2432

I'm looking for a good JavaScript equivalent of the C/PHP printf() or for C#/Java programmers, String.Format() (IFormatProvider for .NET).

My basic requirement is a thousand separator format for numbers for now, but something that handles lots of combinations (including dates) would be good.

I realize Microsoft's Ajax library provides a version of String.Format(), but we don't want the entire overhead of that framework.

7
  • 4
    Aside all the great answers below, you may want to take a look at this one: stackoverflow.com/a/2648463/1712065 which IMO, is the most efficient solution to this problem.
    – Annie
    Apr 24, 2015 at 2:54
  • 3
    I wrote a cheap one that uses C-like printf syntax. Jan 28, 2016 at 19:38
  • var search = [$scope.dog, "1"]; var url = vsprintf("earth/Services/dogSearch.svc/FindMe/%s/%s", search); ***For node, you can get your module by "npm install sprintf-js"
    – Jenna Leaf
    Apr 29, 2016 at 19:25
  • I have also written a simple function to achieve this; stackoverflow.com/a/54345052/5927126 Jan 24, 2019 at 11:10
  • 5
    Most of the answers here are disappointing. Both printf and String.Format are way more than just simple templating, and the question specifically mentions thousand separators, which none of the simple templating solutions handle.
    – blm
    Jan 23, 2021 at 23:01

61 Answers 61

3

I didn't see pyformat in the list so I thought I'd throw it in:

console.log(pyformat( 'The {} {} jumped over the {}'
                , ['brown' ,'fox' ,'foobar']
                ))
console.log(pyformat('The {0} {1} jumped over the {1}'
                , ['brown' ,'fox' ,'foobar']
                ))
console.log(pyformat('The {color} {animal} jumped over the {thing}'
                , [] ,{color: 'brown' ,animal: 'fox' ,thing: 'foobaz'}
                ))
3

another suggestion is you use the string template:

const getPathDadosCidades = (id: string) =>  `/clientes/${id}`

const getPathDadosCidades = (id: string, role: string) =>  `/clientes/${id}/roles/${role}`
1
  • thanks, the idea of putting this into a lambda just saved me a lot of faff! Apr 23, 2021 at 8:35
2

I did not see the String.format variant:

String.format = function (string) {
    var args = Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments, 1, arguments.length);
    return string.replace(/{(\d+)}/g, function (match, number) {
        return typeof args[number] != "undefined" ? args[number] : match;
    });
};
2

For use with jQuery.ajax() success functions. Pass only a single argument and string replace with the properties of that object as {propertyName}:

String.prototype.format = function () {
    var formatted = this;
    for (var prop in arguments[0]) {
        var regexp = new RegExp('\\{' + prop + '\\}', 'gi');
        formatted = formatted.replace(regexp, arguments[0][prop]);
    }
    return formatted;
};

Example:

var userInfo = ("Email: {Email} - Phone: {Phone}").format({ Email: "[email protected]", Phone: "123-123-1234" });
2

With sprintf.js in place - one can make a nifty little format-thingy

String.prototype.format = function(){
    var _args = arguments 
    Array.prototype.unshift.apply(_args,[this])
    return sprintf.apply(undefined,_args)
}   
// this gives you:
"{%1$s}{%2$s}".format("1", "0")
// {1}{0}
2
/**
 * Format string by replacing placeholders with value from element with
 * corresponsing index in `replacementArray`.
 * Replaces are made simultaneously, so that replacement values like
 * '{1}' will not mess up the function.
 *
 * Example 1:
 * ('{2} {1} {0}', ['three', 'two' ,'one']) -> 'one two three'
 *
 * Example 2:
 * ('{0}{1}', ['{1}', '{0}']) -> '{1}{0}'
 */
function stringFormat(formatString, replacementArray) {
    return formatString.replace(
        /\{(\d+)\}/g, // Matches placeholders, e.g. '{1}'
        function formatStringReplacer(match, placeholderIndex) {
            // Convert String to Number
            placeholderIndex = Number(placeholderIndex);

            // Make sure that index is within replacement array bounds
            if (placeholderIndex < 0 ||
                placeholderIndex > replacementArray.length - 1
            ) {
                return placeholderIndex;
            }

            // Replace placeholder with value from replacement array
            return replacementArray[placeholderIndex];
        }
    );
}
1

There is also Globalize.format in the jQuery Globalize project, the official globalization service for jQuery UI. IT's nice when you need culture-aware formatting.

1

I needed a function which could format a price (given in cents) in a way preferred by the user, and the tricky part is that the format is specified by the user -- and I do not expect my users to understand printf-like syntax, or regexps, etc. My solution is somewhat similar to that used in Basic, so the user just marks with # places for digits, for example:

simple_format(1234567,"$ ###,###,###.##")
"$ 12,345.67"
simple_format(1234567,"### ### ###,## pln")
"12 345,67 pln"

I believe this is quite easy to understand by user, and quite easy to implement:

function simple_format(integer,format){
  var text = "";
  for(var i=format.length;i--;){
    if(format[i]=='#'){
      text = (integer%10) + text;
      integer=Math.floor(integer/10);
      if(integer==0){
        return format.substr(0,i).replace(/#(.*#)?/,"")+text;
      }
    }else{
      text = format[i] + text;
    }
  }
  return text;
}
1

arg function:

/**
 * Qt stil arg()
 * var scr = "<div id='%1' class='%2'></div>".arg("mydiv").arg("mydivClass");
 */
String.prototype.arg = function() {
    var signIndex = this.indexOf("%");
    var result = this;
    if (signIndex > -1 && arguments.length > 0) {
        var argNumber = this.charAt(signIndex + 1);
        var _arg = "%"+argNumber;
        var argCount = this.split(_arg);
        for (var itemIndex = 0; itemIndex < argCount.length; itemIndex++) {
            result = result.replace(_arg, arguments[0]);
        }
    }
    return result;
}
1

String.prototype.format = function(){
    var final = String(this);
    for(let i=0; i<arguments.length;i++){
        final = final.replace(`%s${i+1}`, arguments[i])
    }
    return final || ''
}

console.log(("hello %s2 how %s3 you %s1").format('hi', 'hello', 'how'));
<h1 id="text">
   
</h1>

1

I use the template literal approach, like below:

export const messages = {
  foo: (arg1, arg2) => `Hello ${arg1} ${arg2}`,
  bar: (arg1) => `Hello ${arg1}`,
}

From the file:

console.log(messages.foo('Bar', 'World'))
console.log(messages.bar('Foo'))
1

Here is a very short function that does a subset of printf and shows the result in the developer console:

function L(...values)
    {
    // Replace each '@', starting with the text in the first arg
    console.log(values.reduce(function(str,arg) {return str.replace(/@/,arg)}));
    } // L

Here is a test:

let a=[1,2,3];
L('a: [@]',a);

Output is similar to: a=[1,2,3]

0

This one works with {0}, {1} and {}.

String.prototype.format = function format()
{                                                                                                               
  var msg = this;
  for(var i in arguments)
    msg = msg.replace(/\{\}/,arguments[i]).replace(new RegExp('\\{'+i+'\\}','g'),arguments[i]);
  return msg;
}
0

You can use this function

            String.prototype.format = function (args) {
            var str = this;
            return str.replace(String.prototype.format.regex, function(item) {
                var intVal = parseInt(item.substring(1, item.length - 1));
                var replace;
                if (intVal >= 0) {
                    replace = args[intVal];
                } else if (intVal === -1) {
                    replace = "{";
                } else if (intVal === -2) {
                    replace = "}";
                } else {
                    replace = "";
                }
                return replace;
            });
        };
        String.prototype.format.regex = new RegExp("{-?[0-9]+}", "g");

        // Sample usage.
        var str = "She {1} {0}{2} by the {0}{3}. {-1}^_^{-2}";
        str = str.format(["sea", "sells", "shells", "shore"]);
        alert(str);
1
  • Using parseInt() as @hienbt88 has here yields something surprisingly competitive, performancewise… I benched both a tidied-up version of this idea and a regex-caching variant of same here: jsperf.com/stringformat/6#results – the parseInt() implementations come out at or near the top (vs. a bunch of the other versions of String.format() harvested from snippets posted by this q’s answerers).
    – fish2000
    Dec 2, 2013 at 18:04
0

bobjs can do this:

var sFormat = "My name is {0} and I am {1} years old."; 
var result = bob.string.formatString(sFormat, "Bob", 29); 
console.log(result); 
//output: 
//========== 
// My name is Bob and I am 29 years old. 
0
String.prototype.repeat = function(n) { 
    return new Array(++n).join(this); 
};

String.prototype.pad = function(requiredLength, paddingStr, paddingType) {    
    var n = requiredLength - this.length; 

    if (n) {
        paddingType = paddingType ? paddingType.toLowerCase() : '';
        paddingStr = paddingStr || ' ';
        paddingStr = paddingStr.repeat( Math.ceil(n / paddingStr.length) ).substr(0, n);

        if (paddingType == 'both') {
            n /= 2;
            return paddingStr.substr( 0, Math.ceil(n) ) + this + paddingStr.substr( 0, Math.floor(n) );
        }   

        if (paddingType == 'left') {
            return paddingStr + this;
        }

        return this + paddingStr;
    } 

    return this; 
}; 

// синтаксис аналогичен printf
// 'Привет, %s!'.format('мир') -> "Привет, мир!"
// '%.1s.%.1s. %s'.format('Иван', 'Иванович', 'Иванов') -> "И.И. Иванов"
String.prototype.format = function() {
    var i = 0, 
        params = arguments;

    return this.replace(/%(?:%|(?:(|[+-]+)(|0|'.+?)([1-9]\d*)?(?:\.([1-9]\d*))?)?(s|d|f))/g, function(match, sign, padding, width, precision, type) {
        if (match == '%%') { 
            return '%'; 
        }

        var v = params[i++];

        if (type == 'd') { 
            v = Math.round(v); 
        }
        else if (type == 'f') {
            v = v.toFixed(precision ? precision : 6);
        }

        if (/\+/.test(sign) && v > 0) {
            v = '+' + v;
        }

        v += '';

        if (type != 'f' && precision) {
            v = v.substr(0, precision);
        }

        if (width) {
            v = v.pad(width, padding == '' ? ' ' : padding[0] == "'" ? padding.substr(1) : padding, /-/.test(sign) ? 'right' : 'left'); 
        }

        return v;
    });
};

// this.name = 'Вася';
// console.log( 'Привет, ${name}!'.template(this) );
// "Привет, Вася!"
String.prototype.template = function(context) {
    return this.replace(/\$\{(.*?)\}/g, function(match, name) {
        return context[name];
    });
};
0

This is an implementation of https://stackoverflow.com/a/4673436/1258486 for CoffeeScript.

https://gist.github.com/eces/5669361

if String.prototype.format is undefined
  String.prototype.format = () ->
    _arguments = arguments
    this.replace /{(\d+)}/g, (match, number) ->
      if typeof _arguments[number] isnt 'undefined' then _arguments[number] else match
0

I started porting the Java String.format (actually new Formatter().format()) to javascript. The initial version is available at:

https://github.com/RobAu/javascript.string.format

You can simple add the javscript and call StringFormat.format("%.2f", [2.4]); etc.

Please note it is NOT finished yet, but feedback is welcome :)

2
  • So why add it as a possible solution?
    – Dragas
    Jun 17, 2018 at 5:57
  • 1
    "My basic requirement is a thousand separator format for numbers for now" - it handles that just fine Jun 17, 2018 at 13:48
0

In typescript create a file named format.ts and import it whatever you need to use formatting.

// contents of format.ts

interface String {
  format(...args: any[]): string;
}

if (!String.prototype.format) {
  String.prototype.format = function() {
    let a = this;
    let b: any;
    // tslint:disable-next-line: forin
    for (b in arguments) {
      a = a.replace(/%[a-z]/, arguments[b]);
    }
    return a;
  };
}

To format string use this code:

import './format';

console.log('Hello, %s!'.format('World'));

Example

String.prototype.format = function() {
  let a = this;
  let b;
  for (b in arguments) {
    a = a.replace(/%[a-z]/, arguments[b]);
  }
  return a;
};

console.log('Hello, %s!'.format('World'));

0

if you just need to format a string with %s specifier only

function _sprintf(message){
    const regexp = RegExp('%s','g');
    let match;
    let index = 1;
    while((match = regexp.exec(message)) !== null) {
        let replacement = arguments[index];
        if (replacement) {
            let messageToArray = message.split('');
            messageToArray.splice(match.index, regexp.lastIndex - match.index, replacement);
            message = messageToArray.join('');
            index++;
        } else {
            break;
        }
    }

    return message;
}

_sprintf("my name is %s, my age is %s", "bob", 50); // my name is bob, my age is 50
0

If you need a printf, use printf

Looks like 90% of commenters never used printf with more complex format than just %d. I wonder how do they output, for example, money values?

1
  • Formatting outside the string. (213.3244).toFixed(2) exists in JavaScript, other languages have other methods (C# has Decimal.Truncate(), or you use Math.Round()/Math.round()). Cultural information is also present in many languages. System.Globalization for C# is an example, (324).toLocaleString() in JavaScript. This answer also only works in Node.js, not the browser. Considering the question doesn't specify if its browser or node, this answer could be considered rather useless to the situation (tho helpful to others coming here). Template strings are the best solution here.
    – Lilly
    Apr 30, 2021 at 11:12
0

Right now, there is a package called locutus which translate the functions of other languages to Javascript such as php, python, ruby etc.

const printf = require('locutus/php/strings/printf')
printf('Hello world');

You can try this playground codesandbox

1
  • I found a bug and contributed a fix. It should work perfectly now. Thank you for mentioning! Jul 24, 2021 at 8:49
0

Ok, so first we'll set up some variables to use:

    const date = new Date();
    
    const locale = 'en-us';
    
    const wDay   = date.toLocaleString(locale, {weekday: 'short'});
    const month  = date.toLocaleString(locale, {month: 'long'});
    const year   = date.toLocaleString(locale, {year: 'numeric'});
    const minute = date.toLocaleString(locale, {minute: 'numeric'});
    const [hour, ap] = date.toLocaleString(locale, {hour: 'numeric', hour12:true}).split(' ');
    
    let mDay = date.toLocaleString(locale, {day: 'numeric'});
    
    switch(mDay % 10)
    {
        case 1:  mDay += 'st'; break;
        case 2:  mDay += 'nd'; break;
        case 3:  mDay += 'rd'; break;
        default: mDay += 'th'; break;
    }

Now that we've got all that, we can format a string like so:

    const formatter = (...a) => `${a[0]}, the ${a[1]} of ${a[2]} ${a[3]} at ${a[4]}:${a[5]} ${a[6]}`;
    const formatted = formatter(wDay, mDay, month, year, hour, minute, ap);

We could even use named paramaters for the "formatter" function:

    const formatter = (wDay, mDay, month, year, hour, minute, ap) => `${wDay}, the ${mDay} of ${month} ${year} at ${hour}:${minute} ${ap}`;
    const formatted = formatter(wDay, mDay, month, year, hour, minute, ap);

If you'll notice, the JS templates above are both the results of callbacks. If the entire piece of code above were encapsulated within a function that was expected to return a formatted date, it would not be hard to imagine how to construct an arbitrary "formatter" function in the same manner, that could be passed in from outside.

tl;dr you can re-use template literals if you put them inside callbacks and use the args as the replacements.

0

Modified code of old answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/18234317/19531844 much more efficient (without slow RegExp) and shorter

String.prototype.formatUnicorn = function () {
    let str = this.toString();
    if(!arguments.length) {
        return;
    };
    const [args] = arguments;
    for (const key of Object.keys(args)) {
        str = str.replaceAll(`{${key}}`, args[key]);
    };
    return str;
};

usage:

"{test} {test_2} {test}".formatUnicorn({"test": "hello", "test_2": "world"}); // yields hello world hello

benchmark between new and old: https://jsben.ch/BRovx

0
export function stringFormat (str: string, ...args: string[]) {
     return args.reduce((acc, curr, i) => acc.replace(new RegExp("\\{" + i + "\\}", 'g'), curr), str);
}
0

I needed a step more forward solution.

A template I could reuse to generate strings not only in declaration but in a random time in the execution time.

So I came across with this jig:

 class Texplate{
    constructor(...args){
        this.data = args;
    }

    apply(...args){
        var text = "";
        var i = 0, j = 0, n = this.data.length, m = args.length;
        for(;i < n && j < m; i++, j++){
            text += this.data[i] + args[j];
        }

        for (; i < n; i++){
            text += this.data[i];
        }

        for (; j < m; j++){
            text += args[j];
        }

        return text;        
    }
}

This allow to create a Text template which works internally as the array merge algorithm, starting with the text array defined in constructor.

An example of use:

var Textplate example = new Texplate("Hello, ", "!"); 
console.log(example.apply("Frank"));
console.log(example.apply("Mary"));
console.log(example.apply());
console.log(example.apply("Frank", " Have a good day!"));
0

I am answering this question because of the following reasons.

  • sprintf/printf allows you to provide variable lengths of arguments.
  • The top answers are using template literals. When using template literals you must know the number of arguments you have.

@Braden Best and @David Spector's answers seem valid from my perspective.

I am adding the following answer so that someone can find the answer in one place.

Explanation:

  • In the method, you're passing your desired template string in the first parameter, having placeholder :param. Alongside that, you can pass as many replacers as you want.
  • It then iterates over the values passed and replaces the next :param with the currently iterating value.

Mainly, if you know what Array.reduce and String.replace do, you understand the code.

You can change the :param to anything you want. Also, you will need to change the :param within the sprintf method in that case.

function sprintf(format, ...values) {
  return values.reduce((carry, current) => carry.replace(/:param/, current), format);
}

console.log(sprintf('Hello :param! How are you :param. Are you over :param?', 'World', 'Anik', 18));
console.log(sprintf('Nothing to be replaced in here!'));
console.log(sprintf('https://httpbin.org/users/:param/posts/:param', 'anik', 'abcdefgh'));
console.log(sprintf('hello :param! How are you :param. Are you over :param? ":param"', 'world', 'anik', 18, ['extra', 'params']));
console.log(sprintf('hello :param'));
console.log(sprintf('hello', 1,2,3,4));

-1

This is not an exact duplicate of sprintf; however, it is similar and more powerful: https://github.com/anywhichway/stringformatter

Format expressions using this library take the form of embedded Javascript objects, e.g.

format("I have {number: {currency: "$", precision:2}}.",50.2); 

will return "I have $50.20.".

-1

Not the most recommended function in the world, but it works.

If you need sprintf, just copy & paste this same function and change return console.log(sb) to just return sb.

printf = function(s, /*args...*/) {
    a = arguments;
    al = a.length;
    
    if (al <= 1) return -2;
    if (al >= 2 && s.toLowerCase().search(/%[a-z]/) == -1) return -1;

    sb = s;
    for (i = 1; i <= al - 1; i++) {
        sb = sb.replace(/%[a-z]/, a[i]);
    }

    return console.log(sb);
}

var someString = "Hello %s\nIt's %s:%s %s now.\nThe day is %s\n";
printf(someString, "StackOverflowUser", "5", "48", "PM", "beautiful");

-1

sprintf() function analog in JavaScript as Vue filter and String.prototype.format() extension:

/**
 * Returns a formatted string.
 *
 * @param template
 * @param values
 * @return string
 */
String.format = function (template, ...values) {
    let i = -1;

    function callback(exp, p0, p1, p2, p3, p4) {
        if (exp === '%%') return '%';
        if (values[++i] === undefined) return undefined;

        exp = p2 ? parseInt(p2.substr(1)) : undefined;

        let base = p3 ? parseInt(p3.substr(1)) : undefined;
        let val;

        switch (p4) {
            case 's': val = values[i]; break;
            case 'c': val = values[i][0]; break;
            case 'f': val = parseFloat(values[i]).toFixed(exp); break;
            case 'p': val = parseFloat(values[i]).toPrecision(exp); break;
            case 'e': val = parseFloat(values[i]).toExponential(exp); break;
            case 'x': val = parseInt(values[i]).toString(base ? base : 16); break;
            case 'd': val = parseFloat(parseInt(values[i], base ? base : 10).toPrecision(exp)).toFixed(0); break;
        }
        val = typeof (val) == 'object' ? JSON.stringify(val) : val.toString(base);
        let sz = parseInt(p1); /* padding size */
        let ch = p1 && p1[0] === '0' ? '0' : ' '; /* isnull? */

        while (val.length < sz) val = p0 !== undefined ? val + ch : ch + val; /* isminus? */

        return val;
    }

    let regex = /%(-)?(0?[0-9]+)?([.][0-9]+)?([#][0-9]+)?([scfpexd%])/g;

    return template.replace(regex, callback);
}

String.prototype.format = function() {
    return String.format(this, ...arguments);
}

const StringFormat = {
    install: (Vue, options) => {
        Vue.filter('format', function () {
            return String.format(...arguments);
        });
    },
};

export default StringFormat;

Original answer: JavaScript equivalent to printf/String.Format

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