Defined in header <format> | ||
|---|---|---|
template< class... Args > std::string format( std::format_string<Args...> fmt, Args&&... args ); | (1) | (since C++20) |
template< class... Args > std::wstring format( std::wformat_string<Args...> fmt, Args&&... args ); | (2) | (since C++20) |
template< class... Args >
std::string format( const std::locale& loc,
std::format_string<Args...> fmt, Args&&... args );
| (3) | (since C++20) |
template< class... Args >
std::wstring format( const std::locale& loc,
std::wformat_string<Args...> fmt, Args&&... args );
| (4) | (since C++20) |
Format args according to the format string fmt, and return the result as a string. If present, loc is used for locale-specific formatting.
return std::vformat(fmt.get(), std::make_format_args(args...));
return std::vformat(fmt.get(), std::make_wformat_args(args...));
return std::vformat(loc, fmt.get(), std::make_format_args(args...));
return std::vformat(loc, fmt.get(), std::make_wformat_args(args...));
The behavior is undefined if std::formatter<Ti, CharT> does not meet the BasicFormatter requirements for any Ti in Args (as required by std::make_format_args and std::make_wformat_args), where CharT is char for overloads (1,3), wchar_t for overloads (2,4).
| fmt | - | an object that represents the format string. The format string consists of
Each replacement field has the following format:
|
||||||||||||
| args... | - | arguments to be formatted | ||||||||||||
| loc | - | std::locale used for locale-specific formatting |
A string object holding the formatted result.
Throws std::bad_alloc on allocation failure. Also propagates exception thrown by any formatter.
It is not an error to provide more arguments than the format string requires:
std::format("{} {}!", "Hello", "world", "something"); // OK, produces "Hello world!"As of P2216R3, it is an error if the format string is not a constant expression. std::vformat can be used in this case.
std::string f(std::string_view runtime_format_string) {
// return std::format(runtime_format_string, "foo", "bar"); // error
return std::vformat(runtime_format_string, std::make_format_args("foo", "bar")); // ok
}#include <format>
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <string_view>
template <typename... Args>
std::string dyna_print(std::string_view rt_fmt_str, Args&&... args) {
return std::vformat(rt_fmt_str, std::make_format_args(args...));
}
int main() {
std::cout << std::format("Hello {}!\n", "world");
std::string fmt;
for (int i{}; i != 3; ++i) {
fmt += "{} "; // constructs the formatting string
std::cout << fmt << " : ";
std::cout << dyna_print(fmt, "alpha", 'Z', 3.14, "unused");
std::cout << '\n';
}
}Output:
Hello world!
{} : alpha
{} {} : alpha Z
{} {} {} : alpha Z 3.14The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
| DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
|---|---|---|---|
| P2216R3 | C++20 | throws std::format_error for invalid format string | invalid format string results in compile-time error |
| P2418R2 | C++20 | objects that are neither const-usable nor copyable (such as generator-like objects) are not formattable | allow formatting these objects |
| P2508R1 | C++20 | there's no user-visible name for this facility | the name basic_format_string is exposed |
|
(C++20) | writes out formatted representation of its arguments through an output iterator (function template) |
|
(C++20) | writes out formatted representation of its arguments through an output iterator, not exceeding specified size (function template) |
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