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714 lines
22 KiB
Nim
714 lines
22 KiB
Nim
#
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#
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# Nim's Runtime Library
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# (c) Copyright 2017 Nim contributors
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#
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# See the file "copying.txt", included in this
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# distribution, for details about the copyright.
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#
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##[
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String `interpolation`:idx: / `format`:idx: inspired by
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Python's ``f``-strings.
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``fmt`` vs. ``&``
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=================
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You can use either ``fmt`` or the unary ``&`` operator for formatting. The
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difference between them is subtle but important.
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The ``fmt"{expr}"`` syntax is more aesthetically pleasing, but it hides a small
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gotcha. The string is a
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`generalized raw string literal <manual.html#lexical-analysis-generalized-raw-string-literals>`_.
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This has some surprising effects:
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.. code-block:: nim
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import strformat
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let msg = "hello"
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doAssert fmt"{msg}\n" == "hello\\n"
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Because the literal is a raw string literal, the ``\n`` is not interpreted as
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an escape sequence.
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There are multiple ways to get around this, including the use of the ``&``
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operator:
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.. code-block:: nim
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import strformat
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let msg = "hello"
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doAssert &"{msg}\n" == "hello\n"
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doAssert fmt"{msg}{'\n'}" == "hello\n"
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doAssert fmt("{msg}\n") == "hello\n"
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doAssert "{msg}\n".fmt == "hello\n"
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The choice of style is up to you.
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Formatting strings
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==================
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.. code-block:: nim
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import strformat
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doAssert &"""{"abc":>4}""" == " abc"
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doAssert &"""{"abc":<4}""" == "abc "
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Formatting floats
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=================
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.. code-block:: nim
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import strformat
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doAssert fmt"{-12345:08}" == "-0012345"
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doAssert fmt"{-1:3}" == " -1"
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doAssert fmt"{-1:03}" == "-01"
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doAssert fmt"{16:#X}" == "0x10"
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doAssert fmt"{123.456}" == "123.456"
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doAssert fmt"{123.456:>9.3f}" == " 123.456"
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doAssert fmt"{123.456:9.3f}" == " 123.456"
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doAssert fmt"{123.456:9.4f}" == " 123.4560"
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doAssert fmt"{123.456:>9.0f}" == " 123."
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doAssert fmt"{123.456:<9.4f}" == "123.4560 "
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doAssert fmt"{123.456:e}" == "1.234560e+02"
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doAssert fmt"{123.456:>13e}" == " 1.234560e+02"
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doAssert fmt"{123.456:13e}" == " 1.234560e+02"
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Implementation details
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======================
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An expression like ``&"{key} is {value:arg} {{z}}"`` is transformed into:
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.. code-block:: nim
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var temp = newStringOfCap(educatedCapGuess)
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format(key, temp)
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format(" is ", temp)
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format(value, arg, temp)
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format(" {z}", temp)
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temp
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Parts of the string that are enclosed in the curly braces are interpreted
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as Nim code, to escape an ``{`` or ``}`` double it.
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``&`` delegates most of the work to an open overloaded set
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of ``format`` procs. The required signature for a type ``T`` that supports
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formatting is usually ``proc format(x: T; result: var string)`` for efficiency
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but can also be ``proc format(x: T): string``. ``add`` and ``$`` procs are
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used as the fallback implementation.
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This is the concrete lookup algorithm that ``&`` uses:
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.. code-block:: nim
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when compiles(format(arg, res)):
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format(arg, res)
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elif compiles(format(arg)):
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res.add format(arg)
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elif compiles(add(res, arg)):
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res.add(arg)
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else:
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res.add($arg)
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The subexpression after the colon
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(``arg`` in ``&"{key} is {value:arg} {{z}}"``) is an optional argument
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passed to ``format``.
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If an optional argument is present the following lookup algorithm is used:
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.. code-block:: nim
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when compiles(format(arg, option, res)):
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format(arg, option, res)
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else:
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res.add format(arg, option)
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For strings and numeric types the optional argument is a so-called
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"standard format specifier".
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Standard format specifier for strings, integers and floats
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==========================================================
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The general form of a standard format specifier is::
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[[fill]align][sign][#][0][minimumwidth][.precision][type]
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The square brackets ``[]`` indicate an optional element.
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The optional align flag can be one of the following:
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'<'
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Forces the field to be left-aligned within the available
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space. (This is the default for strings.)
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'>'
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Forces the field to be right-aligned within the available space.
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(This is the default for numbers.)
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'^'
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Forces the field to be centered within the available space.
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Note that unless a minimum field width is defined, the field width
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will always be the same size as the data to fill it, so that the alignment
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option has no meaning in this case.
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The optional 'fill' character defines the character to be used to pad
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the field to the minimum width. The fill character, if present, must be
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followed by an alignment flag.
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The 'sign' option is only valid for numeric types, and can be one of the following:
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================= ====================================================
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Sign Meaning
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================= ====================================================
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``+`` Indicates that a sign should be used for both
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positive as well as negative numbers.
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``-`` Indicates that a sign should be used only for
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negative numbers (this is the default behavior).
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(space) Indicates that a leading space should be used on
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positive numbers.
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================= ====================================================
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If the '#' character is present, integers use the 'alternate form' for formatting.
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This means that binary, octal, and hexadecimal output will be prefixed
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with '0b', '0o', and '0x', respectively.
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'width' is a decimal integer defining the minimum field width. If not specified,
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then the field width will be determined by the content.
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If the width field is preceded by a zero ('0') character, this enables
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zero-padding.
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The 'precision' is a decimal number indicating how many digits should be displayed
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after the decimal point in a floating point conversion. For non-numeric types the
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field indicates the maximum field size - in other words, how many characters will
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be used from the field content. The precision is ignored for integer conversions.
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Finally, the 'type' determines how the data should be presented.
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The available integer presentation types are:
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================= ====================================================
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Type Result
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================= ====================================================
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``b`` Binary. Outputs the number in base 2.
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``d`` Decimal Integer. Outputs the number in base 10.
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``o`` Octal format. Outputs the number in base 8.
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``x`` Hex format. Outputs the number in base 16, using
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lower-case letters for the digits above 9.
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``X`` Hex format. Outputs the number in base 16, using
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uppercase letters for the digits above 9.
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(None) the same as 'd'
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================= ====================================================
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The available floating point presentation types are:
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================= ====================================================
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Type Result
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================= ====================================================
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``e`` Exponent notation. Prints the number in scientific
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notation using the letter 'e' to indicate the
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exponent.
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``E`` Exponent notation. Same as 'e' except it converts
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the number to uppercase.
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``f`` Fixed point. Displays the number as a fixed-point
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number.
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``F`` Fixed point. Same as 'f' except it converts the
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number to uppercase.
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``g`` General format. This prints the number as a
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fixed-point number, unless the number is too
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large, in which case it switches to 'e'
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exponent notation.
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``G`` General format. Same as 'g' except switches to 'E'
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if the number gets to large.
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(None) similar to 'g', except that it prints at least one
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digit after the decimal point.
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================= ====================================================
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Future directions
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=================
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A curly expression with commas in it like ``{x, argA, argB}`` could be
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transformed to ``format(x, argA, argB, res)`` in order to support
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formatters that do not need to parse a custom language within a custom
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language but instead prefer to use Nim's existing syntax. This also
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helps in readability since there is only so much you can cram into
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single letter DSLs.
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]##
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import macros, parseutils, unicode
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import strutils
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template callFormat(res, arg) {.dirty.} =
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when arg is string:
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# workaround in order to circumvent 'strutils.format' which matches
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# too but doesn't adhere to our protocol.
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res.add arg
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elif compiles(format(arg, res)) and
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# Check if format returns void
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not (compiles do: discard format(arg, res)):
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format(arg, res)
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elif compiles(format(arg)):
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res.add format(arg)
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elif compiles(add(res, arg)):
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res.add(arg)
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else:
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res.add($arg)
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template callFormatOption(res, arg, option) {.dirty.} =
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when compiles(format(arg, option, res)):
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format(arg, option, res)
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elif compiles(format(arg, option)):
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res.add format(arg, option)
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else:
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format($arg, option, res)
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macro `&`*(pattern: string): untyped =
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## For a specification of the ``&`` macro, see the module level documentation.
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if pattern.kind notin {nnkStrLit..nnkTripleStrLit}:
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error "string formatting (fmt(), &) only works with string literals", pattern
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let f = pattern.strVal
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var i = 0
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let res = genSym(nskVar, "fmtRes")
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result = newNimNode(nnkStmtListExpr, lineInfoFrom=pattern)
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result.add newVarStmt(res, newCall(bindSym"newStringOfCap", newLit(f.len + count(f, '{')*10)))
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var strlit = ""
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while i < f.len:
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if f[i] == '{':
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inc i
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if f[i] == '{':
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inc i
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strlit.add '{'
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else:
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if strlit.len > 0:
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result.add newCall(bindSym"add", res, newLit(strlit))
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strlit = ""
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var subexpr = ""
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while i < f.len and f[i] != '}' and f[i] != ':':
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subexpr.add f[i]
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inc i
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let x = parseExpr(subexpr)
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if f[i] == ':':
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inc i
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var options = ""
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while i < f.len and f[i] != '}':
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options.add f[i]
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inc i
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result.add getAst(callFormatOption(res, x, newLit(options)))
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else:
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result.add getAst(callFormat(res, x))
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if f[i] == '}':
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inc i
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else:
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doAssert false, "invalid format string: missing '}'"
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elif f[i] == '}':
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if f[i+1] == '}':
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strlit.add '}'
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inc i, 2
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else:
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doAssert false, "invalid format string: '}' instead of '}}'"
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inc i
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else:
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strlit.add f[i]
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inc i
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if strlit.len > 0:
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result.add newCall(bindSym"add", res, newLit(strlit))
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result.add res
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when defined(debugFmtDsl):
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echo repr result
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template fmt*(pattern: string): untyped =
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## An alias for ``&``.
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bind `&`
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&pattern
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proc mkDigit(v: int, typ: char): string {.inline.} =
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assert(v < 26)
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if v < 10:
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result = $chr(ord('0') + v)
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else:
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result = $chr(ord(if typ == 'x': 'a' else: 'A') + v - 10)
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proc alignString*(s: string, minimumWidth: int; align = '\0'; fill = ' '): string =
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## Aligns ``s`` using ``fill`` char.
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## This is only of interest if you want to write a custom ``format`` proc that
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## should support the standard format specifiers.
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if minimumWidth == 0:
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result = s
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else:
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let sRuneLen = if s.validateUtf8 == -1: s.runeLen else: s.len
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let toFill = minimumWidth - sRuneLen
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if toFill <= 0:
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result = s
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elif align == '<' or align == '\0':
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result = s & repeat(fill, toFill)
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elif align == '^':
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let half = toFill div 2
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result = repeat(fill, half) & s & repeat(fill, toFill - half)
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else:
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result = repeat(fill, toFill) & s
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type
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StandardFormatSpecifier* = object ## Type that describes "standard format specifiers".
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fill*, align*: char ## Desired fill and alignment.
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sign*: char ## Desired sign.
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alternateForm*: bool ## Whether to prefix binary, octal and hex numbers
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## with ``0b``, ``0o``, ``0x``.
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padWithZero*: bool ## Whether to pad with zeros rather than spaces.
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minimumWidth*, precision*: int ## Desired minium width and precision.
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typ*: char ## Type like 'f', 'g' or 'd'.
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endPosition*: int ## End position in the format specifier after
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## ``parseStandardFormatSpecifier`` returned.
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proc formatInt(n: SomeNumber; radix: int; spec: StandardFormatSpecifier): string =
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## Converts ``n`` to string. If ``n`` is `SomeFloat`, it casts to `int64`.
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## Conversion is done using ``radix``. If result's length is lesser than
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## ``minimumWidth``, it aligns result to the right or left (depending on ``a``)
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## with ``fill`` char.
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when n is SomeUnsignedInt:
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var v = n.uint64
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let negative = false
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else:
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var v = n.int64
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let negative = v.int64 < 0
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if negative:
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# FIXME: overflow error for low(int64)
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v = v * -1
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var xx = ""
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if spec.alternateForm:
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case spec.typ
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of 'X': xx = "0x"
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of 'x': xx = "0x"
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of 'b': xx = "0b"
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of 'o': xx = "0o"
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else: discard
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if v == 0:
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result = "0"
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else:
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result = ""
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while v > type(v)(0):
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let d = v mod type(v)(radix)
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v = v div type(v)(radix)
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result.add(mkDigit(d.int, spec.typ))
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for idx in 0..<(result.len div 2):
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swap result[idx], result[result.len - idx - 1]
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if spec.padWithZero:
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let sign = negative or spec.sign != '-'
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let toFill = spec.minimumWidth - result.len - xx.len - ord(sign)
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if toFill > 0:
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result = repeat('0', toFill) & result
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if negative:
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result = "-" & xx & result
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elif spec.sign != '-':
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result = spec.sign & xx & result
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else:
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result = xx & result
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if spec.align == '<':
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for i in result.len..<spec.minimumWidth:
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result.add(spec.fill)
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else:
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let toFill = spec.minimumWidth - result.len
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if spec.align == '^':
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let half = toFill div 2
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result = repeat(spec.fill, half) & result & repeat(spec.fill, toFill - half)
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else:
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if toFill > 0:
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result = repeat(spec.fill, toFill) & result
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proc parseStandardFormatSpecifier*(s: string; start = 0;
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ignoreUnknownSuffix = false): StandardFormatSpecifier =
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## An exported helper proc that parses the "standard format specifiers",
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## as specified by the grammar::
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##
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## [[fill]align][sign][#][0][minimumwidth][.precision][type]
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##
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## This is only of interest if you want to write a custom ``format`` proc that
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## should support the standard format specifiers. If ``ignoreUnknownSuffix`` is true,
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## an unknown suffix after the ``type`` field is not an error.
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const alignChars = {'<', '>', '^'}
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result.fill = ' '
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result.align = '\0'
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result.sign = '-'
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var i = start
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if i + 1 < s.len and s[i+1] in alignChars:
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result.fill = s[i]
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result.align = s[i+1]
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inc i, 2
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elif i < s.len and s[i] in alignChars:
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result.align = s[i]
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inc i
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if i < s.len and s[i] in {'-', '+', ' '}:
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result.sign = s[i]
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inc i
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if i < s.len and s[i] == '#':
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result.alternateForm = true
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inc i
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if i+1 < s.len and s[i] == '0' and s[i+1] in {'0'..'9'}:
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result.padWithZero = true
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inc i
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let parsedLength = parseSaturatedNatural(s, result.minimumWidth, i)
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inc i, parsedLength
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if i < s.len and s[i] == '.':
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inc i
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let parsedLengthB = parseSaturatedNatural(s, result.precision, i)
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inc i, parsedLengthB
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else:
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result.precision = -1
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if i < s.len and s[i] in {'A'..'Z', 'a'..'z'}:
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result.typ = s[i]
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inc i
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result.endPosition = i
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if i != s.len and not ignoreUnknownSuffix:
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raise newException(ValueError,
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"invalid format string, cannot parse: " & s[i..^1])
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proc format*(value: SomeInteger; specifier: string; res: var string) =
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## Standard format implementation for ``SomeInteger``. It makes little
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## sense to call this directly, but it is required to exist
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## by the ``&`` macro.
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let spec = parseStandardFormatSpecifier(specifier)
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var radix = 10
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case spec.typ
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of 'x', 'X': radix = 16
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of 'd', '\0': discard
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of 'b': radix = 2
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of 'o': radix = 8
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else:
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raise newException(ValueError,
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"invalid type in format string for number, expected one " &
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" of 'x', 'X', 'b', 'd', 'o' but got: " & spec.typ)
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res.add formatInt(value, radix, spec)
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|
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proc format*(value: SomeFloat; specifier: string; res: var string) =
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## Standard format implementation for ``SomeFloat``. It makes little
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## sense to call this directly, but it is required to exist
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## by the ``&`` macro.
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let spec = parseStandardFormatSpecifier(specifier)
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var fmode = ffDefault
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case spec.typ
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of 'e', 'E':
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||
fmode = ffScientific
|
||
of 'f', 'F':
|
||
fmode = ffDecimal
|
||
of 'g', 'G':
|
||
fmode = ffDefault
|
||
of '\0': discard
|
||
else:
|
||
raise newException(ValueError,
|
||
"invalid type in format string for number, expected one " &
|
||
" of 'e', 'E', 'f', 'F', 'g', 'G' but got: " & spec.typ)
|
||
|
||
var f = formatBiggestFloat(value, fmode, spec.precision)
|
||
var sign = false
|
||
if value >= 0.0:
|
||
if spec.sign != '-':
|
||
sign = true
|
||
if value == 0.0:
|
||
if 1.0 / value == Inf:
|
||
# only insert the sign if value != negZero
|
||
f.insert($spec.sign, 0)
|
||
else:
|
||
f.insert($spec.sign, 0)
|
||
else:
|
||
sign = true
|
||
|
||
if spec.padWithZero:
|
||
var sign_str = ""
|
||
if sign:
|
||
sign_str = $f[0]
|
||
f = f[1..^1]
|
||
|
||
let toFill = spec.minimumWidth - f.len - ord(sign)
|
||
if toFill > 0:
|
||
f = repeat('0', toFill) & f
|
||
if sign:
|
||
f = sign_str & f
|
||
|
||
# the default for numbers is right-alignment:
|
||
let align = if spec.align == '\0': '>' else: spec.align
|
||
let result = alignString(f, spec.minimumWidth,
|
||
align, spec.fill)
|
||
if spec.typ in {'A'..'Z'}:
|
||
res.add toUpperAscii(result)
|
||
else:
|
||
res.add result
|
||
|
||
proc format*(value: string; specifier: string; res: var string) =
|
||
## Standard format implementation for ``string``. It makes little
|
||
## sense to call this directly, but it is required to exist
|
||
## by the ``&`` macro.
|
||
let spec = parseStandardFormatSpecifier(specifier)
|
||
var value = value
|
||
case spec.typ
|
||
of 's', '\0': discard
|
||
else:
|
||
raise newException(ValueError,
|
||
"invalid type in format string for string, expected 's', but got " &
|
||
spec.typ)
|
||
if spec.precision != -1:
|
||
if spec.precision < runelen(value):
|
||
setLen(value, runeOffset(value, spec.precision))
|
||
res.add alignString(value, spec.minimumWidth, spec.align, spec.fill)
|
||
|
||
when isMainModule:
|
||
template check(actual, expected: string) =
|
||
doAssert actual == expected
|
||
|
||
from strutils import toUpperAscii, repeat
|
||
|
||
# Basic tests
|
||
let s = "string"
|
||
check &"{0} {s}", "0 string"
|
||
check &"{s[0..2].toUpperAscii}", "STR"
|
||
check &"{-10:04}", "-010"
|
||
check &"{-10:<04}", "-010"
|
||
check &"{-10:>04}", "-010"
|
||
check &"0x{10:02X}", "0x0A"
|
||
|
||
check &"{10:#04X}", "0x0A"
|
||
|
||
check &"""{"test":#>5}""", "#test"
|
||
check &"""{"test":>5}""", " test"
|
||
|
||
check &"""{"test":#^7}""", "#test##"
|
||
|
||
check &"""{"test": <5}""", "test "
|
||
check &"""{"test":<5}""", "test "
|
||
check &"{1f:.3f}", "1.000"
|
||
check &"Hello, {s}!", "Hello, string!"
|
||
|
||
# Tests for identifers without parenthesis
|
||
check &"{s} works{s}", "string worksstring"
|
||
check &"{s:>7}", " string"
|
||
doAssert(not compiles(&"{s_works}")) # parsed as identifier `s_works`
|
||
|
||
# Misc general tests
|
||
check &"{{}}", "{}"
|
||
check &"{0}%", "0%"
|
||
check &"{0}%asdf", "0%asdf"
|
||
check &("\n{\"\\n\"}\n"), "\n\n\n"
|
||
check &"""{"abc"}s""", "abcs"
|
||
|
||
# String tests
|
||
check &"""{"abc"}""", "abc"
|
||
check &"""{"abc":>4}""", " abc"
|
||
check &"""{"abc":<4}""", "abc "
|
||
check &"""{"":>4}""", " "
|
||
check &"""{"":<4}""", " "
|
||
|
||
# Int tests
|
||
check &"{12345}", "12345"
|
||
check &"{ - 12345}", "-12345"
|
||
check &"{12345:6}", " 12345"
|
||
check &"{12345:>6}", " 12345"
|
||
check &"{12345:4}", "12345"
|
||
check &"{12345:08}", "00012345"
|
||
check &"{-12345:08}", "-0012345"
|
||
check &"{0:0}", "0"
|
||
check &"{0:02}", "00"
|
||
check &"{-1:3}", " -1"
|
||
check &"{-1:03}", "-01"
|
||
check &"{10}", "10"
|
||
check &"{16:#X}", "0x10"
|
||
check &"{16:^#7X}", " 0x10 "
|
||
check &"{16:^+#7X}", " +0x10 "
|
||
|
||
# Hex tests
|
||
check &"{0:x}", "0"
|
||
check &"{-0:x}", "0"
|
||
check &"{255:x}", "ff"
|
||
check &"{255:X}", "FF"
|
||
check &"{-255:x}", "-ff"
|
||
check &"{-255:X}", "-FF"
|
||
check &"{255:x} uNaffeCteD CaSe", "ff uNaffeCteD CaSe"
|
||
check &"{255:X} uNaffeCteD CaSe", "FF uNaffeCteD CaSe"
|
||
check &"{255:4x}", " ff"
|
||
check &"{255:04x}", "00ff"
|
||
check &"{-255:4x}", " -ff"
|
||
check &"{-255:04x}", "-0ff"
|
||
|
||
# Float tests
|
||
check &"{123.456}", "123.456"
|
||
check &"{-123.456}", "-123.456"
|
||
check &"{123.456:.3f}", "123.456"
|
||
check &"{123.456:+.3f}", "+123.456"
|
||
check &"{-123.456:+.3f}", "-123.456"
|
||
check &"{-123.456:.3f}", "-123.456"
|
||
check &"{123.456:1g}", "123.456"
|
||
check &"{123.456:.1f}", "123.5"
|
||
check &"{123.456:.0f}", "123."
|
||
#check &"{123.456:.0f}", "123."
|
||
check &"{123.456:>9.3f}", " 123.456"
|
||
check &"{123.456:9.3f}", " 123.456"
|
||
check &"{123.456:>9.4f}", " 123.4560"
|
||
check &"{123.456:>9.0f}", " 123."
|
||
check &"{123.456:<9.4f}", "123.4560 "
|
||
|
||
# Float (scientific) tests
|
||
check &"{123.456:e}", "1.234560e+02"
|
||
check &"{123.456:>13e}", " 1.234560e+02"
|
||
check &"{123.456:<13e}", "1.234560e+02 "
|
||
check &"{123.456:.1e}", "1.2e+02"
|
||
check &"{123.456:.2e}", "1.23e+02"
|
||
check &"{123.456:.3e}", "1.235e+02"
|
||
|
||
# Note: times.format adheres to the format protocol. Test that this
|
||
# works:
|
||
import times
|
||
|
||
var dt = initDateTime(01, mJan, 2000, 00, 00, 00)
|
||
check &"{dt:yyyy-MM-dd}", "2000-01-01"
|
||
|
||
var tm = fromUnix(0)
|
||
discard &"{tm}"
|
||
|
||
# Unicode string tests
|
||
check &"""{"αβγ"}""", "αβγ"
|
||
check &"""{"αβγ":>5}""", " αβγ"
|
||
check &"""{"αβγ":<5}""", "αβγ "
|
||
check &"""a{"a"}α{"α"}€{"€"}𐍈{"𐍈"}""", "aaαα€€𐍈𐍈"
|
||
check &"""a{"a":2}α{"α":2}€{"€":2}𐍈{"𐍈":2}""", "aa αα €€ 𐍈𐍈 "
|
||
# Invalid unicode sequences should be handled as plain strings.
|
||
# Invalid examples taken from: https://stackoverflow.com/a/3886015/1804173
|
||
let invalidUtf8 = [
|
||
"\xc3\x28", "\xa0\xa1",
|
||
"\xe2\x28\xa1", "\xe2\x82\x28",
|
||
"\xf0\x28\x8c\xbc", "\xf0\x90\x28\xbc", "\xf0\x28\x8c\x28"
|
||
]
|
||
for s in invalidUtf8:
|
||
check &"{s:>5}", repeat(" ", 5-s.len) & s
|
||
|
||
|
||
import json
|
||
|
||
doAssert fmt"{'a'} {'b'}" == "a b"
|
||
|
||
echo("All tests ok")
|