4.8 Custom Format Strings
Sometimes it is useful to allow users and Lisp programs alike to control how certain text is generated via custom format control strings. For example, a format string could control how to display someone’s forename, surname, and email address. Using the function format
described in the previous section, the format string could be something like "%s %s <%s>"
. This approach quickly becomes impractical, however, as it can be unclear which specification character corresponds to which piece of information.
A more convenient format string for such cases would be something like "%f %l <%e>"
, where each specification character carries more semantic information and can easily be rearranged relative to other specification characters, making such format strings more easily customizable by the user.
The function format-spec
described in this section performs a similar function to format
, except it operates on format control strings that use arbitrary specification characters.
function
format-spec template spec-alist \&optional only-present
This function returns a string produced from the format string template
according to conversions specified in spec-alist
, which is an alist (see Association Lists) of the form (letter . replacement)
. Each specification %letter
in template
will be replaced by replacement
when formatting the resulting string.
The characters in template
, other than the format specifications, are copied directly into the output, including their text properties, if any. Any text properties of the format specifications are copied to their replacements.
Using an alist to specify conversions gives rise to some useful properties:
- If
spec-alist
contains more uniqueletter
keys than there are unique specification characters intemplate
, the unused keys are simply ignored. - If
spec-alist
contains more than one association with the sameletter
, the closest one to the start of the list is used. - If
template
contains the same specification character more than once, then the samereplacement
found inspec-alist
is used as a basis for all of that character’s substitutions. - The order of specifications in
template
need not correspond to the order of associations inspec-alist
.
The optional argument only-present
indicates how to handle specification characters in template
that are not found in spec-alist
. If it is nil
or omitted, the function signals an error. Otherwise, those format specifications and any occurrences of ‘%%
’ in template
are left verbatim in the output, including their text properties, if any.
The syntax of format specifications accepted by format-spec
is similar, but not identical, to that accepted by format
. In both cases, a format specification is a sequence of characters beginning with ‘%
’ and ending with an alphabetic letter such as ‘s
’.
Unlike format
, which assigns specific meanings to a fixed set of specification characters, format-spec
accepts arbitrary specification characters and treats them all equally. For example:
(setq my-site-info
(list (cons ?s system-name)
(cons ?t (symbol-name system-type))
(cons ?c system-configuration)
(cons ?v emacs-version)
(cons ?e invocation-name)
(cons ?p (number-to-string (emacs-pid)))
(cons ?a user-mail-address)
(cons ?n user-full-name)))
(format-spec "%e %v (%c)" my-site-info)
⇒ "emacs 27.1 (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu)"
(format-spec "%n <%a>" my-site-info)
⇒ "Emacs Developers <emacs-devel@gnu.org>"
A format specification can include any number of the following flag characters immediately after the ‘%
’ to modify aspects of the substitution.
‘0
’
This flag causes any padding specified by the width to consist of ‘0
’ characters instead of spaces.
‘-
’
This flag causes any padding specified by the width to be inserted on the right rather than the left.
‘<
’
This flag causes the substitution to be truncated on the left to the given width, if specified.
‘>
’
This flag causes the substitution to be truncated on the right to the given width, if specified.
‘^
’
This flag converts the substituted text to upper case (see Case Conversion).
‘_
’
This flag converts the substituted text to lower case (see Case Conversion).
The result of using contradictory flags (for instance, both upper and lower case) is undefined.
As is the case with format
, a format specification can include a width, which is a decimal number that appears after any flags. If a substitution contains fewer characters than its specified width, it is padded on the left:
(format-spec "%8a is padded on the left with spaces"
'((?a . "alpha")))
⇒ " alpha is padded on the left with spaces"
Here is a more complicated example that combines several aforementioned features:
(setq my-battery-info
(list (cons ?p "73") ; Percentage
(cons ?L "Battery") ; Status
(cons ?t "2:23") ; Remaining time
(cons ?c "24330") ; Capacity
(cons ?r "10.6"))) ; Rate of discharge
(format-spec "%>^-3L : %3p%% (%05t left)" my-battery-info)
⇒ "BAT : 73% (02:23 left)"
(format-spec "%>^-3L : %3p%% (%05t left)"
(cons (cons ?L "AC")
my-battery-info))
⇒ "AC : 73% (02:23 left)"
As the examples in this section illustrate, format-spec
is often used for selectively formatting an assortment of different pieces of information. This is useful in programs that provide user-customizable format strings, as the user can choose to format with a regular syntax and in any desired order only a subset of the information that the program makes available.