Using Python String Formatting with Lists

可紊 提交于 2019-11-28 03:52:48
print s % tuple(x)

instead of

print s % (x)

You should take a look to the format method of python. You could then define your formatting string like this :

>>> s = '{0} BLAH {1} BLAH BLAH {2} BLAH BLAH BLAH'
>>> x = ['1', '2', '3']
>>> print s.format(*x)
'1 BLAH 2 BLAH BLAH 3 BLAH BLAH BLAH'

Following this resource page, if the length of x is varying, we can use:

', '.join(['%.2f']*len(x))

to create a place holder for each element from the list x. Here is the example:

x = [1/3.0, 1/6.0, 0.678]
s = ("elements in the list are ["+', '.join(['%.2f']*len(x))+"]") % tuple(x)
print s
>>> elements in the list are [0.33, 0.17, 0.68]

Since I just learned about this cool thing(indexing into lists from within a format string) I'm adding to this old question.

s = '{x[0]} BLAH {x[1]} FOO {x[2]} BAR'
x = ['1', '2', '3']
print s.format (x=x)

However, I still haven't figured out how to do slicing(inside of the format string '"{x[2:4]}".format...,) and would love to figure it out if anyone has an idea, however I suspect that you simply cannot do that.

Here is a one line. A little improvised answer to using format with print() on a list.

How about this: (python 3.x)

sample_list = ['cat', 'dog', 'bunny', 'pig']
print("Your list of animals are: {}, {}, {} and {}".format(*sample_list))

Read the docs here on using format().

This was a fun question! Another way to handle this for variable length lists is to build a function that takes full advantage of the .format method and list unpacking. In the following example I don't use any fancy formatting, but that can easily be changed to suit your needs.

list_1 = [1,2,3,4,5,6]
list_2 = [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]

# Create a function that can apply formatting to lists of any length:
def ListToFormattedString(alist):
    # Create a format spec for each item in the input `alist`.
    # E.g., each item will be right-adjusted, field width=3.
    format_list = ['{:>3}' for item in alist] 

    # Now join the format specs into a single string:
    # E.g., '{:>3}, {:>3}, {:>3}' if the input list has 3 items.
    s = ','.join(format_list)

    # Now unpack the input list `alist` into the format string. Done!
    return s.format(*alist)

# Example output:
>>>ListToFormattedString(list_1)
'  1,  2,  3,  4,  5,  6'
>>>ListToFormattedString(list_2)
'  1,  2,  3,  4,  5,  6,  7,  8'
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