std::range_formatter
Defined in header <format>
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template< class T, class CharT = char > requires std::same_as<std::remove_cvref_t<T>, T> && std::formattable<T, CharT> |
(since C++23) | |
The std::range_formatter
is a helper class template for implementing std::formatter specializations for range types.
Contents |
[edit] Range format specification
The syntax of range-format-spec is:
range-fill-and-align (optional) width (optional) n (optional) range-type (optional) range-underlying-spec (optional)
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The range-fill-and-align is interpreted the same way as a fill-and-align except that the fill in range-fill-and-align is any character other than {
, }
, or :
.
The width is described in standard format width specification.
The n
option causes the range to be formatted without the opening and closing brackets.
assert(std::format("{}", views::iota(1, 5)) == "[1, 2, 3, 4]"); assert(std::format("{:n}", views::iota(1, 5)) == "1, 2, 3, 4");
The format-spec in a range-underlying-spec (its syntax is equivalent to :
format-spec), if any, is interpreted by the range element formatter std::formatter<T, CharT>
.
std::array ints{12, 10, 15, 14}; assert(std::format("{}", ints) == "[12, 10, 15, 14]"); assert(std::format("{::X}", ints) == "[C, A, F, E]"); assert(std::format("{:n:_^4}", ints) == "_12_, _10_, _15_, _14_");
The range-type changes the way a range is formatted, with certain options only valid with certain argument types.
The available range presentation types are:
-
m
: Indicates that the opening bracket should be "{", the closing bracket should be "}", the separator should be ", ", and each range element should be formatted as ifm
were specified for its tuple-type (in tuple-format-spec).
- If
m
is chosen as the range-type, the program is ill-formed unlessT
is either a specialization of:
- std::pair, or
- std::tuple such that std::tuple_size_v<T> == 2 is true.
- If
std::array char_pairs { std::pair{'A', 5}, std::pair{'B', 10}, std::pair{'C', 12} }; assert(std::format("{}", char_pairs) == "[('A', 5), ('B', 10), ('C', 12)]"); assert(std::format("{:m}", char_pairs) == "{'A': 5, 'B': 10, 'C': 12}");
-
s
: Indicates that the range should be formatted as a string. -
?s
: Indicates that the range should be formatted as an escaped string.
- If
s
or?s
is chosen as the range-type, bothn
option and range-underlying-spec should not be included in the format specifier, and - the program is ill-formed unless
T
isCharT
.
- If
std::array star{'S', 'T', 'A', 'R'}; assert(std::format("{}", star) == "['S', 'T', 'A', 'R']"); assert(std::format("{:s}", star) == "STAR"); assert(std::format("{:?s}", star) == "\"STAR\"");
[edit] Member objects
Member name | Definition |
underlying_ (private)
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the underlying formatter of type std::formatter<T, CharT> (exposition-only member object*) |
separator_ (private)
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a string representing the separator of the range formatted result. The default separator is ", ". (exposition-only member object*) |
opening-bracket_ (private)
|
a string representing the opening bracket of the range formatted result. The default opening bracket is "[". (exposition-only member object*) |
closing-bracket_ (private)
|
a string representing the closing bracket of the range formatted result. The default closing bracket is "]". (exposition-only member object*) |
[edit] Member functions
set_separator |
sets a specified separator for the range formatted result (public member function) |
set_brackets |
sets a specified opening and closing brackets for the range formatted result (public member function) |
underlying |
returns the underlying formatter (public member function) |
parse |
parses the format specifier as specified by range-format-spec (public member function) |
format |
writes the range formatted output as specified by range-format-spec (public member function) |
std::range_formatter::set_separator
constexpr void set_separator( std::basic_string_view<CharT> sep ) noexcept; |
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Assigns sep to separator_
.
std::range_formatter::set_brackets
constexpr void set_brackets( std::basic_string_view<CharT> opening, std::basic_string_view<CharT> closing ) noexcept; |
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Assigns opening and closing to opening-bracket_
and closing-bracket_
, respectively.
std::range_formatter::underlying
constexpr std::formatter<T, CharT>& underlying(); |
(1) | |
constexpr const std::formatter<T, CharT>& underlying() const; |
(2) | |
Returns underlying_
(the underlying formatter).
std::range_formatter::parse
template< class ParseContext > constexpr auto parse( ParseContext& ctx ) -> ParseContext::iterator; |
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Parses the format specifiers as a range-format-spec and stores the parsed specifiers in the current object.
Calls underlying_
.parse(ctx) to parse format-spec in range-format-spec or, if the latter is not present, an empty format-spec.
If range-type or the n
option is present, the values of opening-bracket_
, closing-bracket_
, and separator_
are modified as required.
It calls underlying_
.set_debug_format() if:
- the range-type is neither
s
nor?s
, -
underlying_
.set_debug_format() is a valid expression, and - there is no range-underlying-spec.
Returns an iterator past the end of the range-format-spec.
std::range_formatter::format
template< ranges::input_range R, class FormatContext > requires std::formattable<ranges::range_reference_t<R>, CharT> && |
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If the range-type was either s
or ?s
, it writes the formatted std::basic_string<CharT>(std::from_range, r) as a string or an escaped string, respectively, into ctx.out().
Otherwise, it writes the following into ctx.out() as specified by range-format-spec, in order:
-
opening-bracket_
, - for each formattable element e of the range r:
- the result of writing e via
underlying_
, and -
separator_
, unless e is the last element of r, and
- the result of writing e via
-
closing-bracket_
.
Returns an iterator past the end of the output range.
[edit] Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior |
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LWG 3892 | C++23 | the formatting of nested ranges was incorrect | corrected |
[edit] See also
(C++20) |
defines formatting rules for a given type (class template) |