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A complete implementation of the printf
C functions family
for Node.JS, written in pure JavaScript.
The code is strongly inspired by the one available in the Dojo Toolkit.
Bonus! You get extra features, like the %O
converter (which inspect
s
the argument). See Extra Features below.
Via NPM:
$ npm install printf
Use it like you would in C (printf
/sprintf
):
var printf = require('printf'); var result = printf(format, args...);
It can also output the result for you, as fprintf
:
var printf = require('printf'); printf(write_stream, format, args...);
(space)assert.eql(' -42', printf('% 5d', -42));
+
(plus)assert.eql(' +42', printf('%+5d', 42));
0
(zero)assert.eql('00042', printf('%05d', 42));
-
(minus)assert.eql('42 ', printf('%-5d', 42));
assert.eql('42.90', printf('%.2f', 42.8952)); assert.eql('042.90', printf('%06.2f', 42.8952));
assert.eql('\x7f', printf('%c', 0x7f)); assert.eql('a', printf('%c', 'a')); assert.eql('"', printf('%c', 34));
assert.eql('10%', printf('%d%%', 10)); assert.eql('+hello+', printf('+%s+', 'hello')); assert.eql('$', printf('%c', 36));
The %O
converter will call util.inspect(...)
at the argument:
assert.eql("Debug: { hello: 'Node', repeat: false }", printf('Debug: %O', {hello: 'Node', "repeat": false}) ); assert.eql("Test: { hello: 'Node' }", printf('%2$s: %1$O', {"hello": 'Node'}, 'Test') );
Important: it's a capital "O", not a zero!
Specifying a precision lets you control the depth up to which the object is formatted:
assert.eql("Debug: { depth0: { depth1_: 0, depth1: [Object] } }", printf('Debug: %.1O', {depth0: {depth1: {depth2: {depth3: true}}, depth1_: 0}}) );
You can use the alternative form flag together with %O
to disable representation of non-enumerable properties (useful for arrays):
assert.eql("With non-enumerable properties: [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, [length]: 5 ]", printf('With non-enumerable properties: %O', [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]) ); assert.eql("Without non-enumerable properties: [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ]", printf('Without non-enumerable properties: %#O', [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]) );
In addition to the old-fashioned n$
,
you can use hashes and property names!
assert.eql('Hot Pockets', printf('%(temperature)s %(crevace)ss', { temperature: 'Hot', crevace: 'Pocket' }) ); assert.eql('Hot Pockets', printf('%2$s %1$ss', 'Pocket', 'Hot') );
Lenght and precision can now be variable:
assert.eql(' foo', printf('%*s', 'foo', 4)); assert.eql(' 3.14', printf('%*.*f', 3.14159265, 10, 2)); assert.eql('000003.142', printf('%0*.*f', 3.14159265, 10, 3)); assert.eql('3.1416 ', printf('%-*.*f', 3.14159265, 10, 4));
Tests are written in CoffeeScript executed with Mocha. To use it, simple run npm install
, it will install
Mocha and its dependencies in your project's node_modules
directory followed by npm test
.
To run the tests:
npm install npm test
The test suite is run online with Travis against the versions 0.9, 0.10 and 0.11 of Node.js.