67

If it doesn't, do you know what compiler or version will?

See cppreference/format.

11
  • Not another way of formatting output! When is this going to end? Still at least pi is now defined as a constant. (Personally I use the C style functions for output, and the C++ ones for input.)
    – Bathsheba
    Sep 3, 2020 at 12:51
  • gcc.gnu.org/projects/cxx-status.html
    – bipll
    Sep 3, 2020 at 12:51
  • 17
    @Bathsheba ?! C++ did not have any adequate way of formatting output before the adoption of fmtlib into C++20. fmtlib has the only usable API and is additionally hands down the fastest formatter. fmtlib isn’t “another way of formatting output”, it’s the only generally usable way of formatting output in C++. Sep 3, 2020 at 12:54
  • In particular, there's a link to library status on that page with poorly formatted tables, and if you search for 'text formatting' on that page, there are three rows pertaining to it, with empty column 'Status' each.
    – bipll
    Sep 3, 2020 at 12:56
  • 6
    I am seriously wondering what takes them so long. Essentially that library has been written long ago as a separate project.
    – shuhalo
    Sep 15, 2021 at 19:06

5 Answers 5

87

It's 2023 Now! Cheers!

GCC 13, CLANG 14 and MSVC 16.10/VS 2019 all have the {fmt} based std::format available in respective standard libraries.

Hopefully we'll have C++23 std::print available soon.


See Compiler support here :-

5
  • 7
    Keep in mind though that {fmt} has more features than the C++20 <format>. So, if you plan to use it then do a one-for-one switch of fmt::format to std::format, you'll need to carefully select which features you use. Jan 23, 2022 at 14:19
  • 10
    I like how this is being kept up to date.
    – Alex
    Feb 9, 2022 at 12:03
  • 1
    gcc trunk has recently implemented text formatting Nov 13, 2022 at 22:39
  • 1
    funny. neither gcc nor clang can find the format include. i got the latest clang-17 and the latest gcc i can get on my system, which is version 12.1.0. am I doing something wrong? because everyone is "hooray, we got the new features", and clearly I do not.
    – FalcoGer
    Jul 18 at 0:14
  • @FalcoGer with clang you need to also use llvm's libc++, -stdlib=libc++ should do the trick. As for GCC, you need version 13 minimum.
    – frakod
    Jul 18 at 19:34
43

EDIT: Support for format is available since GCC 13. For someone who want to find compiler support for another libraries or features, please refer to the compiler support link below from cppreference.com

Does gcc support C++20 std::format?

Not yet!

There's no compiler support yet, not even gcc 11. See Text formatting in Library features.

Compiler support for C++20 library features

4
  • 2
    It's available with Visual Studio 2019 (16.10).
    – PFee
    Jun 18, 2021 at 9:45
  • 1
    @PFee Correct, but GCC does not support it yet. I hope newer versions of GCC 11 or 12 support it.
    – John Park
    Jun 18, 2021 at 11:21
  • 1
    It's not in GCC 11 (already the default compiler with openSUSE Tumbleweed), it would be great to get an update on any progress in GCC/libstdc++.
    – PFee
    Jun 18, 2021 at 16:26
  • 1
    Still not available in gcc 11.2.1. Feb 16, 2022 at 14:43
22

As of today (November 15, 2022), GCC 12.2 does not support this feature. Or rather, its standard library implementation doesn't support it (cause it's a library feature, not the compiler-one).

NOTE: The feature is mentioned as implemented in GCC 13.0 (link)

You can try Clang 14.0.0 and upward for now, but note following:

In libc++ of Clang 14.0.0 std::format support added but: "The paper is implemented but still marked as an incomplete feature. Not yet implemented LWG-issues will cause API and ABI breakage" (link)

In libc++ of Clang 15.0.0 and later, this feature can be enabled with the -fexperimental-library compiler flag (link)

Also you can try MSVC 16.10 and upward. Support of std::format is mentioned as complete.


Standard library current status can be seen here:

5
  • 1
    I use clang17 and even with the -fexperimental-library flag it doesn't compile, complaining that it can't find #include <print> or #include <format>. Can you elaborate on how to make it work?
    – FalcoGer
    Jul 19 at 14:37
  • @FalcoGer are you using -stdlib=libc++ ? Here's an example: godbolt.org/z/K5ee4b9r4 Jul 20 at 12:22
  • If I use that it complains that it can't find iostream.
    – FalcoGer
    Jul 22 at 17:53
  • But -fexperimental-library works only with -stdlib=libc++ because AFAIK Clang by default uses GCC's stdlibc++ and you have to manualy instruct it to use Clang's libc++. "If I use that it complains that it can't find iostream." - check if libc++ is installed Jul 24 at 8:57
  • turns out discord was screwing me over with it's dependency on libc++-14. installing libc++17-dev and pointing clang to the libc++experimental library with -L solved the problem. discord is now a flatpak application for me.
    – FalcoGer
    Jul 24 at 15:25
6

GCC 13 has added support for std::format. According to cppreference, as of GCC 13, no gaps remain in its C++20 support (in both the core language and the standard library).

This bugzilla ticket notes that some C++23 extensions to std::format have not yet been implemented.

GCC 13 can be expected around April 2023.

The GCC trunk installation on compiler explorer includes std::format support.

OpenSUSE Tumbleweed (as of 2023-03-19) and the upcoming Fedora 38 include GCC 13.

2
  • Is this not available in any of the latest clang versions? I see it only work on clang trunk. It works with gcc 13 and onwards now.
    – nullspace
    Sep 2 at 21:58
  • Correct, clang 17 will have support for C++20 std::format. en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/compiler_support/20
    – PFee
    Sep 5 at 10:52
5

Now libstdc++ has implemented it! https://gcc.gnu.org/pipermail/libstdc++/2022-November/054991.html

0

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