C# has the really powerful String.Format()
for replacing elements like {0}
with parameters. Does JavaScript have an equivalent?
Or
// First, checks if it isn't implemented yet.
if (!String.prototype.format) {
String.prototype.format = function() {
var args = arguments;
return this.replace(/{(\d+)}/g, function(match, number) {
return typeof args[number] != 'undefined'
? args[number]
: match
;
});
};
}
"{0} is dead, but {1} is alive! {0} {2}".format("ASP", "ASP.NET")
Both answers pulled from JavaScript equivalent to printf/string.format
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a solution that allows for argument formatting, based on actual .net code: stackoverflow.com/questions/2534803/string-format-in-javascript – JasonS Jan 12 '15 at 23:11
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If you don't want to extend the prototype:
export class String { //String.format("{0} comes before {1}", "a", "b") static format(stringToFormat, ...tokens) { return stringToFormat.replace(/{(\d+)}/g, function (match, number) { return typeof tokens[number] != 'undefined' ? tokens[number] : match; }); }; }
– miraco Mar 20 '18 at 12:36 -
Yeah, I think it's a bad practice to extend the prototype of standard objects. – wm1sr Jan 7 '19 at 21:32
I am using:
String.prototype.format = function() {
var s = this,
i = arguments.length;
while (i--) {
s = s.replace(new RegExp('\\{' + i + '\\}', 'gm'), arguments[i]);
}
return s;
};
usage: "Hello {0}".format("World");
I found it at Equivalent of String.format in JQuery
UPDATED:
In ES6/ES2015 you can use string templating for instance
'use strict';
let firstName = 'John',
lastName = 'Smith';
console.log(`Full Name is ${firstName} ${lastName}`);
// or
console.log(`Full Name is ${firstName + ' ' + lastName}');
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3Although string templating is a nice feature, it's not the same thing. You can't store the string in memory or otherwise (in a registry for example) and use it with whatever inputs at a later point during runtime. – Mike Haas Sep 29 '16 at 20:29
Based on @Vlad Bezden answer I use this slightly modified code because I prefer named placeholders:
String.prototype.format = function(placeholders) {
var s = this;
for(var propertyName in placeholders) {
var re = new RegExp('{' + propertyName + '}', 'gm');
s = s.replace(re, placeholders[propertyName]);
}
return s;
};
usage:
"{greeting} {who}!".format({greeting: "Hello", who: "world"})
String.prototype.format = function(placeholders) {
var s = this;
for(var propertyName in placeholders) {
var re = new RegExp('{' + propertyName + '}', 'gm');
s = s.replace(re, placeholders[propertyName]);
}
return s;
};
$("#result").text("{greeting} {who}!".format({greeting: "Hello", who: "world"}));
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="result"></div>
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Great, much more suitable for formatting when there are multiple variables passed. – Ctrl-C Nov 29 '16 at 12:16
I created it a long time ago, related question
String.Format = function (b) {
var a = arguments;
return b.replace(/(\{\{\d\}\}|\{\d\})/g, function (b) {
if (b.substring(0, 2) == "{{") return b;
var c = parseInt(b.match(/\d/)[0]);
return a[c + 1]
})
};
JavaScript !== jQuery
. There's not even a jQuery tag. You could argue this question ("JavaScript equivalent to printf/string.format") is the correct "original", but the currently linked one isn't. – ruffin Jun 10 '15 at 14:55