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util-format-x

v3.1.2

Published

An implementation of node's util.format and util.formatWithOptions

Downloads

611

Readme

util-format-x

An implementation of node's util.format and util.formatWithOptions

util-format-x.formatstring

See: https://nodejs.org/api/assert.html

The format() method returns a formatted string using the first argument as a printf-like format.

The first argument is a string containing zero or more placeholder tokens. Each placeholder token is replaced with the converted value from the corresponding argument. Supported placeholders are:

%s - String.

%d - Number (integer or floating point value) or BigInt.

%i - Integer or BigInt.

%f - Floating point value.

%j - JSON. Replaced with the string '[Circular]' if the argument contains circular references.

%o - Object. A string representation of an object with generic JavaScript object formatting. Similar to inspect() with options { showHidden: true, showProxy: true }. This will show the full object including non-enumerable properties and proxies.

%O - Object. A string representation of an object with generic JavaScript object formatting. Similar to inspect() without options. This will show the full object not including non-enumerable properties and proxies.

%% - single percent sign ('%'). This does not consume an argument.

Kind: Exported member
Returns: * - The target.

| Param | Type | Description | | --------- | ------------------- | ----------- | | f | string | Template. | | [...args] | * | Values. |

Example

import {format} from 'util-format-x';

// If the placeholder does not have a corresponding argument,
// the placeholder is not replaced.
format('%s:%s', 'foo'); // Returns: 'foo:%s'

// If there are more arguments passed to the format() method than the number
// of placeholders, the extra arguments are coerced into strings (for objects
// and symbols, inspect() is used) then concatenated to the returned
// string, each delimited by a space.
format('%s:%s', 'foo', 'bar', 'baz'); // 'foo:bar baz'

// If the first argument is not a format string then format() returns a
// string that is the concatenation of all arguments separated by spaces.
// Each argument is converted to a string using inspect().
format(1, 2, 3); // '1 2 3'

// If only one argument is passed to format(), it is returned as it is
//without any formatting.
format('%% %s'); // '%% %s'

util-format-x.formatWithOptionsstring

See: https://nodejs.org/api/assert.html

This function is identical to format(), except in that it takes an inspectOptions argument which specifies options that are passed along to inspect().

import {formatWithOptions} from 'util-format-x';

formatWithOptions({colors: true}, 'See object %O', {foo: 42});
// Returns 'See object { foo: 42 }', where `42` is colored as a number
// when printed to a terminal.