View source code
							
							
						
								Display the source code in std/format/package.d from which this
								page was generated on github.
							
						
							Report a bug
							
						
								If you spot a problem with this page, click here to create a
								Bugzilla issue.
							
						
							
								Improve this page
							
							
					
								Quickly fork, edit online, and submit a pull request for this page.
								Requires a signed-in GitHub account. This works well for small changes.
								If you'd like to make larger changes you may want to consider using
								local clone.
							
						Function std.format.format
Converts its arguments according to a format string into a string.
						
				immutable(Char)[] format(Char, Args...)
				(
				
				  in Char[] fmt,
				
				  Args args
				
				)
				
				if (isSomeChar!Char);
				
				
				typeof(fmt) format(alias fmt, Args...)
				(
				
				  Args args
				
				)
				
				if (isSomeString!(typeof(fmt)));
						
					
				The second version of format takes the format string as template
argument. In this case, it is checked for consistency at
compile-time and produces slightly faster code, because the length of
the output buffer can be estimated in advance.
Parameters
| Name | Description | 
|---|---|
| fmt | a format string | 
| args | a variadic list of arguments to be formatted | 
| Char | character type of fmt | 
| Args | a variadic list of types of the arguments | 
Returns
The formatted string.
Throws
A FormatException if formatting did not succeed.
See Also
sformat for a variant, that tries to avoid garbage collection.
Example
writeln(format("Here are %d %s.", 3, "apples")); // "Here are 3 apples."
writeln("Increase: %7.2f %%"Example
The format string can be checked at compile-time:
auto s = format!"%s is %s"("Pi", 3.14);
writeln(s); // "Pi is 3.14"
// This line doesn't compile, because 3.14 cannot be formatted with %d:
// s = format!"%s is %d"("Pi", 3.14);
Authors
Walter Bright, Andrei Alexandrescu, and Kenji Hara
License
					Copyright © 1999-2024 by the D Language Foundation | Page generated by ddox.