be47d6ecef
From-SVN: r200974
214 lines
8.5 KiB
Go
214 lines
8.5 KiB
Go
// Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
|
|
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
|
|
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
|
|
|
|
/*
|
|
Package fmt implements formatted I/O with functions analogous
|
|
to C's printf and scanf. The format 'verbs' are derived from C's but
|
|
are simpler.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Printing
|
|
|
|
The verbs:
|
|
|
|
General:
|
|
%v the value in a default format.
|
|
when printing structs, the plus flag (%+v) adds field names
|
|
%#v a Go-syntax representation of the value
|
|
%T a Go-syntax representation of the type of the value
|
|
%% a literal percent sign; consumes no value
|
|
|
|
Boolean:
|
|
%t the word true or false
|
|
Integer:
|
|
%b base 2
|
|
%c the character represented by the corresponding Unicode code point
|
|
%d base 10
|
|
%o base 8
|
|
%q a single-quoted character literal safely escaped with Go syntax.
|
|
%x base 16, with lower-case letters for a-f
|
|
%X base 16, with upper-case letters for A-F
|
|
%U Unicode format: U+1234; same as "U+%04X"
|
|
Floating-point and complex constituents:
|
|
%b decimalless scientific notation with exponent a power of two,
|
|
in the manner of strconv.FormatFloat with the 'b' format,
|
|
e.g. -123456p-78
|
|
%e scientific notation, e.g. -1234.456e+78
|
|
%E scientific notation, e.g. -1234.456E+78
|
|
%f decimal point but no exponent, e.g. 123.456
|
|
%g whichever of %e or %f produces more compact output
|
|
%G whichever of %E or %f produces more compact output
|
|
String and slice of bytes:
|
|
%s the uninterpreted bytes of the string or slice
|
|
%q a double-quoted string safely escaped with Go syntax
|
|
%x base 16, lower-case, two characters per byte
|
|
%X base 16, upper-case, two characters per byte
|
|
Pointer:
|
|
%p base 16 notation, with leading 0x
|
|
|
|
There is no 'u' flag. Integers are printed unsigned if they have unsigned type.
|
|
Similarly, there is no need to specify the size of the operand (int8, int64).
|
|
|
|
The width and precision control formatting and are in units of Unicode
|
|
code points. (This differs from C's printf where the units are numbers
|
|
of bytes.) Either or both of the flags may be replaced with the
|
|
character '*', causing their values to be obtained from the next
|
|
operand, which must be of type int.
|
|
|
|
For numeric values, width sets the minimum width of the field and
|
|
precision sets the number of places after the decimal, if appropriate,
|
|
except that for %g/%G it sets the total number of digits. For example,
|
|
given 123.45 the format %6.2f prints 123.45 while %.4g prints 123.5.
|
|
The default precision for %e and %f is 6; for %g it is the smallest
|
|
number of digits necessary to identify the value uniquely.
|
|
|
|
For most values, width is the minimum number of characters to output,
|
|
padding the formatted form with spaces if necessary.
|
|
For strings, precision is the maximum number of characters to output,
|
|
truncating if necessary.
|
|
|
|
Other flags:
|
|
+ always print a sign for numeric values;
|
|
guarantee ASCII-only output for %q (%+q)
|
|
- pad with spaces on the right rather than the left (left-justify the field)
|
|
# alternate format: add leading 0 for octal (%#o), 0x for hex (%#x);
|
|
0X for hex (%#X); suppress 0x for %p (%#p);
|
|
for %q, print a raw (backquoted) string if strconv.CanBackquote
|
|
returns true;
|
|
write e.g. U+0078 'x' if the character is printable for %U (%#U).
|
|
' ' (space) leave a space for elided sign in numbers (% d);
|
|
put spaces between bytes printing strings or slices in hex (% x, % X)
|
|
0 pad with leading zeros rather than spaces;
|
|
for numbers, this moves the padding after the sign
|
|
|
|
Flags are ignored by verbs that do not expect them.
|
|
For example there is no alternate decimal format, so %#d and %d
|
|
behave identically.
|
|
|
|
For each Printf-like function, there is also a Print function
|
|
that takes no format and is equivalent to saying %v for every
|
|
operand. Another variant Println inserts blanks between
|
|
operands and appends a newline.
|
|
|
|
Regardless of the verb, if an operand is an interface value,
|
|
the internal concrete value is used, not the interface itself.
|
|
Thus:
|
|
var i interface{} = 23
|
|
fmt.Printf("%v\n", i)
|
|
will print 23.
|
|
|
|
If an operand implements interface Formatter, that interface
|
|
can be used for fine control of formatting.
|
|
|
|
If the format (which is implicitly %v for Println etc.) is valid
|
|
for a string (%s %q %v %x %X), the following two rules also apply:
|
|
|
|
1. If an operand implements the error interface, the Error method
|
|
will be used to convert the object to a string, which will then
|
|
be formatted as required by the verb (if any).
|
|
|
|
2. If an operand implements method String() string, that method
|
|
will be used to convert the object to a string, which will then
|
|
be formatted as required by the verb (if any).
|
|
|
|
To avoid recursion in cases such as
|
|
type X string
|
|
func (x X) String() string { return Sprintf("<%s>", x) }
|
|
convert the value before recurring:
|
|
func (x X) String() string { return Sprintf("<%s>", string(x)) }
|
|
|
|
Format errors:
|
|
|
|
If an invalid argument is given for a verb, such as providing
|
|
a string to %d, the generated string will contain a
|
|
description of the problem, as in these examples:
|
|
|
|
Wrong type or unknown verb: %!verb(type=value)
|
|
Printf("%d", hi): %!d(string=hi)
|
|
Too many arguments: %!(EXTRA type=value)
|
|
Printf("hi", "guys"): hi%!(EXTRA string=guys)
|
|
Too few arguments: %!verb(MISSING)
|
|
Printf("hi%d"): hi %!d(MISSING)
|
|
Non-int for width or precision: %!(BADWIDTH) or %!(BADPREC)
|
|
Printf("%*s", 4.5, "hi"): %!(BADWIDTH)hi
|
|
Printf("%.*s", 4.5, "hi"): %!(BADPREC)hi
|
|
|
|
All errors begin with the string "%!" followed sometimes
|
|
by a single character (the verb) and end with a parenthesized
|
|
description.
|
|
|
|
If an Error or String method triggers a panic when called by a
|
|
print routine, the fmt package reformats the error message
|
|
from the panic, decorating it with an indication that it came
|
|
through the fmt package. For example, if a String method
|
|
calls panic("bad"), the resulting formatted message will look
|
|
like
|
|
%s(PANIC=bad)
|
|
|
|
The %s just shows the print verb in use when the failure
|
|
occurred.
|
|
|
|
Scanning
|
|
|
|
An analogous set of functions scans formatted text to yield
|
|
values. Scan, Scanf and Scanln read from os.Stdin; Fscan,
|
|
Fscanf and Fscanln read from a specified io.Reader; Sscan,
|
|
Sscanf and Sscanln read from an argument string. Scanln,
|
|
Fscanln and Sscanln stop scanning at a newline and require that
|
|
the items be followed by one; Scanf, Fscanf and Sscanf require
|
|
newlines in the input to match newlines in the format; the other
|
|
routines treat newlines as spaces.
|
|
|
|
Scanf, Fscanf, and Sscanf parse the arguments according to a
|
|
format string, analogous to that of Printf. For example, %x
|
|
will scan an integer as a hexadecimal number, and %v will scan
|
|
the default representation format for the value.
|
|
|
|
The formats behave analogously to those of Printf with the
|
|
following exceptions:
|
|
|
|
%p is not implemented
|
|
%T is not implemented
|
|
%e %E %f %F %g %G are all equivalent and scan any floating point or complex value
|
|
%s and %v on strings scan a space-delimited token
|
|
Flags # and + are not implemented.
|
|
|
|
The familiar base-setting prefixes 0 (octal) and 0x
|
|
(hexadecimal) are accepted when scanning integers without a
|
|
format or with the %v verb.
|
|
|
|
Width is interpreted in the input text (%5s means at most
|
|
five runes of input will be read to scan a string) but there
|
|
is no syntax for scanning with a precision (no %5.2f, just
|
|
%5f).
|
|
|
|
When scanning with a format, all non-empty runs of space
|
|
characters (except newline) are equivalent to a single
|
|
space in both the format and the input. With that proviso,
|
|
text in the format string must match the input text; scanning
|
|
stops if it does not, with the return value of the function
|
|
indicating the number of arguments scanned.
|
|
|
|
In all the scanning functions, if an operand implements method
|
|
Scan (that is, it implements the Scanner interface) that
|
|
method will be used to scan the text for that operand. Also,
|
|
if the number of arguments scanned is less than the number of
|
|
arguments provided, an error is returned.
|
|
|
|
All arguments to be scanned must be either pointers to basic
|
|
types or implementations of the Scanner interface.
|
|
|
|
Note: Fscan etc. can read one character (rune) past the input
|
|
they return, which means that a loop calling a scan routine
|
|
may skip some of the input. This is usually a problem only
|
|
when there is no space between input values. If the reader
|
|
provided to Fscan implements ReadRune, that method will be used
|
|
to read characters. If the reader also implements UnreadRune,
|
|
that method will be used to save the character and successive
|
|
calls will not lose data. To attach ReadRune and UnreadRune
|
|
methods to a reader without that capability, use
|
|
bufio.NewReader.
|
|
*/
|
|
package fmt
|