Nick Coghlan wrote: > skip at pobox.com wrote: > >> My >> apologies if I don't understand some amazing generality about format() > >>>> format("Header", '=^20s') > '=======Header=======' > >>>> "Format a single object {0!r}, multiple times in a single string. > Year: {0.year}; Month: {0.month}; Day: {0.day}; Formatted: > {0:%Y-%M-%d}".format(datetime.now()) > 'Format a single object datetime.datetime(2009, 12, 6, 9, 16, 0, > 875018), multiple times in a single string. Year: 2009; Month: 12; Day: > 6; Formatted: 2009-16-06' > >>>> "Use keyword arguments easily: {x}, {y}, {z}".format(x=1, y=2, z=3) > 'Use keyword arguments easily: 1, 2, 3' > > For the things that mod formatting already allows you to do, our aim is > to get format() functionality at least on par with what mod formatting > supports (it should be most of the way there with the number formatting > cleanups for 2.7/3.2). For the rest of the features (explicit position > references, centre alignment, arbitrary fill characters, attribute and > subscript references, type defined formatting control), mod formatting > isn't even in the game. > > Getting rid of the magic behaviour associated with the use of tuples on > the right hand side is also valuable: > >>>> "%s" % (1, 2) > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> > TypeError: not all arguments converted during string formatting >>>> "{}".format((1, 2)) > '(1, 2)' A nice demonstration of what an excellent piece of work the new .format is or is becoming. I would still like it to be a goal for 3.2 that all stdlib modules that work with formats accept the new formats and not just % formats. Mark Summerfield only covered .format in his book on Python 3 programimg and I hated to tell him that there was at least one module in the stdlib that currently (3.1) requires the old style. Terry Jan Reedy
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