2

A python newbie question:

I would like to print in python with the c format with a list of parameters:

agrs = [1,2,3,"hello"]
string = "This is a test %d, %d, %d, %s"

How can I print using python as:

This is a test 1, 2, 3, hello

Thanks.

3
  • Look at stackoverflow.com/questions/15286401/…
    – perennial_
    Aug 10, 2017 at 19:56
  • I'd say go look here in the documentation: docs.python.org/3.6/library/string.html Everything is very well documented there and it should be the first place you look.
    – Anton vBR
    Aug 10, 2017 at 20:02
  • @bouletta: I wouldn't call it a duplicate only because this specific question is concerned with formatting an existing list as sequential format items. True, you could just blindly do string % (agrs[0], agrs[1], agrs[2], agrs[3]) and it would work, but you wouldn't necessarily understand why it worked (that you need a tuple specifically, and list(agrs) works just fine. Aug 10, 2017 at 20:02

6 Answers 6

6

Strings overload the modulus operator, %, for printf-style formatting, and special case tuples for formatting using multiple values, so all you need to do is convert from list to tuple:

print(string % tuple(agrs))
1
  • This works well for me and is simplest way. Thanks.
    – KTran
    Aug 10, 2017 at 20:40
5

Tuple:

Example:

print("Total score for %s is %s  " % (name, score))

In your case:

print(string % tuple(agrs))

Or use the new-style string formatting:

print("Total score for {} is {}".format(name, score))

Or pass the values as parameters and print will do it:

print("Total score for", name, "is", score)

Source

1
  • @ShadowRanger method work best for me because the agrs list is a variable list of parameter. the "string" is a predefine format so changing it is just making it more complicated. Thanks Liam.
    – KTran
    Aug 10, 2017 at 20:43
1

Using new-style formatting: How about these one? (just experementing here) Docs: https://docs.python.org/3.6/library/string.html

args = [1,2,3,"hello"]
string = "{}, "*(len(args)-1)+"{}" # = "{}, {}, {}, {}"

'This is a test {}'.format(string.format(*args)) # inception!

Or this one:

args = [1,2,3,"hello"]
argstring = [str(i) for i in args]
'This is a test {}'.format(', '.join(argstring))

Or simply:

args = [1,2,3,"hello"]
'This is a test {}'.format(', '.join(map(str,args)))

All print:

This is a test 1, 2, 3, hello

1

The % character is not needed in following method:

agrs = [1,2,3,"hello"]
print("This is a test: {:02d},{:>10d},{:05d},{:>15s}".format(agrs[0],agrs[1],agrs[2],agrs[3]))

Same will do:

agrs = [1,2,3,"hello"]
print("This is a test: {0:02d},{1:>10d},{2:05d},{3:>15s}".format(agrs[0],agrs[1],agrs[2],agrs[3]))

Each item is formatted by what follows ":" within each curly bracket, and each of those corresponds to an argument passed on in brackets to format. For example, agrs[0] is passed and the format is "02d", which is equivalent of %02d in C.

0

Have a look at the % operator. It accepts a string and a tuple like that:

print "My age is %d and my favourite char is %c" % (16, '$')
-1
l = [1,2,3,"hello"]
print("This is a test %d, %d, %d, %s"%(l[0],l[1],l[2],l[3]))

Hope this works ! Cheers bud!

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.