Python String Formatting
From the Python 3 documentation
The formatting operations described here (% operator) exhibit a variety of quirks that lead to a number of common errors [...]. Using the newer formatted string literals [...] helps avoid these errors. These alternatives also provide more powerful, flexible and extensible approaches to formatting text.
% operator
Prefer String Literals
For new code, using str.format, or formatted string literals (Python 3.6+) over the %
operator is strongly recommended.
>>> name = 'Pete'
>>> 'Hello %s' % name
# "Hello Pete"
We can use the %d
format specifier to convert an int value to a string:
>>> num = 5
>>> 'I have %d apples' % num
# "I have 5 apples"
str.format
Python 3 introduced a new way to do string formatting that was later back-ported to Python 2.7. This makes the syntax for string formatting more regular.
>>> name = 'John'
>>> age = 20
>>> "Hello I'm {}, my age is {}".format(name, age)
# "Hello I'm John, my age is 20"
>>> "Hello I'm {0}, my age is {1}".format(name, age)
# "Hello I'm John, my age is 20"
Formatted String Literals or f-Strings
If your are using Python 3.6+, string f-Strings
are the recommended way to format strings.
From the Python 3 documentation
A formatted string literal or f-string is a string literal that is prefixed with `f` or `F`. These strings may contain replacement fields, which are expressions delimited by curly braces {}. While other string literals always have a constant value, formatted strings are really expressions evaluated at run time.
>>> name = 'Elizabeth'
>>> f'Hello {name}!'
# 'Hello Elizabeth!'
It is even possible to do inline arithmetic with it:
>>> a = 5
>>> b = 10
>>> f'Five plus ten is {a + b} and not {2 * (a + b)}.'
# 'Five plus ten is 15 and not 30.'
Multiline f-Strings
>>> name = 'Robert'
>>> messages = 12
>>> (
... f'Hi, {name}. '
... f'You have {messages} unread messages'
... )
# 'Hi, Robert. You have 12 unread messages'
The =
specifier
This will print the expression and its value:
>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> now = datetime.now().strftime("%b/%d/%Y - %H:%M:%S")
>>> f'date and time: {now=}'
# "date and time: now='Nov/14/2022 - 20:50:01'"
Adding spaces or characters
>>> f"{name.upper() = :-^20}"
# 'name.upper() = -------ROBERT-------'
>>>
>>> f"{name.upper() = :^20}"
# 'name.upper() = ROBERT '
>>>
>>> f"{name.upper() = :20}"
# 'name.upper() = ROBERT '
Formatting Digits
Adding thousands separator
>>> a = 10000000
>>> f"{a:,}"
# '10,000,000'
Rounding
>>> a = 3.1415926
>>> f"{a:.2f}"
# '3.14'
Showing as Percentage
>>> a = 0.816562
>>> f"{a:.2%}"
# '81.66%'
Number formatting table
Number | Format | Output | description |
---|---|---|---|
3.1415926 | {:.2f} | 3.14 | Format float 2 decimal places |
3.1415926 | {:+.2f} | +3.14 | Format float 2 decimal places with sign |
-1 | {:+.2f} | -1.00 | Format float 2 decimal places with sign |
2.71828 | {:.0f} | 3 | Format float with no decimal places |
4 | {:0>2d} | 04 | Pad number with zeros (left padding, width 2) |
4 | {:x<4d} | 4xxx | Pad number with x’s (right padding, width 4) |
10 | {:x<4d} | 10xx | Pad number with x’s (right padding, width 4) |
1000000 | {:,} | 1,000,000 | Number format with comma separator |
0.35 | {:.2%} | 35.00% | Format percentage |
1000000000 | {:.2e} | 1.00e+09 | Exponent notation |
11 | {:11d} | 11 | Right-aligned (default, width 10) |
11 | {:<11d} | 11 | Left-aligned (width 10) |
11 | {:^11d} | 11 | Center aligned (width 10) |
Template Strings
A simpler and less powerful mechanism, but it is recommended when handling strings generated by users. Due to their reduced complexity, template strings are a safer choice.
>>> from string import Template
>>> name = 'Elizabeth'
>>> t = Template('Hey $name!')
>>> t.substitute(name=name)
# 'Hey Elizabeth!'