Ruby example:
name = "Spongebob Squarepants"
puts "Who lives in a Pineapple under the sea? \n#{name}."
The successful Python string concatenation is seemingly verbose to me.
Python 3.6 will add literal string interpolation similar to Ruby's string interpolation. Starting with that version of Python (which is scheduled to be released by the end of 2016), you will be able to include expressions in "f-strings", e.g.
name = "Spongebob Squarepants"
print(f"Who lives in a Pineapple under the sea? {name}.")
Prior to 3.6, the closest you can get to this is
name = "Spongebob Squarepants"
print("Who lives in a Pineapple under the sea? %(name)s." % locals())
The %
operator can be used for string interpolation in Python. The first operand is the string to be interpolated, the second can have different types including a "mapping", mapping field names to the values to be interpolated. Here I used the dictionary of local variables locals()
to map the field name name
to its value as a local variable.
The same code using the .format()
method of recent Python versions would look like this:
name = "Spongebob Squarepants"
print("Who lives in a Pineapple under the sea? {name!s}.".format(**locals()))
There is also the string.Template
class:
tmpl = string.Template("Who lives in a Pineapple under the sea? $name.")
print(tmpl.substitute(name="Spongebob Squarepants"))
%s
for a string and %03d
for a number padded to 3 digits with leading zeroes. It could just be written print "%s has %03d" % ("Python", 2)
. The example then makes use of putting a mapping key in brackets after the %
which is a way of giving the placeholders meaningful names rather than relying on their order in the string. You then pass a dictionary that maps the key names to their values. That's why Sven is using the locals()
function which returns a dict containing all your local variables so it will map name
to the value of name
s
as a conversion type -- Python can convert just about anything to a string. But of course you would lose the special formatting capabilities of other conversion types.
Dec 15, 2010 at 14:37
Since Python 2.6.X you might want to use:
"my {0} string: {1}".format("cool", "Hello there!")
%
operator for string interpolation is not deprecated in Python 3.x. docs.python.org/dev/py3k/whatsnew/… announces the plan to deprecate %
starting in 3.1, but this never happened.
Dec 15, 2010 at 14:52
I've developed the interpy package, that enables string interpolation in Python.
Just install it via pip install interpy
.
And then, add the line # coding: interpy
at the beginning of your files!
Example:
#!/usr/bin/env python
# coding: interpy
name = "Spongebob Squarepants"
print "Who lives in a Pineapple under the sea? \n#{name}."
Python's string interpolation is similar to C's printf()
If you try:
name = "SpongeBob Squarepants"
print "Who lives in a Pineapple under the sea? %s" % name
The tag %s
will be replaced with the name
variable. You should take a look to the print function tags: http://docs.python.org/library/functions.html
print "First is %s, second is %s" % (var1, var2)
.
Nov 5, 2015 at 20:07
String interpolation is going to be included with Python 3.6 as specified in PEP 498. You will be able to do this:
name = 'Spongebob Squarepants'
print(f'Who lives in a Pineapple under the sea? \n{name}')
Note that I hate Spongebob, so writing this was slightly painful. :)
You can also have this
name = "Spongebob Squarepants"
print "Who lives in a Pineapple under the sea? \n{name}.".format(name=name)
import inspect
def s(template, **kwargs):
"Usage: s(string, **locals())"
if not kwargs:
frame = inspect.currentframe()
try:
kwargs = frame.f_back.f_locals
finally:
del frame
if not kwargs:
kwargs = globals()
return template.format(**kwargs)
Usage:
a = 123
s('{a}', locals()) # print '123'
s('{a}') # it is equal to the above statement: print '123'
s('{b}') # raise an KeyError: b variable not found
PS: performance may be a problem. This is useful for local scripts, not for production logs.
Duplicated:
For old Python (tested on 2.4) the top solution points the way. You can do this:
import string
def try_interp():
d = 1
f = 1.1
s = "s"
print string.Template("d: $d f: $f s: $s").substitute(**locals())
try_interp()
And you get
d: 1 f: 1.1 s: s
Python 3.6 and newer have literal string interpolation using f-strings:
name='world'
print(f"Hello {name}!")
name
is a local variable lying in the string, and in Python you have to explicitly pass the dictionary of local variables to the string formatter if you want it to use them.