what's the meaning of %r in the following statement?
print '%r' % (1)
I think I've heard of %s, %d, and %f but never heard of this.
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Background: In Python, there are two builtin functions for turning an object into a string: str vs. repr. str is supposed to be a friendly, human readable string. repr is supposed to include detailed information about an object's contents (sometimes, they'll return the same thing, such as for integers). By convention, if there's a Python expression that will eval to another object that's ==, repr will return such an expression e.g.
>>> print repr('hi')
'hi' # notice the quotes here as opposed to...
>>> print str('hi')
hi
If returning an expression doesn't make sense for an object, repr should return a string that's surrounded by < and > symbols e.g. To answer your original question: %s <-> str In addition: You can control the way an instance of your own classes convert to strings by implementing
class Foo:
def __init__(self, foo):
self.foo = foo
def __eq__(self, other):
"""Implements ==."""
return self.foo == other.foo
def __repr__(self):
# if you eval the return value of this function,
# you'll get another Foo instance that's == to self
return "Foo(%r)" % self.foo
Python's documentation, describing these methods and their related functions:
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See String Formatting Operations in the docs. Notice that %s and %d etc, might work differently to how you expect if you are used to the way they work in another language such as C. In particular, %s also works well for ints and floats unless you have special formatting requirements where %d or %f will give you more control. |
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