-User
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Dungeons) such as MUSH have used brackets (e.g. [name]) to do
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string interpolation. The Microsoft .Net libraries uses braces
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({}), and a syntax which is very similar to the one in this
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proposal, although the syntax for conversion specifiers is quite
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different. [2]
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- Backquoting. This method has the benefit of minimal syntactical
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clutter, however it lacks many of the benefits of a function
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call syntax (such as complex expression arguments, custom
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formatters, etc.).
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- Other variations include Ruby's #{}, PHP's {$name}, and so
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on.
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Backwards Compatibility
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Backwards compatibility can be maintained by leaving the existing
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mechanisms in place. The new system does not collide with any of
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the method names of the existing string formatting techniques, so
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both systems can co-exist until it comes time to deprecate the
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older system.
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References
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[1] [Python-3000] String formating operations in python 3k
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http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-3000/2006-April/000285.html
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[2] Composite Formatting - [.Net Framework Developer's Guide]
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http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/en-us/cpguide/html/cpconcompositeformatting.asp?frame=true
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Copyright
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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sentence-end-double-space: t
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fill-column: 70
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coding: utf-8
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End:
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