--- hide: - navigation - toc --- # A modern formatting library
Inspired by the Python's formatting facility, {fmt} provides a safe
replacement for the printf
family of functions. Errors in format
strings, which are a common source of vulnerabilities in C, are reported
at compile time. For example:
fmt::format("The answer is {:d}", "forty-two");
will give a compile-time error because d
is not a valid
format specifier for strings. APIs like
fmt::format
prevent buffer overflow errors via
automatic memory management.
→ Learn more
Formatting of most standard types including all containers, dates and times is supported out-of-the-box. For example:
fmt::print("{}", std::vector{1, 2, 3});
prints the vector in a JSON-like format:
[1, 2, 3]
You can make your own types formattable and even make compile-time
checks work for them.
→ Learn more
{fmt} can be anywhere from tens of percent to 20-30 times faster than
iostreams and sprintf
, especially on numeric formatting.
The library minimizes dynamic memory allocations and allows
format string compilation.
{fmt} provides portable Unicode support on major operating systems
with UTF-8 and normal char
strings. For example:
fmt::print("Слава Україні!");
will be printed correctly on Linux, macOS and even Windows console regardless
of the codepages.
The default is locale-independent but you can opt into localized formatting and {fmt} makes it work with Unicode, working around problems in the standard libary.
The library makes extensive use of type erasure to achieve fast
compilation. fmt/base.h
provides a subset
of the API with minimal include dependencies and enough functionality
to replace all uses of *printf
.
Code using {fmt} is usually several times faster to compile than the
equivalent iostreams code and while printf
is faster still, the
gap is narrowing.
Type erasure is also used to prevent template bloat resulting in compact
per-call binary code. For example, a call to fmt::print
with
a single argument is less than ten
x86-64 instructions, comparable to printf
despite adding
runtime safety and much smaller than the equivalent iostreams code.
The library itself has small binary footprint and some components such as floating-point formatting can be disabled to make it even smaller for resource constrained devices.
{fmt} has a small self-contained codebase with the core consisting of just three header files and no external dependencies.
The library is highly portable and requires only on a minimal subset of C++11 features which are available in GCC 4.8, Clang 3.4, MSVC 19.0 (2015) and later. Newer compiler and standard library features are used if available and enable additional functionality.
Where possible, the output of formatting functions is consistent across platforms.
{fmt} is in top hundred open-source libraries on GitHub and has hundreds of all-time contributors.
Permissive MIT license allows using the library both in open-source and commercial projects.