Consider this code:
var age = 3;
console.log("I'm " + age + " years old!");
Are there any other ways to insert the value of a variable in to a string, apart from string concatenation?
Since ES6, you can use template literals:
const age = 3
console.log(`I'm ${age} years old!`)
P.S. Note the use of backticks: ``
.
Use ECMAScript 2015's Template String Literals, if applicable.
There is no direct way to do it, as per ECMAScript 5 specifications, but ECMAScript 6 has template strings, which were also known as quasi-literals during the drafting of the spec. Use them like this:
> var n = 42;
undefined
> `foo${n}bar`
'foo42bar'
You can use any valid JavaScript expression inside the {}
. For example:
> `foo${{name: 'Google'}.name}bar`
'fooGooglebar'
> `foo${1 + 3}bar`
'foo4bar'
The other important thing is, you don't have to worry about multi-line strings anymore. You can write them simply as
> `foo
... bar`
'foo\n bar'
Note: I used io.js v2.4.0 to evaluate all the template strings shown above. You can also use the latest Chrome to test the above shown examples.
Note: ES6 Specifications are now finalized, but have yet to be implemented by all major browsers.
According to the Mozilla Developer Network pages, this will be implemented for basic support starting in the following versions: Firefox 34, Chrome 41, Internet Explorer 12. If you're an Opera, Safari, or Internet Explorer user and are curious about this now, this test bed can be used to play around until everyone gets support for this.
Douglas Crockford's Remedial JavaScript includes a String.prototype.supplant
function. It is short, familiar, and easy to use:
String.prototype.supplant = function (o) {
return this.replace(/{([^{}]*)}/g,
function (a, b) {
var r = o[b];
return typeof r === 'string' || typeof r === 'number' ? r : a;
}
);
};
// Usage:
alert("I'm {age} years old!".supplant({ age: 29 }));
alert("The {a} says {n}, {n}, {n}!".supplant({ a: 'cow', n: 'moo' }));
If you don't want to change String's prototype, you can always adapt it to be standalone, or place it into some other namespace, or whatever.
"The {0} says {1}, {1}, {1}!".supplant(['cow', 'moo'])
Commented
Feb 19, 2013 at 13:31
Word of caution: avoid any template system which does't allow you to escape its own delimiters. For example, There would be no way to output the following using the supplant()
method mentioned here.
"I am 3 years old thanks to my {age} variable."
Simple interpolation may work for small self-contained scripts, but often comes with this design flaw that will limit any serious use. I honestly prefer DOM templates, such as:
<div> I am <span id="age"></span> years old!</div>
And use jQuery manipulation: $('#age').text(3)
Alternately, if you are simply just tired of string concatenation, there's always alternate syntax:
var age = 3;
var str = ["I'm only", age, "years old"].join(" ");
Array.join()
is slower than direct (+
style) concatenation, because browser engines (which includes V8, which includes node and almost anything that runs JS today) have optimized it massively and there's a great deal of difference in favor of direct concatenation
token
- thus provided that you do not provide a data object that has an age
member, it will be fine.
Commented
Feb 1, 2014 at 15:18
supplant
is unwarranted: "I am 3 years old thanks to my {age} variable.".supplant({}));
returns exactly the given string. If age
were given, one could still print {
and }
using {{age}}
I use this pattern in a lot of languages when I don't know how to do it properly yet and just want to get an idea down quickly:
// JavaScript
let stringValue = 'Hello, my name is {name}. You {action} my {relation}.'
.replace(/{name}/g ,'Inigo Montoya')
.replace(/{action}/g ,'killed')
.replace(/{relation}/g,'father')
;
While not particularily efficient, I find it readable. It always works, and its always available:
' VBScript
dim template = "Hello, my name is {name}. You {action} my {relation}."
dim stringvalue = template
stringValue = replace(stringvalue, "{name}" ,"Luke Skywalker")
stringValue = replace(stringvalue, "{relation}","Father")
stringValue = replace(stringvalue, "{action}" ,"are")
ALWAYS
* COBOL
INSPECT stringvalue REPLACING FIRST '{name}' BY 'Grendel Mother'
INSPECT stringvalue REPLACING FIRST '{relation}' BY 'Son shoulder'
INSPECT stringvalue REPLACING FIRST '{action}' BY 'made a gaping mortal-making wound upon.'
UPDATE:
I had thought it was self-evident, but it was made clear to me that it was not. You can apply this anytime you have a key/value pair to loop through.
// JavaScript
let template = 'Hello, my name is {name}. You {action} my {relation}.'
let values = {
name: 'Inigo Montoya',
action: 'killed',
relation, 'father',
};
let output = template;
for(let entry of Object.entries(values)){
output = output.replace('{'+output[0]+'}',output[1]);
}
console.log(output);
I've been using this in pl/SQL lately.
You could use Prototype's template system if you really feel like using a sledgehammer to crack a nut:
var template = new Template("I'm #{age} years old!");
alert(template.evaluate({age: 21}));
The simplest would be
`my string ${VARIABLE}`
a less efficient way to accomplish this would be
function format(str, ...params) {
for(const param of params)
str = str.replace("%", param);
return str;
}
which can be used with
format("My % string", "interpolation")
If you want to interpolate in console.log
output, then just
console.log("Eruption 1: %s", eruption1);
^^
Here, %s
is what is called a "format specifier". console.log
has this sort of interpolation support built-in.
You can do easily using ES6 template string
and transpile to ES5 using any available transpilar like babel.
const age = 3;
console.log(`I'm ${age} years old!`);
let age = 3;
console.log(`I'm ${age} years old!`);
You can use the backticks `` and ES6 template string
Here's a solution which requires you to provide an object with the values. If you don't provide an object as parameter, it will default to using global variables. But better stick to using the parameter, it's much cleaner.
String.prototype.interpolate = function(props) {
return this.replace(/\{(\w+)\}/g, function(match, expr) {
return (props || window)[expr];
});
};
// Test:
// Using the parameter (advised approach)
document.getElementById("resultA").innerText = "Eruption 1: {eruption1}".interpolate({ eruption1: 112 });
// Using the global scope
var eruption2 = 116;
document.getElementById("resultB").innerText = "Eruption 2: {eruption2}".interpolate();
<div id="resultA"></div><div id="resultB"></div>
eval
, but sometimes not. For example, if the OP wanted a way to interpolate using the current scope, without having to pass a lookup object (like how Groovy interpolation works), I'm pretty sure eval
would be required. Don't just resort to the old "eval is evil".
eval
is the only way to access local variables in scope. So don't reject it just because it hurts your feelings. BTW, I also prefer the alternative way because it's safer, but the eval
method is what precisely answers OP's question, hence it's in the answer.
Commented
Jan 4, 2015 at 13:14
eval
is that is cannot access vars from another scope, so if your .interpolate
call is within another function, and not global, it's not going to work.
Try kiwi, a light-weight JavaScript module for string interpolation.
You can do
Kiwi.compose("I'm % years old!", [age]);
or
Kiwi.compose("I'm %{age} years old!", {"age" : age});
Couldn't find what I was looking for, then found it -
If you're using Node.js, there's a built-in util
package with a format function that works like this:
util.format("Hello my name is %s", "Brent");
> Hello my name is Brent
Coincidentally this is now built into console.log
flavors too in Node.js -
console.log("This really bad error happened: %s", "ReferenceError");
> This really bad error happened: ReferenceError
Expanding on Greg Kindel's second answer, you can write a function to eliminate some of the boilerplate:
var fmt = {
join: function() {
return Array.prototype.slice.call(arguments).join(' ');
},
log: function() {
console.log(this.join(...arguments));
}
}
Usage:
var age = 7;
var years = 5;
var sentence = fmt.join('I am now', age, 'years old!');
fmt.log('In', years, 'years I will be', age + years, 'years old!');
Since ES6, if you want to do string interpolation in object keys, you will get a SyntaxError: expected property name, got '${'
if you do something like:
let age = 3
let obj = { `${age}`: 3 }
You should do the following instead:
let obj = { [`${age}`]: 3 }
While templates are probably best for the case you describe, if you have or want your data and/or arguments in iterable/array form, you can use String.raw
.
String.raw({
raw: ["I'm ", " years old!"]
}, 3);
With the data as an array, one can use the spread operator:
const args = [3, 'yesterday'];
String.raw({
raw: ["I'm ", " years old as of ", ""]
}, ...args);
var sourceElm = document.querySelector('input')
// interpolation callback
const onInterpolate = s => `<mark>${s}</mark>`
// listen to "input" event
sourceElm.addEventListener('input', parseInput)
// parse on window load
parseInput()
// input element parser
function parseInput(){
var html = interpolate(sourceElm.value, undefined, onInterpolate)
sourceElm.nextElementSibling.innerHTML = html;
}
// the actual interpolation
function interpolate(str, interpolator = ["{{", "}}"], cb){
// split by "start" pattern
return str.split(interpolator[0]).map((s1, i) => {
// first item can be safely ignored
if( i == 0 ) return s1;
// for each splited part, split again by "end" pattern
const s2 = s1.split(interpolator[1]);
// is there's no "closing" match to this part, rebuild it
if( s1 == s2[0]) return interpolator[0] + s2[0]
// if this split's result as multiple items' array, it means the first item is between the patterns
if( s2.length > 1 ){
s2[0] = s2[0]
? cb(s2[0]) // replace the array item with whatever
: interpolator.join('') // nothing was between the interpolation pattern
}
return s2.join('') // merge splited array (part2)
}).join('') // merge everything
}
input{
padding:5px;
width: 100%;
box-sizing: border-box;
margin-bottom: 20px;
}
*{
font: 14px Arial;
padding:5px;
}
<input value="Everything between {{}} is {{processed}}" />
<div></div>