format

format , a built-in Tcl command, produces a formatted string from a given template.

See Also

Binary representation of numbers
Pure-Tcl implementations similar to format %b.

Synopsis

format formatString ?arg arg ...?

Documentation

man page

Description

Gives each $arg the representation indicated by the next conversion specifier informatString, interpolates that representation into the formatString in place of the converstion specifier, and at the end of the routine returns the result. There must be at $arg for each conversion specifier. Operation is similar to that of to sprintf , , which is used internally.

A conversion specifer begins with % and is followed, in order, by a position specifier, a set of flags, a minimum field width, a precision, a size modifier, and a conversion characer, which is the only mandatory component.

The position specifier is a decimal number followed by a dollar sign, e.g. %2$d, which means that the the second $arg should be used to form the value for interpolation, and that value should be given a decimal represenation. If there are any positional conversion specifiers in formatString, then each conversion specifier in formatString must include a position specifier.

See the documentation for details of the other components of a conversion specifier.

Without a size modifier, the numeric conversion types are all subject to underflow/overflow. The ll size modifier configures a conversion type to operate on a number of arbitrary size.

Maximum Width for Numbers

by default, format doesn't provide a way to specify a maxiumum number of digits when using a numeric conversion type such as %d. You could specify the format as a %s and then provide a maximum number of characters, or you could write tcl code to check for maximum. Jonathan Bromley, comp.lang.tcl 2007-09, posted the following code (modernized here), which provides a first cut at a -strict initial argument to format.

proc strictformat {fmt value} {
    set f [format $fmt $value]
    regexp {%(\d+)} $fmt -> maxwidth
    if {[string length $f] > $maxwidth} {
        return [string repeat * $maxwidth]
    } else {
        return $f
    }
}
rename format _format
proc format args {
    if {[lindex $args 0] eq {-strict}} {
        strictformat {*}$args
    } else {
        _format {*}$args
    }
}

Make Unsigned Values

You can use format to produce unsigned integers for display (but don't reckon with them - for expr they're still signed!):

% format %u -1
4294967295

See floating-point formatting for discussion on how to write format strings to handle floats...

DKF: Note that 8.5 makes this sort of thing much less necessary as we can now handle arbitrary width integers.

Nice-Looking Floats

To make numbers look nice:

set fah [format {%0.2f} [expr {$temperature_cel * 9 / 5 + 32}]]

Color Formatting

set color [format #%02x%02x%02x $r $g $b]

KPV If you have the color name then you can do

::tk::Darken $color 100

IDG Where is this documented?

Converting Characters

A limited formatting of decimals to characters is available in other languages, e.g. CHR() in Basic. If you use that more often, here's a cute shortcut:

interp alias {} chr {} format %c
% set a [chr 49][chr 48]
10

Abbreviating Integers

See Narrow formatting for short rendering of big integers, with powers of 1024:

% fixform 12345678
11.7M

Understanding Formats

This method should get format string and explain the format structure. This is a fast scatch:

proc explainFormat {formatStr vars} {
    set index 1
    foreach frm [split $formatStr %] {
        set extra {} 
        set size 0
        regexp {([0-9]+)([duioxXcsfegG])(.*)} $frm => size type extra
        if {$size == 0} {
            set size [string length $frm]
        } else {
            set frm "%$size$type [lindex $vars 0]"
            set vars [lrange $vars 1 end]
            set size [string trimleft $size 0]
        }
        for {set i 0} {$i < 2} {incr i} {
            set newIndex [expr {$size +$index -1}]
            puts "$index-$newIndex '$frm'"
            set index [expr {$newIndex +1}]
            if {$extra eq {}} {
                break
            } else {
                set frm $extra
                set size [string length $extra]
            }
        }
    }
}
% explainFormat hello%02s000%3d $a $b
1-5 'hello'
6-7 '%02s $a'
8-10 '000'
11-13 '%3d $b'

Emulating Fortran

RS 2007-09-04: Here's emulating the Fortran behavior that numbers too large for the format are marked as an asterisk string:

proc strictformat {fmt value} {
    set f [format $fmt $value]
    regexp {%(\d+)} $fmt -> maxwidth
    if {[string length $f]>$maxwidth} {
        return [string repeat * $maxwidth]
    } else {return $f}
}

Testing:

% strictformat %5.2f 12.345
12.35
% strictformat %5.2f 123.45
*****
% strictformat %5.2f 12345.67
*****

Restricting Floats

While using Tcl 8.5, you will begin to see strings like 0.0052499999999999995 where before you were seeing values like 0.00525. To round the value to a shorter value, try something like:

format %.3g 0.0052499999999999995

See Also Floating-point formatting

Rebasing

Don Porter, comp.lang.tcl, in reply to a question about how to go from base 10 to another base, such as 2 or 16, using arbitrarily large numbers in Tcl 8.5:

> I would have guessed that format %x should do the job, but apparently
> it's currently limited to 64 bits...

% format %llx 1234567890123456789012345
1056e0f36a6443de2df79

DrASK: Those are ELLs above in %llx. Not {percent eleven lower-case-x}, but rather {percent, ell, ell, lower-case-x}.

Digit Grouping

Digit grouping can make numbers with many digits easier to read.

ET: While I never liked the language Ada, it did have an idea that I wish had caught on, the optional use of an underscore character in large numerical constants, to make the numbers readable. (And trival for a compiler or interpreter to scan/parse).

So, 1_234_567 is a number that is as readable as 1,234,567 and is much better than 1234567. I have a handy little converter, (which I stole from somewhere on this wiki and modifed):

proc commas {var {num 3} {char ,}} {
    set len   [string length $var]
    set first [expr $len - $num]
    set x     {}
    while {$len > 0} {
        # grab left num chars
        set lef [string range $var $first end] 
        if {[string length $x] > 0} {
            set x   "${lef}$char${x}"
        } else {
            set x   $lef
        }
        # grab everything except left num chars
        set var [string range  $var 0 [expr $first -1]]
        set len   [string length $var]
        set first [expr {$len - $num}]
    }
    return $x
}

Here are some examples of its use:

dec2bin 987654
11110001001000000110

% commas [dec2bin 987654] 4 _
1111_0001_0010_0000_0110

% commas [dec2bin 987654] 4 { }
1111 0001 0010 0000 0110

% commas [dec2bin 987654] 1 { }
1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0

%commas 123456789     ;# naturally, it defaults for use with large decimal integers
123,456,789

% commas 123456789 3 _  ;# and here's how I wish numbers could be entered, in tcl and in C etc.
123_456_789

% puts "0x[commas [format %08X 123456789] 4 _]"    ;# and for hex numbers as well
0x075B_CD15   

ten: modified to make it work with decimal points:

% commas 101135130.01 101,135,130.01

proc commas {var {num 3} {char ,}} {
    set dec ""
    regexp {(\d+)(\.\d+)?} $var tmp var dec
    set len   [string length $var]
    set first [expr $len - $num]
    set x     {}
    while {$len > 0} {
        # grab left num chars
        set lef [string range $var $first end] 
        if {[string length $x] > 0} {
            set x   "${lef}$char${x}"
        } else {
            set x   $lef
        }
        # grab everything except left num chars
        set var [string range  $var 0 [expr $first -1]]
        set len   [string length $var]
        set first [expr {$len - $num}]
    }
    return $x$dec
}

Misc

LV: The man page for 8.4 is missing examples. 8.5 is better, but I'm looking for an example of the following. I have a report line that I am trying to fill out. It consists of a time stamp, a date stamp, and 2 text strings. each of these items must begin in a specific column.

set g OHIO
set fmtg [format %-25.25s $g]
puts [string length $fmtg]

The man page is complex enough that I want to be certain that I am not missing something. This seems to ensure that if g is longer than 25 characters, it is truncated, and if it is shorter than 25 characters, that it is left justified and blank padded. Are there any gotchas of which I need to be aware?

[TODO: Explain XPG positional format specifiers.]


dbohdan 2014-06-06: Observation: you could use format to do multiple ad hoc type assertions in the vein of assert [string is integer $var] with a single command. E.g.,

eltclsh > set a 5
eltclsh > set b 7
eltclsh > format %d%d $a $b
57
eltclsh > set a NaNNaNNaN
eltclsh > format %d%d $a $b
expected integer but got "NaNNaNNaN"

This may or may not be a bad idea.

Extra Arguments

AMG: [format] ignores extra arguments, that is, arguments not matched by any format specifiers.