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195 lines
8.2 KiB
Markdown
195 lines
8.2 KiB
Markdown
# Printf for Deno
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This is very much a work-in-progress. I'm actively soliciting feedback. What
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immediately follows are points for discussion.
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If you are looking for the documentation proper, skip to:
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"printf: prints formatted output"
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below.
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## Discussion
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This is very much a work-in-progress. I'm actively soliciting feedback.
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- What useful features are available in other languages apart from Golang and C?
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- behaviour of `%v` verb. In Golang, this is a shortcut verb to "print the
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default format" of the argument. It is currently implemented to format using
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`toString` in the default case and `inspect` if the `%#v` alternative format
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flag is used in the format directive. Alternatively, `%V` could be used to
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distinguish the two.
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`inspect` output is not defined, however. This may be problematic if using
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this code on other platforms (and expecting interoperability). To my
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knowledge, no suitable specification of object representation aside from JSON
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and `toString` exist. ( Aside: see "[Common object formats][3]" in the
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"Console Living Standard" which basically says "do whatever" )
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- `%j` verb. This is an extension particular to this implementation. Currently
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not very sophisticated, it just runs `JSON.stringify` on the argument.
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Consider possible modifier flags, etc.
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- `<` verb. This is an extension that assumes the argument is an array and will
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format each element according to the format (surrounded by [] and separated by
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comma) (`<` Mnemonic: pull each element out of array)
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- how to deal with more newfangled JavaScript features (generic Iterables, Map
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and Set types, typed Arrays, ...)
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- the implementation is fairly rough around the edges:
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- currently contains little in the way of checking for correctness. Conceivably,
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there will be a 'strict' form, e.g. that ensures only Number-ish arguments are
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passed to %f flags
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- assembles output using string concatenation instead of utilizing buffers or
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other optimizations. It would be nice to have printf / sprintf / fprintf (etc)
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all in one.
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- float formatting is handled by toString() and to `toExponential` along with a
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mess of Regexp. Would be nice to use fancy match
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- some flags that are potentially applicable ( POSIX long and unsigned modifiers
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are not likely useful) are missing, namely %q (print quoted), %U (unicode
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format)
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# printf: prints formatted output
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sprintf converts and formats a variable number of arguments as is specified by a
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`format string`. In it's basic form, a format string may just be a literal. In
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case arguments are meant to be formatted, a `directive` is contained in the
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format string, preceded by a '%' character:
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%<verb>
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E.g. the verb `s` indicates the directive should be replaced by the string
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representation of the argument in the corresponding position of the argument
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list. E.g.:
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Hello %s!
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applied to the arguments "World" yields "Hello World!"
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The meaning of the format string is modelled after [POSIX][1] format strings as
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well as well as [Golang format strings][2]. Both contain elements specific to
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the respective programming language that don't apply to JavaScript, so they can
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not be fully supported. Furthermore we implement some functionality that is
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specific to JS.
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## Verbs
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The following verbs are supported:
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| Verb | Meaning |
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| ----- | -------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| `%` | print a literal percent |
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| `t` | evaluate arg as boolean, print `true` or `false` |
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| `b` | eval as number, print binary |
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| `c` | eval as number, print character corresponding to the codePoint |
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| `o` | eval as number, print octal |
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| `x X` | print as hex (ff FF), treat string as list of bytes |
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| `e E` | print number in scientific/exponent format 1.123123e+01 |
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| `f F` | print number as float with decimal point and no exponent |
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| `g G` | use %e %E or %f %F depending on size of argument |
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| `s` | interpolate string |
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| `T` | type of arg, as returned by `typeof` |
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| `v` | value of argument in 'default' format (see below) |
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| `j` | argument as formatted by `JSON.stringify` |
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## Width and Precision
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Verbs may be modified by providing them with width and precision, either or both
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may be omitted:
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%9f width 9, default precision
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%.9f default width, precision 9
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%8.9f width 8, precision 9
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%8.f width 9, precision 0
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In general, 'width' describes the minimum length of the output, while
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'precision' limits the output.
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| verb | precision |
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| --------- | --------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| `t` | n/a |
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| `b c o` | n/a |
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| `x X` | n/a for number, strings are truncated to p bytes(!) |
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| `e E f F` | number of places after decimal, default 6 |
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| `g G` | set maximum number of digits |
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| `s` | truncate input |
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| `T` | truncate |
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| `v` | truncate, or depth if used with # see "'default' format", below |
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| `j` | n/a |
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Numerical values for width and precision can be substituted for the `*` char, in
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which case the values are obtained from the next args, e.g.:
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sprintf ("%*.*f", 9,8,456.0)
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is equivalent to
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sprintf ("%9.9f", 456.0)
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## Flags
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The effects of the verb may be further influenced by using flags to modify the
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directive:
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| Flag | Verb | Meaning |
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| ----- | --------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| `+` | numeric | always print sign |
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| `-` | all | pad to the right (left justify) |
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| `#` | | alternate format |
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| `#` | `b o x X` | prefix with `0b 0 0x` |
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| `#` | `g G` | don't remove trailing zeros |
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| `#` | `v` | ues output of `inspect` instead of `toString` |
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| `' '` | | space character |
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| `' '` | `x X` | leave spaces between bytes when printing string |
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| `' '` | `d` | insert space for missing `+` sign character |
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| `0` | all | pad with zero, `-` takes precedence, sign is appended in front of padding |
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| `<` | all | format elements of the passed array according to the directive (extension) |
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## 'default' format
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The default format used by `%v` is the result of calling `toString()` on the
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relevant argument. If the `#` flags is used, the result of calling `inspect()`
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is interpolated. In this case, the precision, if set is passed to `inspect()` as
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the 'depth' config parameter
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## Positional arguments
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Arguments do not need to be consumed in the order they are provided and may be
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consumed more than once. E.g.:
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sprintf("%[2]s %[1]s", "World", "Hello")
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returns "Hello World". The presence of a positional indicator resets the arg
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counter allowing args to be reused:
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sprintf("dec[%d]=%d hex[%[1]d]=%x oct[%[1]d]=%#o %s", 1, 255, "Third")
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returns `dec[1]=255 hex[1]=0xff oct[1]=0377 Third`
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Width and precision my also use positionals:
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"%[2]*.[1]*d", 1, 2
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This follows the golang conventions and not POSIX.
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## Errors
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The following errors are handled:
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Incorrect verb:
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S("%h", "") %!(BAD VERB 'h')
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Too few arguments:
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S("%d") %!(MISSING 'd')"
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[1]: https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/fprintf.html
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[2]: https://golang.org/pkg/fmt/
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[3]: https://console.spec.whatwg.org/#object-formats
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