| |||
The String formatter
String Handling example from a Well House Consultants training course
More on String Handling [link]
Source code: strf Module: Y108
# The String formatter
# New in Python 2.6, and becoming THE standard in Python 3.0 ... # a replacement for the "%" string format operator # (a) - deciding what to fill in .... one = "This is a test".format() two = "This is a {} test".format("second") three = "This is a {0} test".format("third") four = "This is a {which} test".format(which = "fourth") mycollection = ["fifth","sixth","final"] five = "This is a {0[2]} initial test".format(mycollection) print(one) print(two) print(three) print(four) print(five) print() ; # a blank line # (b) - deciding how to format it ... # field specification for formatting - examples using floating point value = -1.0/7.0 print( "The raw value is",value) seven = "The value is {}".format(value) ; # default - 14 places eight = "The value is {:f}".format(value) ; # default float format - 7 places nine = "The value is {:.2f}".format(value) ; # 2 decimal places ten = "The value is {:10.2f}".format(value) ; # min field width 10, 2 decimal places print(seven) print(eight) print(nine) print(ten) print() ; # a blank line # (c) - deciding how to align it and fill it eleven = "The value is {:<10.2f} rounded to 2 decimal places".format(value) ; # left justified twelve = "The value is {:>10.2f} rounded to 2 decimal places".format(value) ; # right justified thirteen = "The value is {:^10.2f} rounded to 2 decimal places".format(value) ; # centred fourteen = "The value is {:*>10.2f} rounded to 2 decimal places".format(value) ; # leading * filled fifteen = "The value is {:*=10.2f} rounded to 2 decimal places".format(value) ; # leading * filled after sign print(eleven) print(twelve) print(thirteen) print(fourteen) print(fifteen) print() ; # a blank line # Conversion types - for FLOATING POINT NUMBERS: e E f F g G n % and none . # e - exponential. f - fixed. g - general (use best choice of e or f based on number value. # E F G are like e f g but capitalise letter E when used. # n like g but considers locale. % makes number into a percentage and uses f formatting. # Integer conversion types ... demovals = [14,120,1642,-9] sixteen = "In binary {0[0]:b} and {0[1]:^5b} and {0[2]:<15b} and {0[3]:8b}".format(demovals) seventeen = "In octal {0[0]:o} and {0[1]:^5o} and {0[2]:<15o} and {0[3]:8o}".format(demovals) eighteen = "In decimal {0[0]:d} and {0[1]:^5d} and {0[2]:<15d} and {0[3]:8d}".format(demovals) nineteen = "In hexadecimal {0[0]:x} and {0[1]:^5x} and {0[2]:<15x} and {0[3]:8x}".format(demovals) twenty = "In heXadecimal {0[0]:X} and {0[1]:^5X} and {0[2]:<15X} and {0[3]:8X}".format(demovals) print(sixteen) print(seventeen) print(eighteen) print(nineteen) print(twenty) print() ; # a blank line """ Sample Output WomanWithCat:y108 grahamellis$ python3 strf This is a test This is a second test This is a third test This is a fourth test This is a final initial test The raw value is -0.14285714285714285 The value is -0.14285714285714285 The value is -0.142857 The value is -0.14 The value is -0.14 The value is -0.14 rounded to 2 decimal places The value is -0.14 rounded to 2 decimal places The value is -0.14 rounded to 2 decimal places The value is *****-0.14 rounded to 2 decimal places The value is -*****0.14 rounded to 2 decimal places In binary 1110 and 1111000 and 11001101010 and -1001 In octal 16 and 170 and 3152 and -11 In decimal 14 and 120 and 1642 and -9 In hexadecimal e and 78 and 66a and -9 In heXadecimal E and 78 and 66A and -9 WomanWithCat:y108 grahamellis$ python2 strf This is a test This is a second test This is a third test This is a fourth test This is a final initial test () ('The raw value is', -0.14285714285714285) The value is -0.142857142857 The value is -0.142857 The value is -0.14 The value is -0.14 () The value is -0.14 rounded to 2 decimal places The value is -0.14 rounded to 2 decimal places The value is -0.14 rounded to 2 decimal places The value is *****-0.14 rounded to 2 decimal places The value is -*****0.14 rounded to 2 decimal places () In binary 1110 and 1111000 and 11001101010 and -1001 In octal 16 and 170 and 3152 and -11 In decimal 14 and 120 and 1642 and -9 In hexadecimal e and 78 and 66a and -9 In heXadecimal E and 78 and 66A and -9 WomanWithCat:y108 grahamellis$ """ Learn about this subject
This module and example are covered on the following public courses:
* Learning to program in Python * Python Programming * Intermediate Python Also available on on site courses for larger groups Books covering this topic
Yes. We have over 700 books in our library. Books
covering Python are listed here and when you've selected a
relevant book we'll link you on to Amazon to order.
Other Examples
This example comes from our "String Handling" training module. You'll find a description of the topic and some
other closely related examples on the "String Handling" module index page.
Full description of the source code
You can learn more about this example on the training courses listed on this page,
on which you'll be given a full set of training notes.
Many other training modules are available for download (for limited use) from our download centre under an Open Training Notes License. Other resources
• Our Solutions centre provides a number of longer technical articles.
• Our Opentalk forum archive provides a question and answer centre. • The Horse's mouth provides a daily tip or thought. • Further resources are available via the resources centre. • All of these resources can be searched through through our search engine • And there's a global index here. Purpose of this website
This is a sample program, class demonstration or answer from a
training course. It's main purpose
is to provide an after-course service to customers who have attended our
public private or
on site courses, but the examples are made
generally available under conditions described below.
Web site author
Conditions of use
Past attendees on our training courses are welcome to use individual
examples in the course of their programming, but must check
the examples they use to ensure that they are suitable for their
job. Remember that some of our examples show you how not to do
things - check in your notes. Well House Consultants take no responsibility
for the suitability of these example programs to customer's needs.
This program is copyright Well House Consultants Ltd. You are forbidden from using it for running your own training courses without our prior written permission. See our page on courseware provision for more details. Any of our images within this code may NOT be reused on a public URL without our prior permission. For Bona Fide personal use, we will often grant you permission provided that you provide a link back. Commercial use on a website will incur a license fee for each image used - details on request. | |||
PH: 01144 1225 708225 • EMAIL: info@wellho.net • WEB: http://www.wellho.net • SKYPE: wellho PAGE: http://www.wellho.net/resources/ex.php4 • PAGE BUILT: Sun Oct 11 14:50:09 2020 • BUILD SYSTEM: JelliaJamb |