| //! Utilities for formatting and printing `String`s. |
| //! |
| //! This module contains the runtime support for the [`format!`] syntax extension. |
| //! This macro is implemented in the compiler to emit calls to this module in |
| //! order to format arguments at runtime into strings. |
| //! |
| //! # Usage |
| //! |
| //! The [`format!`] macro is intended to be familiar to those coming from C's |
| //! `printf`/`fprintf` functions or Python's `str.format` function. |
| //! |
| //! Some examples of the [`format!`] extension are: |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! # #![allow(unused_must_use)] |
| //! format!("Hello"); // => "Hello" |
| //! format!("Hello, {}!", "world"); // => "Hello, world!" |
| //! format!("The number is {}", 1); // => "The number is 1" |
| //! format!("{:?}", (3, 4)); // => "(3, 4)" |
| //! format!("{value}", value=4); // => "4" |
| //! let people = "Rustaceans"; |
| //! format!("Hello {people}!"); // => "Hello Rustaceans!" |
| //! format!("{} {}", 1, 2); // => "1 2" |
| //! format!("{:04}", 42); // => "0042" with leading zeros |
| //! format!("{:#?}", (100, 200)); // => "( |
| //! // 100, |
| //! // 200, |
| //! // )" |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! From these, you can see that the first argument is a format string. It is |
| //! required by the compiler for this to be a string literal; it cannot be a |
| //! variable passed in (in order to perform validity checking). The compiler |
| //! will then parse the format string and determine if the list of arguments |
| //! provided is suitable to pass to this format string. |
| //! |
| //! To convert a single value to a string, use the [`to_string`] method. This |
| //! will use the [`Display`] formatting trait. |
| //! |
| //! ## Positional parameters |
| //! |
| //! Each formatting argument is allowed to specify which value argument it's |
| //! referencing, and if omitted it is assumed to be "the next argument". For |
| //! example, the format string `{} {} {}` would take three parameters, and they |
| //! would be formatted in the same order as they're given. The format string |
| //! `{2} {1} {0}`, however, would format arguments in reverse order. |
| //! |
| //! Things can get a little tricky once you start intermingling the two types of |
| //! positional specifiers. The "next argument" specifier can be thought of as an |
| //! iterator over the argument. Each time a "next argument" specifier is seen, |
| //! the iterator advances. This leads to behavior like this: |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! # #![allow(unused_must_use)] |
| //! format!("{1} {} {0} {}", 1, 2); // => "2 1 1 2" |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! The internal iterator over the argument has not been advanced by the time |
| //! the first `{}` is seen, so it prints the first argument. Then upon reaching |
| //! the second `{}`, the iterator has advanced forward to the second argument. |
| //! Essentially, parameters that explicitly name their argument do not affect |
| //! parameters that do not name an argument in terms of positional specifiers. |
| //! |
| //! A format string is required to use all of its arguments, otherwise it is a |
| //! compile-time error. You may refer to the same argument more than once in the |
| //! format string. |
| //! |
| //! ## Named parameters |
| //! |
| //! Rust itself does not have a Python-like equivalent of named parameters to a |
| //! function, but the [`format!`] macro is a syntax extension that allows it to |
| //! leverage named parameters. Named parameters are listed at the end of the |
| //! argument list and have the syntax: |
| //! |
| //! ```text |
| //! identifier '=' expression |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! For example, the following [`format!`] expressions all use named arguments: |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! # #![allow(unused_must_use)] |
| //! format!("{argument}", argument = "test"); // => "test" |
| //! format!("{name} {}", 1, name = 2); // => "2 1" |
| //! format!("{a} {c} {b}", a="a", b='b', c=3); // => "a 3 b" |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! If a named parameter does not appear in the argument list, `format!` will |
| //! reference a variable with that name in the current scope. |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! # #![allow(unused_must_use)] |
| //! let argument = 2 + 2; |
| //! format!("{argument}"); // => "4" |
| //! |
| //! fn make_string(a: u32, b: &str) -> String { |
| //! format!("{b} {a}") |
| //! } |
| //! make_string(927, "label"); // => "label 927" |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! It is not valid to put positional parameters (those without names) after |
| //! arguments that have names. Like with positional parameters, it is not |
| //! valid to provide named parameters that are unused by the format string. |
| //! |
| //! # Formatting Parameters |
| //! |
| //! Each argument being formatted can be transformed by a number of formatting |
| //! parameters (corresponding to `format_spec` in [the syntax](#syntax)). These |
| //! parameters affect the string representation of what's being formatted. |
| //! |
| //! ## Width |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! // All of these print "Hello x !" |
| //! println!("Hello {:5}!", "x"); |
| //! println!("Hello {:1$}!", "x", 5); |
| //! println!("Hello {1:0$}!", 5, "x"); |
| //! println!("Hello {:width$}!", "x", width = 5); |
| //! let width = 5; |
| //! println!("Hello {:width$}!", "x"); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! This is a parameter for the "minimum width" that the format should take up. |
| //! If the value's string does not fill up this many characters, then the |
| //! padding specified by fill/alignment will be used to take up the required |
| //! space (see below). |
| //! |
| //! The value for the width can also be provided as a [`usize`] in the list of |
| //! parameters by adding a postfix `$`, indicating that the second argument is |
| //! a [`usize`] specifying the width. |
| //! |
| //! Referring to an argument with the dollar syntax does not affect the "next |
| //! argument" counter, so it's usually a good idea to refer to arguments by |
| //! position, or use named arguments. |
| //! |
| //! ## Fill/Alignment |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("Hello {:<5}!", "x"), "Hello x !"); |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("Hello {:-<5}!", "x"), "Hello x----!"); |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("Hello {:^5}!", "x"), "Hello x !"); |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("Hello {:>5}!", "x"), "Hello x!"); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! The optional fill character and alignment is provided normally in conjunction with the |
| //! [`width`](#width) parameter. It must be defined before `width`, right after the `:`. |
| //! This indicates that if the value being formatted is smaller than |
| //! `width` some extra characters will be printed around it. |
| //! Filling comes in the following variants for different alignments: |
| //! |
| //! * `[fill]<` - the argument is left-aligned in `width` columns |
| //! * `[fill]^` - the argument is center-aligned in `width` columns |
| //! * `[fill]>` - the argument is right-aligned in `width` columns |
| //! |
| //! The default [fill/alignment](#fillalignment) for non-numerics is a space and |
| //! left-aligned. The |
| //! default for numeric formatters is also a space character but with right-alignment. If |
| //! the `0` flag (see below) is specified for numerics, then the implicit fill character is |
| //! `0`. |
| //! |
| //! Note that alignment might not be implemented by some types. In particular, it |
| //! is not generally implemented for the `Debug` trait. A good way to ensure |
| //! padding is applied is to format your input, then pad this resulting string |
| //! to obtain your output: |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! println!("Hello {:^15}!", format!("{:?}", Some("hi"))); // => "Hello Some("hi") !" |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! ## Sign/`#`/`0` |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("Hello {:+}!", 5), "Hello +5!"); |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("{:#x}!", 27), "0x1b!"); |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("Hello {:05}!", 5), "Hello 00005!"); |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("Hello {:05}!", -5), "Hello -0005!"); |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("{:#010x}!", 27), "0x0000001b!"); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! These are all flags altering the behavior of the formatter. |
| //! |
| //! * `+` - This is intended for numeric types and indicates that the sign |
| //! should always be printed. By default only the negative sign of signed values |
| //! is printed, and the sign of positive or unsigned values is omitted. |
| //! This flag indicates that the correct sign (`+` or `-`) should always be printed. |
| //! * `-` - Currently not used |
| //! * `#` - This flag indicates that the "alternate" form of printing should |
| //! be used. The alternate forms are: |
| //! * `#?` - pretty-print the [`Debug`] formatting (adds linebreaks and indentation) |
| //! * `#x` - precedes the argument with a `0x` |
| //! * `#X` - precedes the argument with a `0x` |
| //! * `#b` - precedes the argument with a `0b` |
| //! * `#o` - precedes the argument with a `0o` |
| //! |
| //! See [Formatting traits](#formatting-traits) for a description of what the `?`, `x`, `X`, |
| //! `b`, and `o` flags do. |
| //! |
| //! * `0` - This is used to indicate for integer formats that the padding to `width` should |
| //! both be done with a `0` character as well as be sign-aware. A format |
| //! like `{:08}` would yield `00000001` for the integer `1`, while the |
| //! same format would yield `-0000001` for the integer `-1`. Notice that |
| //! the negative version has one fewer zero than the positive version. |
| //! Note that padding zeros are always placed after the sign (if any) |
| //! and before the digits. When used together with the `#` flag, a similar |
| //! rule applies: padding zeros are inserted after the prefix but before |
| //! the digits. The prefix is included in the total width. |
| //! This flag overrides the [fill character and alignment flag](#fillalignment). |
| //! |
| //! ## Precision |
| //! |
| //! For non-numeric types, this can be considered a "maximum width". If the resulting string is |
| //! longer than this width, then it is truncated down to this many characters and that truncated |
| //! value is emitted with proper `fill`, `alignment` and `width` if those parameters are set. |
| //! |
| //! For integral types, this is ignored. |
| //! |
| //! For floating-point types, this indicates how many digits after the decimal point should be |
| //! printed. |
| //! |
| //! There are three possible ways to specify the desired `precision`: |
| //! |
| //! 1. An integer `.N`: |
| //! |
| //! the integer `N` itself is the precision. |
| //! |
| //! 2. An integer or name followed by dollar sign `.N$`: |
| //! |
| //! use format *argument* `N` (which must be a `usize`) as the precision. |
| //! |
| //! 3. An asterisk `.*`: |
| //! |
| //! `.*` means that this `{...}` is associated with *two* format inputs rather than one: |
| //! - If a format string in the fashion of `{:<spec>.*}` is used, then the first input holds |
| //! the `usize` precision, and the second holds the value to print. |
| //! - If a format string in the fashion of `{<arg>:<spec>.*}` is used, then the `<arg>` part |
| //! refers to the value to print, and the `precision` is taken like it was specified with an |
| //! omitted positional parameter (`{}` instead of `{<arg>:}`). |
| //! |
| //! For example, the following calls all print the same thing `Hello x is 0.01000`: |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! // Hello {arg 0 ("x")} is {arg 1 (0.01) with precision specified inline (5)} |
| //! println!("Hello {0} is {1:.5}", "x", 0.01); |
| //! |
| //! // Hello {arg 1 ("x")} is {arg 2 (0.01) with precision specified in arg 0 (5)} |
| //! println!("Hello {1} is {2:.0$}", 5, "x", 0.01); |
| //! |
| //! // Hello {arg 0 ("x")} is {arg 2 (0.01) with precision specified in arg 1 (5)} |
| //! println!("Hello {0} is {2:.1$}", "x", 5, 0.01); |
| //! |
| //! // Hello {next arg -> arg 0 ("x")} is {second of next two args -> arg 2 (0.01) with precision |
| //! // specified in first of next two args -> arg 1 (5)} |
| //! println!("Hello {} is {:.*}", "x", 5, 0.01); |
| //! |
| //! // Hello {arg 1 ("x")} is {arg 2 (0.01) with precision |
| //! // specified in next arg -> arg 0 (5)} |
| //! println!("Hello {1} is {2:.*}", 5, "x", 0.01); |
| //! |
| //! // Hello {next arg -> arg 0 ("x")} is {arg 2 (0.01) with precision |
| //! // specified in next arg -> arg 1 (5)} |
| //! println!("Hello {} is {2:.*}", "x", 5, 0.01); |
| //! |
| //! // Hello {next arg -> arg 0 ("x")} is {arg "number" (0.01) with precision specified |
| //! // in arg "prec" (5)} |
| //! println!("Hello {} is {number:.prec$}", "x", prec = 5, number = 0.01); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! While these: |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! println!("{}, `{name:.*}` has 3 fractional digits", "Hello", 3, name=1234.56); |
| //! println!("{}, `{name:.*}` has 3 characters", "Hello", 3, name="1234.56"); |
| //! println!("{}, `{name:>8.*}` has 3 right-aligned characters", "Hello", 3, name="1234.56"); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! print three significantly different things: |
| //! |
| //! ```text |
| //! Hello, `1234.560` has 3 fractional digits |
| //! Hello, `123` has 3 characters |
| //! Hello, ` 123` has 3 right-aligned characters |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! When truncating these values, Rust uses [round half-to-even](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rounding#Rounding_half_to_even), |
| //! which is the default rounding mode in IEEE 754. |
| //! For example, |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! print!("{0:.1$e}", 12345, 3); |
| //! print!("{0:.1$e}", 12355, 3); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! Would return: |
| //! |
| //! ```text |
| //! 1.234e4 |
| //! 1.236e4 |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! ## Localization |
| //! |
| //! In some programming languages, the behavior of string formatting functions |
| //! depends on the operating system's locale setting. The format functions |
| //! provided by Rust's standard library do not have any concept of locale and |
| //! will produce the same results on all systems regardless of user |
| //! configuration. |
| //! |
| //! For example, the following code will always print `1.5` even if the system |
| //! locale uses a decimal separator other than a dot. |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! println!("The value is {}", 1.5); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! # Escaping |
| //! |
| //! The literal characters `{` and `}` may be included in a string by preceding |
| //! them with the same character. For example, the `{` character is escaped with |
| //! `{{` and the `}` character is escaped with `}}`. |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("Hello {{}}"), "Hello {}"); |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("{{ Hello"), "{ Hello"); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! # Syntax |
| //! |
| //! To summarize, here you can find the full grammar of format strings. |
| //! The syntax for the formatting language used is drawn from other languages, |
| //! so it should not be too alien. Arguments are formatted with Python-like |
| //! syntax, meaning that arguments are surrounded by `{}` instead of the C-like |
| //! `%`. The actual grammar for the formatting syntax is: |
| //! |
| //! ```text |
| //! format_string := text [ maybe_format text ] * |
| //! maybe_format := '{' '{' | '}' '}' | format |
| //! format := '{' [ argument ] [ ':' format_spec ] [ ws ] * '}' |
| //! argument := integer | identifier |
| //! |
| //! format_spec := [[fill]align][sign]['#']['0'][width]['.' precision]type |
| //! fill := character |
| //! align := '<' | '^' | '>' |
| //! sign := '+' | '-' |
| //! width := count |
| //! precision := count | '*' |
| //! type := '' | '?' | 'x?' | 'X?' | identifier |
| //! count := parameter | integer |
| //! parameter := argument '$' |
| //! ``` |
| //! In the above grammar, |
| //! - `text` must not contain any `'{'` or `'}'` characters, |
| //! - `ws` is any character for which [`char::is_whitespace`] returns `true`, has no semantic |
| //! meaning and is completely optional, |
| //! - `integer` is a decimal integer that may contain leading zeroes and must fit into an `usize` and |
| //! - `identifier` is an `IDENTIFIER_OR_KEYWORD` (not an `IDENTIFIER`) as defined by the [Rust language reference](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/identifiers.html). |
| //! |
| //! # Formatting traits |
| //! |
| //! When requesting that an argument be formatted with a particular type, you |
| //! are actually requesting that an argument ascribes to a particular trait. |
| //! This allows multiple actual types to be formatted via `{:x}` (like [`i8`] as |
| //! well as [`isize`]). The current mapping of types to traits is: |
| //! |
| //! * *nothing* ⇒ [`Display`] |
| //! * `?` ⇒ [`Debug`] |
| //! * `x?` ⇒ [`Debug`] with lower-case hexadecimal integers |
| //! * `X?` ⇒ [`Debug`] with upper-case hexadecimal integers |
| //! * `o` ⇒ [`Octal`] |
| //! * `x` ⇒ [`LowerHex`] |
| //! * `X` ⇒ [`UpperHex`] |
| //! * `p` ⇒ [`Pointer`] |
| //! * `b` ⇒ [`Binary`] |
| //! * `e` ⇒ [`LowerExp`] |
| //! * `E` ⇒ [`UpperExp`] |
| //! |
| //! What this means is that any type of argument which implements the |
| //! [`fmt::Binary`][`Binary`] trait can then be formatted with `{:b}`. Implementations |
| //! are provided for these traits for a number of primitive types by the |
| //! standard library as well. If no format is specified (as in `{}` or `{:6}`), |
| //! then the format trait used is the [`Display`] trait. |
| //! |
| //! When implementing a format trait for your own type, you will have to |
| //! implement a method of the signature: |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! # #![allow(dead_code)] |
| //! # use std::fmt; |
| //! # struct Foo; // our custom type |
| //! # impl fmt::Display for Foo { |
| //! fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { |
| //! # write!(f, "testing, testing") |
| //! # } } |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! Your type will be passed as `self` by-reference, and then the function |
| //! should emit output into the Formatter `f` which implements `fmt::Write`. It is up to each |
| //! format trait implementation to correctly adhere to the requested formatting parameters. |
| //! The values of these parameters can be accessed with methods of the |
| //! [`Formatter`] struct. In order to help with this, the [`Formatter`] struct also |
| //! provides some helper methods. |
| //! |
| //! Additionally, the return value of this function is [`fmt::Result`] which is a |
| //! type alias of <code>[Result]<(), [std::fmt::Error]></code>. Formatting implementations |
| //! should ensure that they propagate errors from the [`Formatter`] (e.g., when |
| //! calling [`write!`]). However, they should never return errors spuriously. That |
| //! is, a formatting implementation must and may only return an error if the |
| //! passed-in [`Formatter`] returns an error. This is because, contrary to what |
| //! the function signature might suggest, string formatting is an infallible |
| //! operation. This function only returns a [`Result`] because writing to the |
| //! underlying stream might fail and it must provide a way to propagate the fact |
| //! that an error has occurred back up the stack. |
| //! |
| //! An example of implementing the formatting traits would look |
| //! like: |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! use std::fmt; |
| //! |
| //! #[derive(Debug)] |
| //! struct Vector2D { |
| //! x: isize, |
| //! y: isize, |
| //! } |
| //! |
| //! impl fmt::Display for Vector2D { |
| //! fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { |
| //! // The `f` value implements the `Write` trait, which is what the |
| //! // write! macro is expecting. Note that this formatting ignores the |
| //! // various flags provided to format strings. |
| //! write!(f, "({}, {})", self.x, self.y) |
| //! } |
| //! } |
| //! |
| //! // Different traits allow different forms of output of a type. The meaning |
| //! // of this format is to print the magnitude of a vector. |
| //! impl fmt::Binary for Vector2D { |
| //! fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { |
| //! let magnitude = (self.x * self.x + self.y * self.y) as f64; |
| //! let magnitude = magnitude.sqrt(); |
| //! |
| //! // Respect the formatting flags by using the helper method |
| //! // `pad_integral` on the Formatter object. See the method |
| //! // documentation for details, and the function `pad` can be used |
| //! // to pad strings. |
| //! let decimals = f.precision().unwrap_or(3); |
| //! let string = format!("{magnitude:.decimals$}"); |
| //! f.pad_integral(true, "", &string) |
| //! } |
| //! } |
| //! |
| //! fn main() { |
| //! let myvector = Vector2D { x: 3, y: 4 }; |
| //! |
| //! println!("{myvector}"); // => "(3, 4)" |
| //! println!("{myvector:?}"); // => "Vector2D {x: 3, y:4}" |
| //! println!("{myvector:10.3b}"); // => " 5.000" |
| //! } |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! ### `fmt::Display` vs `fmt::Debug` |
| //! |
| //! These two formatting traits have distinct purposes: |
| //! |
| //! - [`fmt::Display`][`Display`] implementations assert that the type can be faithfully |
| //! represented as a UTF-8 string at all times. It is **not** expected that |
| //! all types implement the [`Display`] trait. |
| //! - [`fmt::Debug`][`Debug`] implementations should be implemented for **all** public types. |
| //! Output will typically represent the internal state as faithfully as possible. |
| //! The purpose of the [`Debug`] trait is to facilitate debugging Rust code. In |
| //! most cases, using `#[derive(Debug)]` is sufficient and recommended. |
| //! |
| //! Some examples of the output from both traits: |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("{} {:?}", 3, 4), "3 4"); |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("{} {:?}", 'a', 'b'), "a 'b'"); |
| //! assert_eq!(format!("{} {:?}", "foo\n", "bar\n"), "foo\n \"bar\\n\""); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! # Related macros |
| //! |
| //! There are a number of related macros in the [`format!`] family. The ones that |
| //! are currently implemented are: |
| //! |
| //! ```ignore (only-for-syntax-highlight) |
| //! format! // described above |
| //! write! // first argument is either a &mut io::Write or a &mut fmt::Write, the destination |
| //! writeln! // same as write but appends a newline |
| //! print! // the format string is printed to the standard output |
| //! println! // same as print but appends a newline |
| //! eprint! // the format string is printed to the standard error |
| //! eprintln! // same as eprint but appends a newline |
| //! format_args! // described below. |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! ### `write!` |
| //! |
| //! [`write!`] and [`writeln!`] are two macros which are used to emit the format string |
| //! to a specified stream. This is used to prevent intermediate allocations of |
| //! format strings and instead directly write the output. Under the hood, this |
| //! function is actually invoking the [`write_fmt`] function defined on the |
| //! [`std::io::Write`] and the [`std::fmt::Write`] trait. Example usage is: |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! # #![allow(unused_must_use)] |
| //! use std::io::Write; |
| //! let mut w = Vec::new(); |
| //! write!(&mut w, "Hello {}!", "world"); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! ### `print!` |
| //! |
| //! This and [`println!`] emit their output to stdout. Similarly to the [`write!`] |
| //! macro, the goal of these macros is to avoid intermediate allocations when |
| //! printing output. Example usage is: |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! print!("Hello {}!", "world"); |
| //! println!("I have a newline {}", "character at the end"); |
| //! ``` |
| //! ### `eprint!` |
| //! |
| //! The [`eprint!`] and [`eprintln!`] macros are identical to |
| //! [`print!`] and [`println!`], respectively, except they emit their |
| //! output to stderr. |
| //! |
| //! ### `format_args!` |
| //! |
| //! [`format_args!`] is a curious macro used to safely pass around |
| //! an opaque object describing the format string. This object |
| //! does not require any heap allocations to create, and it only |
| //! references information on the stack. Under the hood, all of |
| //! the related macros are implemented in terms of this. First |
| //! off, some example usage is: |
| //! |
| //! ``` |
| //! # #![allow(unused_must_use)] |
| //! use std::fmt; |
| //! use std::io::{self, Write}; |
| //! |
| //! let mut some_writer = io::stdout(); |
| //! write!(&mut some_writer, "{}", format_args!("print with a {}", "macro")); |
| //! |
| //! fn my_fmt_fn(args: fmt::Arguments<'_>) { |
| //! write!(&mut io::stdout(), "{args}"); |
| //! } |
| //! my_fmt_fn(format_args!(", or a {} too", "function")); |
| //! ``` |
| //! |
| //! The result of the [`format_args!`] macro is a value of type [`fmt::Arguments`]. |
| //! This structure can then be passed to the [`write`] and [`format`] functions |
| //! inside this module in order to process the format string. |
| //! The goal of this macro is to even further prevent intermediate allocations |
| //! when dealing with formatting strings. |
| //! |
| //! For example, a logging library could use the standard formatting syntax, but |
| //! it would internally pass around this structure until it has been determined |
| //! where output should go to. |
| //! |
| //! [`fmt::Result`]: Result "fmt::Result" |
| //! [Result]: core::result::Result "std::result::Result" |
| //! [std::fmt::Error]: Error "fmt::Error" |
| //! [`write`]: write() "fmt::write" |
| //! [`to_string`]: crate::string::ToString::to_string "ToString::to_string" |
| //! [`write_fmt`]: ../../std/io/trait.Write.html#method.write_fmt |
| //! [`std::io::Write`]: ../../std/io/trait.Write.html |
| //! [`std::fmt::Write`]: ../../std/fmt/trait.Write.html |
| //! [`print!`]: ../../std/macro.print.html "print!" |
| //! [`println!`]: ../../std/macro.println.html "println!" |
| //! [`eprint!`]: ../../std/macro.eprint.html "eprint!" |
| //! [`eprintln!`]: ../../std/macro.eprintln.html "eprintln!" |
| //! [`format_args!`]: ../../std/macro.format_args.html "format_args!" |
| //! [`fmt::Arguments`]: Arguments "fmt::Arguments" |
| //! [`format`]: format() "fmt::format" |
| |
| #![stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| |
| #[stable(feature = "fmt_flags_align", since = "1.28.0")] |
| pub use core::fmt::Alignment; |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| pub use core::fmt::Error; |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| pub use core::fmt::{Arguments, write}; |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| pub use core::fmt::{Binary, Octal}; |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| pub use core::fmt::{Debug, Display}; |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| pub use core::fmt::{DebugList, DebugMap, DebugSet, DebugStruct, DebugTuple}; |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| pub use core::fmt::{Formatter, Result, Write}; |
| #[unstable(feature = "debug_closure_helpers", issue = "117729")] |
| pub use core::fmt::{FromFn, from_fn}; |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| pub use core::fmt::{LowerExp, UpperExp}; |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| pub use core::fmt::{LowerHex, Pointer, UpperHex}; |
| |
| #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] |
| use crate::string; |
| |
| /// Takes an [`Arguments`] struct and returns the resulting formatted string. |
| /// |
| /// The [`Arguments`] instance can be created with the [`format_args!`] macro. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// Basic usage: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use std::fmt; |
| /// |
| /// let s = fmt::format(format_args!("Hello, {}!", "world")); |
| /// assert_eq!(s, "Hello, world!"); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Please note that using [`format!`] might be preferable. |
| /// Example: |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// let s = format!("Hello, {}!", "world"); |
| /// assert_eq!(s, "Hello, world!"); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// [`format_args!`]: core::format_args |
| /// [`format!`]: crate::format |
| #[cfg(not(no_global_oom_handling))] |
| #[must_use] |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[inline] |
| pub fn format(args: Arguments<'_>) -> string::String { |
| fn format_inner(args: Arguments<'_>) -> string::String { |
| let capacity = args.estimated_capacity(); |
| let mut output = string::String::with_capacity(capacity); |
| output |
| .write_fmt(args) |
| .expect("a formatting trait implementation returned an error when the underlying stream did not"); |
| output |
| } |
| |
| args.as_str().map_or_else(|| format_inner(args), crate::borrow::ToOwned::to_owned) |
| } |