.. _string-formatting-api: ************* API Reference ************* All functions and classes provided by the fmt library reside in namespace ``fmt`` and macros have prefix ``FMT_``. For brevity the namespace is usually omitted in examples. Format API ========== The following functions defined in ``fmt/core.h`` use :ref:`format string syntax ` similar to that of Python's `str.format `_. They take *format_str* and *args* as arguments. *format_str* is a format string that contains literal text and replacement fields surrounded by braces ``{}``. The fields are replaced with formatted arguments in the resulting string. *args* is an argument list representing objects to be formatted. The `performance of the formating functions `_ is close to that of glibc's ``printf`` and better than the performance of IOStreams. .. _format: .. doxygenfunction:: format(string_view, const Args&...) .. doxygenfunction:: operator""_format(const char *, std::size_t) .. _print: .. doxygenfunction:: print(string_view, const Args&...) .. doxygenfunction:: print(std::FILE *, string_view, const Args&...) Date and time formatting ------------------------ The library supports `strftime `_-like date and time formatting:: #include "fmt/time.h" std::time_t t = std::time(nullptr); // Prints "The date is 2016-04-29." (with the current date) fmt::print("The date is {:%Y-%m-%d}.", *std::localtime(&t)); The format string syntax is described in the documentation of `strftime `_. Formatting user-defined types ----------------------------- To make a user-defined type formattable, specialize the ``formatter`` struct template and implement ``parse`` and ``format`` methods:: struct MyStruct { double x, y; }; namespace fmt { template <> struct formatter { template auto parse(ParseContext &ctx) { return ctx.begin(); } template auto format(const MyStruct &s, FormatContext &ctx) { return format_to(ctx.begin(), "[MyStruct: x={:.1f}, y={:.2f}]", s.x, s.y); } }; } Then you can pass objects of type ``MyStruct`` to any formatting function:: MyStruct m = {1, 2}; std::string s = fmt::format("m={}", m); // s == "m=[MyStruct: x=1.0, y=2.00]" In the example above the ``formatter::parse`` function ignores the contents of the format string referred to by ``ctx.begin()`` so the object will always be formatted in the same way. See ``formatter::parse`` in :file:`fmt/time.h` for an advanced example of how to parse the format string and customize the formatted output. This section shows how to define a custom format function for a user-defined type. The next section describes how to get ``fmt`` to use a conventional stream output ``operator<<`` when one is defined for a user-defined type. ``std::ostream`` support ------------------------ The header ``fmt/ostream.h`` provides ``std::ostream`` support including formatting of user-defined types that have overloaded ``operator<<``:: #include "fmt/ostream.h" class Date { int year_, month_, day_; public: Date(int year, int month, int day): year_(year), month_(month), day_(day) {} friend std::ostream &operator<<(std::ostream &os, const Date &d) { return os << d.year_ << '-' << d.month_ << '-' << d.day_; } }; std::string s = fmt::format("The date is {}", Date(2012, 12, 9)); // s == "The date is 2012-12-9" .. doxygenfunction:: print(std::ostream&, string_view, const Args&...) Argument formatters ------------------- It is possible to change the way arguments are formatted by providing a custom argument formatter class:: using arg_formatter = fmt::arg_formatter>; // A custom argument formatter that formats negative integers as unsigned // with the ``x`` format specifier. class custom_arg_formatter : public arg_formatter { public: custom_arg_formatter(fmt::context &ctx, fmt::format_specs &spec) : arg_formatter(ctx, spec) {} using arg_formatter::operator(); void operator()(int value) { if (spec().type() == 'x') (*this)(static_cast(value)); // convert to unsigned and format else arg_formatter::operator()(value); } }; std::string custom_vformat(fmt::string_view format_str, fmt::format_args args) { fmt::memory_buffer buffer; // Pass custom argument formatter as a template arg to vformat_to. fmt::vformat_to(buffer, format_str, args); return fmt::to_string(buffer); } template inline std::string custom_format( fmt::string_view format_str, const Args &... args) { return custom_vformat(format_str, fmt::make_args(args...)); } std::string s = custom_format("{:x}", -42); // s == "ffffffd6" .. doxygenclass:: fmt::ArgVisitor :members: .. doxygenclass:: fmt::arg_formatter_base :members: .. doxygenclass:: fmt::arg_formatter :members: Printf formatting ----------------- The header ``fmt/printf.h`` provides ``printf``-like formatting functionality. The following functions use `printf format string syntax `_ with the POSIX extension for positional arguments. Unlike their standard counterparts, the ``fmt`` functions are type-safe and throw an exception if an argument type doesn't match its format specification. .. doxygenfunction:: printf(string_view, const Args&...) .. doxygenfunction:: fprintf(std::FILE *, string_view, const Args&...) .. doxygenfunction:: fprintf(std::ostream&, string_view, const Args&...) .. doxygenfunction:: sprintf(string_view, const Args&...) Write API ========= The write API provides classes for writing formatted data into character streams. It is usually faster than the `format API`_ but, as IOStreams, may result in larger compiled code size. The main writer class is `~fmt::BasicMemoryWriter` which stores its output in a memory buffer and provides direct access to it. It is possible to create custom writers that store output elsewhere by subclassing `~fmt::BasicWriter`. .. doxygenclass:: fmt::BasicWriter :members: .. doxygenclass:: fmt::BasicMemoryWriter :members: .. doxygenclass:: fmt::BasicArrayWriter :members: .. doxygenclass:: fmt::BasicStringWriter :members: .. doxygenfunction:: bin(int) .. doxygenfunction:: oct(int) .. doxygenfunction:: hex(int) .. doxygenfunction:: hexu(int) .. doxygenfunction:: pad(int, unsigned, Char) Utilities ========= .. doxygenfunction:: fmt::arg(string_view, const T&) .. doxygenfunction:: operator""_a(const char *, std::size_t) .. doxygendefine:: FMT_CAPTURE .. doxygenclass:: fmt::basic_format_args :members: .. doxygenfunction:: fmt::to_string(const T&) .. doxygenclass:: fmt::basic_string_view :members: .. doxygenclass:: fmt::Buffer :protected-members: :members: System errors ============= .. doxygenclass:: fmt::system_error :members: .. doxygenfunction:: fmt::format_system_error .. doxygenclass:: fmt::windows_error :members: .. _formatstrings: Custom allocators ================= The fmt library supports custom dynamic memory allocators. A custom allocator class can be specified as a template argument to :class:`fmt::BasicMemoryWriter`:: typedef fmt::BasicMemoryWriter CustomMemoryWriter; It is also possible to write a formatting function that uses a custom allocator:: typedef std::basic_string, CustomAllocator> CustomString; CustomString format(CustomAllocator alloc, fmt::CStringRef format_str, fmt::ArgList args) { CustomMemoryWriter writer(alloc); writer.write(format_str, args); return CustomString(writer.data(), writer.size(), alloc); } FMT_VARIADIC(CustomString, format, CustomAllocator, fmt::CStringRef)