API Reference¶
The {fmt} library API consists of the following parts:
- fmt/core.h: the core API providing argument handling facilities and a lightweight subset of formatting functions
- fmt/format.h: the full format API providing compile-time format string checks, output iterator and user-defined type support
- fmt/time.h: date and time formatting
- fmt/ostream.h:
std::ostream
support - fmt/printf.h:
printf
formatting
All functions and types provided by the library reside in namespace fmt
and
macros have prefix FMT_
or fmt
.
Core API¶
fmt/core.h
defines the core API which provides argument handling facilities
and a lightweight subset of formatting functions.
The following functions use format string syntax imilar to that of Python’s str.format. They take format_str and args as arguments.
format_str is a format string that contains literal text and replacement
fields surrounded by braces {}
. The fields are replaced with formatted
arguments in the resulting string.
args is an argument list representing objects to be formatted.
- template <typename String, typename... Args>
-
std::basic_string<typename internal::format_string_traits<String>::char_type>
fmt::
format
(const String &format_str, const Args&... args)¶ Formats arguments and returns the result as a string.
Example:
#include <fmt/core.h> std::string message = fmt::format("The answer is {}", 42);
- template <typename String, typename Char = typename internal::format_string_traits<String>::char_type>
-
std::basic_string<Char>
fmt::
vformat
(const String &format_str, basic_format_args<typename buffer_context<Char>::type> args)¶
- template <typename... Args>
-
void
fmt::
print
(string_view format_str, const Args&... args)¶ Prints formatted data to
stdout
.Example:
fmt::print("Elapsed time: {0:.2f} seconds", 1.23);
-
void
fmt::
vprint
(string_view format_str, format_args args)¶
- template <typename... Args>
-
void
fmt::
print
(std::FILE *f, string_view format_str, const Args&... args)¶ Prints formatted data to the file f.
Example:
fmt::print(stderr, "Don't {}!", "panic");
-
void
fmt::
vprint
(std::FILE *f, string_view format_str, format_args args)¶
- template <typename... Args>
-
void
fmt::
print
(std::FILE *f, wstring_view format_str, const Args&... args)¶ Prints formatted data to the file f which should be in wide-oriented mode set via
fwide(f, 1)
or_setmode(_fileno(f), _O_U8TEXT)
on Windows.
-
void
fmt::
vprint
(std::FILE *f, wstring_view format_str, wformat_args args)¶
Named arguments¶
- template <typename T>
-
internal::named_arg<T, char>
fmt::
arg
(string_view name, const T &arg)¶ Returns a named argument to be used in a formatting function.
Example:
fmt::print("Elapsed time: {s:.2f} seconds", fmt::arg("s", 1.23));
Argument lists¶
- template <typename Context, typename ... Args>
-
format_arg_store<Context, Args...>
fmt::
make_format_args
(const Args&... args)¶ Constructs an
format_arg_store
object that contains references to arguments and can be implicitly converted toformat_args
.Context
can be omitted in which case it defaults tocontext
.
- template <typename Context, typename ... Args>
-
class
fmt::
format_arg_store
¶ An array of references to arguments. It can be implicitly converted into
basic_format_args
for passing into type-erased formatting functions such asvformat()
.
- template <typename Context>
-
class
fmt::
basic_format_args
¶ Formatting arguments.
Public Functions
- template <typename... Args>
-
basic_format_args
(const format_arg_store<Context, Args...> &store)¶ -
Constructs a
basic_format_args
object fromformat_arg_store
.
-
basic_format_args
(const format_arg *args, size_type count)¶ -
Constructs a
basic_format_args
object from a dynamic set of arguments.
-
format_arg
get
(size_type index) const¶ Returns the argument at specified index.
-
struct
fmt::
format_args
¶ An alias to
basic_format_args<context>
.Inherits from fmt::basic_format_args< format_context >
- template <typename Context>
-
class
fmt::
basic_format_arg
¶
Compatibility¶
- template <typename Char>
-
class
fmt::
basic_string_view
¶ An implementation of
std::basic_string_view
for pre-C++17.It provides a subset of the API.
fmt::basic_string_view
is used for format strings even ifstd::string_view
is available to prevent issues when a library is compiled with a different-std
option than the client code (which is not recommended).Public Functions
-
basic_string_view
(const Char *s, size_t count)¶ Constructs a string reference object from a C string and a size.
-
basic_string_view
(const Char *s)¶ Constructs a string reference object from a C string computing the size with
std::char_traits<Char>::length
.
- template <typename Alloc>
-
basic_string_view
(const std::basic_string<Char, Alloc> &s)¶ Constructs a string reference from a
std::basic_string
object.
-
const Char *
data
() const¶ Returns a pointer to the string data.
-
size_t
size
() const¶ Returns the string size.
-
-
typedef basic_string_view<char>
fmt::
string_view
¶
-
typedef basic_string_view<wchar_t>
fmt::
wstring_view
¶
Format API¶
fmt/format.h
defines the full format API providing compile-time format
string checks, output iterator and user-defined type support.
Compile-time format string checks¶
-
fmt
(s)¶ Constructs a compile-time format string. This macro is disabled by default to prevent potential name collisions. To enable it define
FMT_STRING_ALIAS
to 1 before includingfmt/format.h
.Example:
#define FMT_STRING_ALIAS 1 #include <fmt/format.h> // A compile-time error because 'd' is an invalid specifier for strings. std::string s = format(fmt("{:d}"), "foo");
Formatting user-defined types¶
To make a user-defined type formattable, specialize the formatter<T>
struct
template and implement parse
and format
methods:
#include <fmt/format.h>
struct point { double x, y; };
namespace fmt {
template <>
struct formatter<point> {
template <typename ParseContext>
constexpr auto parse(ParseContext &ctx) { return ctx.begin(); }
template <typename FormatContext>
auto format(const point &p, FormatContext &ctx) {
return format_to(ctx.begin(), "({:.1f}, {:.1f})", p.x, p.y);
}
};
}
Then you can pass objects of type point
to any formatting function:
point p = {1, 2};
std::string s = fmt::format("{}", p);
// s == "(1.0, 2.0)"
In the example above the formatter<point>::parse
function ignores the
contents of the format string referred to by ctx.begin()
so the object will
always be formatted in the same way. See formatter<tm>::parse
in
fmt/time.h
for an advanced example of how to parse the format string and
customize the formatted output.
You can also reuse existing formatters, for example:
enum class color {red, green, blue};
template <>
struct fmt::formatter<color>: formatter<string_view> {
// parse is inherited from formatter<string_view>.
template <typename FormatContext>
auto format(color c, FormatContext &ctx) {
string_view name = "unknown";
switch (c) {
case color::red: name = "red"; break;
case color::green: name = "green"; break;
case color::blue: name = "blue"; break;
}
return formatter<string_view>::format(name, ctx);
}
};
This section shows how to define a custom format function for a user-defined
type. The next section describes how to get fmt
to use a conventional stream
output operator<<
when one is defined for a user-defined type.
Output iterator support¶
- template <typename OutputIt, typename... Args>
-
OutputIt
fmt::
format_to
(OutputIt out, string_view format_str, const Args&... args)¶ -
Formats arguments, writes the result to the output iterator
out
and returns the iterator past the end of the output range.Example:
std::vector<char> out; fmt::format_to(std::back_inserter(out), "{}", 42);
- template <typename OutputIt, typename... Args>
-
format_to_n_result<OutputIt>
fmt::
format_to_n
(OutputIt out, std::size_t n, string_view format_str, const Args&... args)¶ -
Formats arguments, writes up to
n
characters of the result to the output iteratorout
and returns the total output size and the iterator past the end of the output range.
- template <typename OutputIt>
-
struct
fmt::
format_to_n_result
¶
Literal-based API¶
The following user-defined literals are defined in fmt/format.h
.
Warning
doxygenfunction: Cannot find function “operator”“_format” in doxygen xml output for project “format” from directory: /Users/viz/work/fmt/support/build/fmt/doc/doxyxml
Warning
doxygenfunction: Cannot find function “operator”“_a” in doxygen xml output for project “format” from directory: /Users/viz/work/fmt/support/build/fmt/doc/doxyxml
Utilities¶
- template <typename... Args>
-
std::size_t
fmt::
formatted_size
(string_view format_str, const Args&... args)¶ Returns the number of characters in the output of
format(format_str, args...)
.
- template <typename T>
-
std::string
fmt::
to_string
(const T &value)¶ Converts value to
std::string
using the default format for type T. It doesn’t support user-defined types with custom formatters.Example:
#include <fmt/format.h> std::string answer = fmt::to_string(42);
- template <typename T>
-
std::wstring
fmt::
to_wstring
(const T &value)¶ Converts value to
std::wstring
using the default format for type T.
- template <typename T, std::size_t SIZE = inline_buffer_size, typename Allocator = std::allocator<T>>
-
class
fmt::
basic_memory_buffer
¶ A dynamically growing memory buffer for trivially copyable/constructible types with the first
SIZE
elements stored in the object itself.You can use one of the following typedefs for common character types:
Type Definition memory_buffer basic_memory_buffer<char> wmemory_buffer basic_memory_buffer<wchar_t> Example:
fmt::memory_buffer out; format_to(out, "The answer is {}.", 42);
This will write the following output to the
out
object:The answer is 42.
The output can be converted to an
std::string
withto_string(out)
.Inherits from Allocator, fmt::internal::basic_buffer< T >
Public Functions
-
basic_memory_buffer
(basic_memory_buffer &&other)¶ Constructs a
fmt::basic_memory_buffer
object moving the content of the other object to it.
-
basic_memory_buffer &
operator=
(basic_memory_buffer &&other)¶ Moves the content of the other
basic_memory_buffer
object to this one.
-
System errors¶
fmt does not use errno
to communicate errors to the user, but it may call
system functions which set errno
. Users should not make any assumptions about
the value of errno
being preserved by library functions.
-
class
fmt::
system_error
¶ An error returned by an operating system or a language runtime, for example a file opening error.
Inherits from runtime_error
Subclassed by fmt::windows_error
Public Functions
- template <typename... Args>
-
system_error
(int error_code, string_view message, const Args&... args)¶ -
Constructs a
fmt::system_error
object with a description formatted withfmt::format_system_error()
. message and additional arguments passed into the constructor are formatted similarly tofmt::format()
.Example:
// This throws a system_error with the description // cannot open file 'madeup': No such file or directory // or similar (system message may vary). const char *filename = "madeup"; std::FILE *file = std::fopen(filename, "r"); if (!file) throw fmt::system_error(errno, "cannot open file '{}'", filename);
-
void
fmt::
format_system_error
(internal::buffer &out, int error_code, fmt::string_view message)¶ Formats an error returned by an operating system or a language runtime, for example a file opening error, and writes it to out in the following form:
<message>: <system-message>
where <message> is the passed message and <system-message> is the system message corresponding to the error code. error_code is a system error code as given by
errno
. If error_code is not a valid error code such as -1, the system message may look like “Unknown error -1” and is platform-dependent.
-
class
fmt::
windows_error
¶ A Windows error.
Inherits from fmt::system_error
Public Functions
- template <typename... Args>
-
windows_error
(int error_code, string_view message, const Args&... args)¶ -
Constructs a
fmt::windows_error
object with the description of the form<message>: <system-message>
where <message> is the formatted message and <system-message> is the system message corresponding to the error code. error_code is a Windows error code as given by
GetLastError
. If error_code is not a valid error code such as -1, the system message will look like “error -1”.Example:
// This throws a windows_error with the description // cannot open file 'madeup': The system cannot find the file specified. // or similar (system message may vary). const char *filename = "madeup"; LPOFSTRUCT of = LPOFSTRUCT(); HFILE file = OpenFile(filename, &of, OF_READ); if (file == HFILE_ERROR) { throw fmt::windows_error(GetLastError(), "cannot open file '{}'", filename); }
Custom allocators¶
The {fmt} library supports custom dynamic memory allocators.
A custom allocator class can be specified as a template argument to
fmt::basic_memory_buffer
:
using custom_memory_buffer =
fmt::basic_memory_buffer<char, fmt::inline_buffer_size, custom_allocator>;
It is also possible to write a formatting function that uses a custom allocator:
using custom_string =
std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, custom_allocator>;
custom_string vformat(custom_allocator alloc, fmt::string_view format_str,
fmt::format_args args) {
custom_memory_buffer buf(alloc);
fmt::vformat_to(buf, format_str, args);
return custom_string(buf.data(), buf.size(), alloc);
}
template <typename ...Args>
inline custom_string format(custom_allocator alloc,
fmt::string_view format_str,
const Args & ... args) {
return vformat(alloc, format_str, fmt::make_format_args(args...));
}
The allocator will be used for the output container only. If you are using named
arguments, the container that stores pointers to them will be allocated using
the default allocator. Also floating-point formatting falls back on sprintf
which may do allocations.
Custom formatting of built-in types¶
It is possible to change the way arguments are formatted by providing a custom argument formatter class:
using arg_formatter =
fmt::arg_formatter<fmt::back_insert_range<fmt::internal::buffer>>;
// A custom argument formatter that formats negative integers as unsigned
// with the ``x`` format specifier.
class custom_arg_formatter : public arg_formatter {
public:
custom_arg_formatter(fmt::format_context &ctx, fmt::format_specs &spec)
: arg_formatter(ctx, spec) {}
using arg_formatter::operator();
auto operator()(int value) {
if (spec().type() == 'x')
return (*this)(static_cast<unsigned>(value)); // convert to unsigned and format
return arg_formatter::operator()(value);
}
};
std::string custom_vformat(fmt::string_view format_str, fmt::format_args args) {
fmt::memory_buffer buffer;
// Pass custom argument formatter as a template arg to vformat_to.
fmt::vformat_to<custom_arg_formatter>(buffer, format_str, args);
return fmt::to_string(buffer);
}
template <typename ...Args>
inline std::string custom_format(
fmt::string_view format_str, const Args &... args) {
return custom_vformat(format_str, fmt::make_format_args(args...));
}
std::string s = custom_format("{:x}", -42); // s == "ffffffd6"
- template <typename Range>
-
class
fmt::
arg_formatter
¶ The default argument formatter.
Inherits from fmt::internal::function< internal::arg_formatter_base< Range >::iterator >, fmt::internal::arg_formatter_base< Range >
Public Functions
-
arg_formatter
(context_type &ctx, format_specs *spec = {})¶ Constructs an argument formatter object. ctx is a reference to the formatting context, spec contains format specifier information for standard argument types.
-
iterator
operator()
(typename basic_format_arg<context_type>::handle handle)¶ Formats an argument of a user-defined type.
-
Date and time formatting¶
The library supports strftime-like date and time formatting:
#include <fmt/time.h>
std::time_t t = std::time(nullptr);
// Prints "The date is 2016-04-29." (with the current date)
fmt::print("The date is {:%Y-%m-%d}.", *std::localtime(&t));
The format string syntax is described in the documentation of strftime.
std::ostream
support¶
fmt/ostream.h
provides std::ostream
support including formatting of
user-defined types that have overloaded operator<<
:
#include <fmt/ostream.h>
class date {
int year_, month_, day_;
public:
date(int year, int month, int day): year_(year), month_(month), day_(day) {}
friend std::ostream &operator<<(std::ostream &os, const date &d) {
return os << d.year_ << '-' << d.month_ << '-' << d.day_;
}
};
std::string s = fmt::format("The date is {}", date(2012, 12, 9));
// s == "The date is 2012-12-9"
- template <typename... Args>
-
void
fmt::
print
(std::ostream &os, string_view format_str, const Args&... args)¶ Prints formatted data to the stream os.
Example:
fmt::print(cerr, "Don't {}!", "panic");
printf
formatting¶
The header fmt/printf.h
provides printf
-like formatting functionality.
The following functions use printf format string syntax with
the POSIX extension for positional arguments. Unlike their standard
counterparts, the fmt
functions are type-safe and throw an exception if an
argument type doesn’t match its format specification.
- template <typename... Args>
-
int
fmt::
printf
(string_view format_str, const Args&... args)¶ Prints formatted data to
stdout
.Example:
fmt::printf("Elapsed time: %.2f seconds", 1.23);
- template <typename... Args>
-
int
fmt::
fprintf
(std::FILE *f, string_view format_str, const Args&... args)¶ Prints formatted data to the file f.
Example:
fmt::fprintf(stderr, "Don't %s!", "panic");
- template <typename... Args>
-
int
fmt::
fprintf
(std::ostream &os, string_view format_str, const Args&... args)¶ Prints formatted data to the stream os.
Example:
fmt::fprintf(cerr, "Don't %s!", "panic");
- template <typename... Args>
-
std::string
fmt::
sprintf
(string_view format_str, const Args&... args)¶ Formats arguments and returns the result as a string.
Example:
std::string message = fmt::sprintf("The answer is %d", 42);