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In Ruby, you can substitute arguments into a C-style format string using the String#% method, like so:

'%.3d can be expressed in binary as %b' % [30, 30]
#=> "030 can be expressed in binary as 11110"

Kernel#sprintf and Kernel#format behave similarly:

sprintf('%.3d can be expressed in binary as %b', 30, 30)
#=> "030 can be expressed in binary as 11110"

format('%.3d can be expressed in binary as %b', 30, 30)
#=> "030 can be expressed in binary as 11110"

Ruby also provides the ability to use named parameters within this format string:

'Hello, %{first_name} %{last_name}!' % {first_name: 'John', last_name: 'Doe'}
#=> "Hello, John Doe!"

But is there a way to use these features together? E.g.:

'%{num}.3d can be expressed in binary as %{num}b' % {num: 30}
# I want: "030 can be expressed in binary as 11110"
# Actual: "30.3d can be expressed in binary as 30b"

In other words, is there a way to use flags, width specifiers, precision specifiers, and types in format strings with named parameters? What's the form of %[flags][width][.precision]type if I want to give the format sequence a name?

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    In the doc #format, It is mentioned Ruby supports a reference by name. %<name>s style uses format style, but %{name} style doesn’t. --- This you might missed while reading the doc. May 28, 2014 at 20:01

1 Answer 1

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Try this:

'%<num>.3d can be expressed in binary as %<num>b' % {num: 30}
# => "030 can be expressed in binary as 11110"
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