blob: b0061b753836d474ca335fd8425d0ef8f07e9938 [file] [log] [blame]
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001
2:mod:`string` --- Common string operations
3==========================================
4
5.. module:: string
6 :synopsis: Common string operations.
7
8
9.. index:: module: re
10
Georg Brandl4b491312007-08-31 09:22:56 +000011The :mod:`string` module contains a number of useful constants and classes, as
12well as some deprecated legacy functions that are also available as methods on
13strings. In addition, Python's built-in string classes support the sequence type
14methods described in the :ref:`typesseq` section, and also the string-specific
15methods described in the :ref:`string-methods` section. To output formatted
16strings, see the :ref:`string-formatting` section. Also, see the :mod:`re`
17module for string functions based on regular expressions.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000018
19
20String constants
21----------------
22
23The constants defined in this module are:
24
25
26.. data:: ascii_letters
27
28 The concatenation of the :const:`ascii_lowercase` and :const:`ascii_uppercase`
29 constants described below. This value is not locale-dependent.
30
31
32.. data:: ascii_lowercase
33
34 The lowercase letters ``'abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz'``. This value is not
35 locale-dependent and will not change.
36
37
38.. data:: ascii_uppercase
39
40 The uppercase letters ``'ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ'``. This value is not
41 locale-dependent and will not change.
42
43
44.. data:: digits
45
46 The string ``'0123456789'``.
47
48
49.. data:: hexdigits
50
51 The string ``'0123456789abcdefABCDEF'``.
52
53
54.. data:: octdigits
55
56 The string ``'01234567'``.
57
58
59.. data:: punctuation
60
61 String of ASCII characters which are considered punctuation characters
62 in the ``C`` locale.
63
64
65.. data:: printable
66
67 String of ASCII characters which are considered printable. This is a
68 combination of :const:`digits`, :const:`ascii_letters`, :const:`punctuation`,
69 and :const:`whitespace`.
70
71
72.. data:: whitespace
73
74 A string containing all characters that are considered whitespace.
75 This includes the characters space, tab, linefeed, return, formfeed, and
76 vertical tab.
77
78
Georg Brandl4b491312007-08-31 09:22:56 +000079.. _string-formatting:
80
81String Formatting
82-----------------
83
84Starting in Python 3.0, the built-in string class provides the ability to do
85complex variable substitutions and value formatting via the :func:`format`
86method described in :pep:`3101`. The :class:`Formatter` class in the
87:mod:`string` module allows you to create and customize your own string
88formatting behaviors using the same implementation as the built-in
89:meth:`format` method.
90
91.. class:: Formatter
92
93 The :class:`Formatter` class has the following public methods:
94
95 .. method:: format(format_string, *args, *kwargs)
96
97 :meth:`format` is the primary API method. It takes a format template
98 string, and an arbitrary set of positional and keyword argument.
99 :meth:`format` is just a wrapper that calls :meth:`vformat`.
100
101 .. method:: vformat(format_string, args, kwargs)
102
103 This function does the actual work of formatting. It is exposed as a
104 separate function for cases where you want to pass in a predefined
105 dictionary of arguments, rather than unpacking and repacking the
106 dictionary as individual arguments using the ``*args`` and ``**kwds``
107 syntax. :meth:`vformat` does the work of breaking up the format template
108 string into character data and replacement fields. It calls the various
109 methods described below.
110
111 In addition, the :class:`Formatter` defines a number of methods that are
112 intended to be replaced by subclasses:
113
114 .. method:: parse(format_string)
115
116 Loop over the format_string and return an iterable of tuples
117 (*literal_text*, *field_name*, *format_spec*, *conversion*). This is used
118 by :meth:`vformat` to break the string in to either literal text, or
119 replacement fields.
120
121 The values in the tuple conceptually represent a span of literal text
122 followed by a single replacement field. If there is no literal text
123 (which can happen if two replacement fields occur consecutively), then
124 *literal_text* will be a zero-length string. If there is no replacement
125 field, then the values of *field_name*, *format_spec* and *conversion*
126 will be ``None``.
127
Eric Smith9d4ba392007-09-02 15:33:26 +0000128 .. method:: get_field(field_name, args, kwargs)
Georg Brandl4b491312007-08-31 09:22:56 +0000129
130 Given *field_name* as returned by :meth:`parse` (see above), convert it to
Georg Brandl7f13e6b2007-08-31 10:37:15 +0000131 an object to be formatted. Returns a tuple (obj, used_key). The default
132 version takes strings of the form defined in :pep:`3101`, such as
133 "0[name]" or "label.title". *args* and *kwargs* are as passed in to
134 :meth:`vformat`. The return value *used_key* has the same meaning as the
135 *key* parameter to :meth:`get_value`.
Georg Brandl4b491312007-08-31 09:22:56 +0000136
137 .. method:: get_value(key, args, kwargs)
138
139 Retrieve a given field value. The *key* argument will be either an
140 integer or a string. If it is an integer, it represents the index of the
141 positional argument in *args*; if it is a string, then it represents a
142 named argument in *kwargs*.
143
144 The *args* parameter is set to the list of positional arguments to
145 :meth:`vformat`, and the *kwargs* parameter is set to the dictionary of
146 keyword arguments.
147
148 For compound field names, these functions are only called for the first
149 component of the field name; Subsequent components are handled through
150 normal attribute and indexing operations.
151
152 So for example, the field expression '0.name' would cause
153 :meth:`get_value` to be called with a *key* argument of 0. The ``name``
154 attribute will be looked up after :meth:`get_value` returns by calling the
155 built-in :func:`getattr` function.
156
157 If the index or keyword refers to an item that does not exist, then an
158 :exc:`IndexError` or :exc:`KeyError` should be raised.
159
160 .. method:: check_unused_args(used_args, args, kwargs)
161
162 Implement checking for unused arguments if desired. The arguments to this
163 function is the set of all argument keys that were actually referred to in
164 the format string (integers for positional arguments, and strings for
165 named arguments), and a reference to the *args* and *kwargs* that was
166 passed to vformat. The set of unused args can be calculated from these
167 parameters. :meth:`check_unused_args` is assumed to throw an exception if
168 the check fails.
169
170 .. method:: format_field(value, format_spec)
171
172 :meth:`format_field` simply calls the global :func:`format` built-in. The
173 method is provided so that subclasses can override it.
174
175 .. method:: convert_field(value, conversion)
176
177 Converts the value (returned by :meth:`get_field`) given a conversion type
178 (as in the tuple returned by the :meth:`parse` method.) The default
179 version understands 'r' (repr) and 's' (str) conversion types.
180
Georg Brandl4b491312007-08-31 09:22:56 +0000181
182.. _formatstrings:
183
184Format String Syntax
185--------------------
186
187The :meth:`str.format` method and the :class:`Formatter` class share the same
188syntax for format strings (although in the case of :class:`Formatter`,
189subclasses can define their own format string syntax.)
190
191Format strings contain "replacement fields" surrounded by curly braces ``{}``.
192Anything that is not contained in braces is considered literal text, which is
193copied unchanged to the output. If you need to include a brace character in the
194literal text, it can be escaped by doubling: ``{{`` and ``}}``.
195
196The grammar for a replacement field is as follows:
197
198 .. productionlist:: sf
199 replacement_field: "{" `field_name` ["!" `conversion`] [":" `format_spec`] "}"
200 field_name: (`identifier` | `integer`) ("." `attribute_name` | "[" element_index "]")*
201 attribute_name: `identifier`
202 element_index: `integer`
203 conversion: "r" | "s"
204 format_spec: <described in the next section>
205
206In less formal terms, the replacement field starts with a *field_name*, which
207can either be a number (for a positional argument), or an identifier (for
208keyword arguments). Following this is an optional *conversion* field, which is
209preceded by an exclamation point ``'!'``, and a *format_spec*, which is preceded
210by a colon ``':'``.
211
212The *field_name* itself begins with either a number or a keyword. If it's a
213number, it refers to a positional argument, and if it's a keyword it refers to a
214named keyword argument. This can be followed by any number of index or
215attribute expressions. An expression of the form ``'.name'`` selects the named
216attribute using :func:`getattr`, while an expression of the form ``'[index]'``
217does an index lookup using :func:`__getitem__`.
218
219Some simple format string examples::
220
221 "First, thou shalt count to {0}" # References first positional argument
222 "My quest is {name}" # References keyword argument 'name'
223 "Weight in tons {0.weight}" # 'weight' attribute of first positional arg
224 "Units destroyed: {players[0]}" # First element of keyword argument 'players'.
225
226The *conversion* field causes a type coercion before formatting. Normally, the
227job of formatting a value is done by the :meth:`__format__` method of the value
228itself. However, in some cases it is desirable to force a type to be formatted
229as a string, overriding its own definition of formatting. By converting the
230value to a string before calling :meth:`__format__`, the normal formatting logic
231is bypassed.
232
233Two conversion flags are currently supported: ``'!s'`` which calls :func:`str()`
234on the value, and ``'!r'`` which calls :func:`repr()`.
235
236Some examples::
237
238 "Harold's a clever {0!s}" # Calls str() on the argument first
239 "Bring out the holy {name!r}" # Calls repr() on the argument first
240
241The *format_spec* field contains a specification of how the value should be
242presented, including such details as field width, alignment, padding, decimal
243precision and so on. Each value type can define it's own "formatting
244mini-language" or interpretation of the *format_spec*.
245
246Most built-in types support a common formatting mini-language, which is
247described in the next section.
248
249A *format_spec* field can also include nested replacement fields within it.
250These nested replacement fields can contain only a field name; conversion flags
251and format specifications are not allowed. The replacement fields within the
252format_spec are substituted before the *format_spec* string is interpreted.
253This allows the formatting of a value to be dynamically specified.
254
255For example, suppose you wanted to have a replacement field whose field width is
256determined by another variable::
257
258 "A man with two {0:{1}}".format("noses", 10)
259
260This would first evaluate the inner replacement field, making the format string
261effectively::
262
263 "A man with two {0:10}"
264
265Then the outer replacement field would be evaluated, producing::
266
267 "noses "
268
269Which is subsitituted into the string, yielding::
270
271 "A man with two noses "
272
273(The extra space is because we specified a field width of 10, and because left
274alignment is the default for strings.)
275
Georg Brandl4b491312007-08-31 09:22:56 +0000276
277.. _formatspec:
278
279Format Specification Mini-Language
280^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
281
282"Format specifications" are used within replacement fields contained within a
283format string to define how individual values are presented (see
284:ref:`formatstrings`.) They can also be passed directly to the builtin
285:func:`format` function. Each formattable type may define how the format
286specification is to be interpreted.
287
288Most built-in types implement the following options for format specifications,
289although some of the formatting options are only supported by the numeric types.
290
291A general convention is that an empty format string (``""``) produces the same
292result as if you had called :func:`str()` on the value.
293
294The general form of a *standard format specifier* is:
295
296.. productionlist:: sf
297 format_spec: [[`fill`]`align`][`sign`][0][`width`][.`precision`][`type`]
298 fill: <a character other than '}'>
299 align: "<" | ">" | "=" | "^"
300 sign: "+" | "-" | " "
301 width: `integer`
302 precision: `integer`
303 type: "b" | "c" | "d" | "e" | "E" | "f" | "F" | "g" | "G" | "n" | "o" | "x" | "X" | "%"
304
305The *fill* character can be any character other than '}' (which signifies the
306end of the field). The presence of a fill character is signaled by the *next*
307character, which must be one of the alignment options. If the second character
308of *format_spec* is not a valid alignment option, then it is assumed that both
309the fill character and the alignment option are absent.
310
311The meaning of the various alignment options is as follows:
312
313 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
314 | Option | Meaning |
315 +=========+==========================================================+
316 | ``'<'`` | Forces the field to be left-aligned within the available |
317 | | space (This is the default.) |
318 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
319 | ``'>'`` | Forces the field to be right-aligned within the |
320 | | available space. |
321 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
322 | ``'='`` | Forces the padding to be placed after the sign (if any) |
323 | | but before the digits. This is used for printing fields |
324 | | in the form '+000000120'. This alignment option is only |
325 | | valid for numeric types. |
326 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
327 | ``'^'`` | Forces the field to be centered within the available |
328 | | space. |
329 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
330
331Note that unless a minimum field width is defined, the field width will always
332be the same size as the data to fill it, so that the alignment option has no
333meaning in this case.
334
335The *sign* option is only valid for number types, and can be one of the
336following:
337
338 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
339 | Option | Meaning |
340 +=========+==========================================================+
341 | ``'+'`` | indicates that a sign should be used for both |
342 | | positive as well as negative numbers. |
343 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
344 | ``'-'`` | indicates that a sign should be used only for negative |
345 | | numbers (this is the default behavior). |
346 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
347 | space | indicates that a leading space should be used on |
348 | | positive numbers, and a minus sign on negative numbers. |
349 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
350
351*width* is a decimal integer defining the minimum field width. If not
352specified, then the field width will be determined by the content.
353
354If the *width* field is preceded by a zero (``'0'``) character, this enables
355zero-padding. This is equivalent to an *alignment* type of ``'='`` and a *fill*
356character of ``'0'``.
357
358The *precision* is a decimal number indicating how many digits should be
359displayed after the decimal point for a floating point value. For non-number
360types the field indicates the maximum field size - in other words, how many
361characters will be used from the field content. The *precision* is ignored for
362integer values.
363
364Finally, the *type* determines how the data should be presented.
365
366The available integer presentation types are:
367
368 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
369 | Type | Meaning |
370 +=========+==========================================================+
371 | ``'b'`` | Binary. Outputs the number in base 2. |
372 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
373 | ``'c'`` | Character. Converts the integer to the corresponding |
374 | | unicode character before printing. |
375 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
376 | ``'d'`` | Decimal Integer. Outputs the number in base 10. |
377 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
378 | ``'o'`` | Octal format. Outputs the number in base 8. |
379 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
380 | ``'x'`` | Hex format. Outputs the number in base 16, using lower- |
381 | | case letters for the digits above 9. |
382 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
383 | ``'X'`` | Hex format. Outputs the number in base 16, using upper- |
384 | | case letters for the digits above 9. |
385 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
386 | None | the same as ``'d'`` |
387 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
388
389The available presentation types for floating point and decimal values are:
390
391 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
392 | Type | Meaning |
393 +=========+==========================================================+
394 | ``'e'`` | Exponent notation. Prints the number in scientific |
395 | | notation using the letter 'e' to indicate the exponent. |
396 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
397 | ``'E'`` | Exponent notation. Same as ``'e'`` except it uses an |
398 | | upper case 'E' as the separator character. |
399 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
400 | ``'f'`` | Fixed point. Displays the number as a fixed-point |
401 | | number. |
402 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
403 | ``'F'`` | Fixed point. Same as ``'f'``. |
404 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
405 | ``'g'`` | General format. This prints the number as a fixed-point |
406 | | number, unless the number is too large, in which case |
407 | | it switches to ``'e'`` exponent notation. |
408 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
409 | ``'G'`` | General format. Same as ``'g'`` except switches to |
410 | | ``'E'`` if the number gets to large. |
411 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
412 | ``'n'`` | Number. This is the same as ``'g'``, except that it uses |
413 | | the current locale setting to insert the appropriate |
414 | | number separator characters. |
415 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
416 | ``'%'`` | Percentage. Multiplies the number by 100 and displays |
417 | | in fixed (``'f'``) format, followed by a percent sign. |
418 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
419 | None | similar to ``'g'``, except that it prints at least one |
420 | | digit after the decimal point. |
421 +---------+----------------------------------------------------------+
422
423
424.. _template-strings:
425
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000426Template strings
427----------------
428
429Templates provide simpler string substitutions as described in :pep:`292`.
430Instead of the normal ``%``\ -based substitutions, Templates support ``$``\
431-based substitutions, using the following rules:
432
433* ``$$`` is an escape; it is replaced with a single ``$``.
434
435* ``$identifier`` names a substitution placeholder matching a mapping key of
436 ``"identifier"``. By default, ``"identifier"`` must spell a Python
437 identifier. The first non-identifier character after the ``$`` character
438 terminates this placeholder specification.
439
440* ``${identifier}`` is equivalent to ``$identifier``. It is required when valid
441 identifier characters follow the placeholder but are not part of the
442 placeholder, such as ``"${noun}ification"``.
443
444Any other appearance of ``$`` in the string will result in a :exc:`ValueError`
445being raised.
446
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000447The :mod:`string` module provides a :class:`Template` class that implements
448these rules. The methods of :class:`Template` are:
449
450
451.. class:: Template(template)
452
453 The constructor takes a single argument which is the template string.
454
455
456.. method:: Template.substitute(mapping[, **kws])
457
458 Performs the template substitution, returning a new string. *mapping* is any
459 dictionary-like object with keys that match the placeholders in the template.
460 Alternatively, you can provide keyword arguments, where the keywords are the
461 placeholders. When both *mapping* and *kws* are given and there are duplicates,
462 the placeholders from *kws* take precedence.
463
464
465.. method:: Template.safe_substitute(mapping[, **kws])
466
467 Like :meth:`substitute`, except that if placeholders are missing from *mapping*
468 and *kws*, instead of raising a :exc:`KeyError` exception, the original
469 placeholder will appear in the resulting string intact. Also, unlike with
470 :meth:`substitute`, any other appearances of the ``$`` will simply return ``$``
471 instead of raising :exc:`ValueError`.
472
473 While other exceptions may still occur, this method is called "safe" because
474 substitutions always tries to return a usable string instead of raising an
475 exception. In another sense, :meth:`safe_substitute` may be anything other than
476 safe, since it will silently ignore malformed templates containing dangling
477 delimiters, unmatched braces, or placeholders that are not valid Python
478 identifiers.
479
480:class:`Template` instances also provide one public data attribute:
481
482
483.. attribute:: string.template
484
485 This is the object passed to the constructor's *template* argument. In general,
486 you shouldn't change it, but read-only access is not enforced.
487
488Here is an example of how to use a Template::
489
490 >>> from string import Template
491 >>> s = Template('$who likes $what')
492 >>> s.substitute(who='tim', what='kung pao')
493 'tim likes kung pao'
494 >>> d = dict(who='tim')
495 >>> Template('Give $who $100').substitute(d)
496 Traceback (most recent call last):
497 [...]
498 ValueError: Invalid placeholder in string: line 1, col 10
499 >>> Template('$who likes $what').substitute(d)
500 Traceback (most recent call last):
501 [...]
502 KeyError: 'what'
503 >>> Template('$who likes $what').safe_substitute(d)
504 'tim likes $what'
505
506Advanced usage: you can derive subclasses of :class:`Template` to customize the
507placeholder syntax, delimiter character, or the entire regular expression used
508to parse template strings. To do this, you can override these class attributes:
509
510* *delimiter* -- This is the literal string describing a placeholder introducing
511 delimiter. The default value ``$``. Note that this should *not* be a regular
512 expression, as the implementation will call :meth:`re.escape` on this string as
513 needed.
514
515* *idpattern* -- This is the regular expression describing the pattern for
516 non-braced placeholders (the braces will be added automatically as
517 appropriate). The default value is the regular expression
518 ``[_a-z][_a-z0-9]*``.
519
520Alternatively, you can provide the entire regular expression pattern by
521overriding the class attribute *pattern*. If you do this, the value must be a
522regular expression object with four named capturing groups. The capturing
523groups correspond to the rules given above, along with the invalid placeholder
524rule:
525
526* *escaped* -- This group matches the escape sequence, e.g. ``$$``, in the
527 default pattern.
528
529* *named* -- This group matches the unbraced placeholder name; it should not
530 include the delimiter in capturing group.
531
532* *braced* -- This group matches the brace enclosed placeholder name; it should
533 not include either the delimiter or braces in the capturing group.
534
535* *invalid* -- This group matches any other delimiter pattern (usually a single
536 delimiter), and it should appear last in the regular expression.
537
538
539String functions
540----------------
541
542The following functions are available to operate on string and Unicode objects.
543They are not available as string methods.
544
545
546.. function:: capwords(s)
547
548 Split the argument into words using :func:`split`, capitalize each word using
549 :func:`capitalize`, and join the capitalized words using :func:`join`. Note
550 that this replaces runs of whitespace characters by a single space, and removes
551 leading and trailing whitespace.
552
553
Georg Brandl7f13e6b2007-08-31 10:37:15 +0000554.. function:: maketrans(frm, to)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000555
Georg Brandl7f13e6b2007-08-31 10:37:15 +0000556 Return a translation table suitable for passing to :meth:`bytes.translate`,
557 that will map each character in *from* into the character at the same
558 position in *to*; *from* and *to* must have the same length.