From eb5b84214546fd2e2280543529ba94af7e9b7a55 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Steve Klabnik Date: Tue, 21 Apr 2015 11:10:56 -0400 Subject: [PATCH] Add examples by @pnkfelix to fmt precision Fixes #24656 --- src/libcollections/fmt.rs | 67 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- 1 file changed, 62 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/src/libcollections/fmt.rs b/src/libcollections/fmt.rs index 2b502b2227ef3..ed4dbf97f413f 100644 --- a/src/libcollections/fmt.rs +++ b/src/libcollections/fmt.rs @@ -394,14 +394,71 @@ //! //! ## Precision //! -//! For non-numeric types, this can be considered a "maximum width". If the -//! resulting string is longer than this width, then it is truncated down to -//! this many characters and only those are emitted. +//! For non-numeric types, this can be considered a "maximum width". If the resulting string is +//! longer than this width, then it is truncated down to this many characters and only those are +//! emitted. //! //! For integral types, this has no meaning currently. //! -//! For floating-point types, this indicates how many digits after the decimal -//! point should be printed. +//! For floating-point types, this indicates how many digits after the decimal point should be +//! printed. +//! +//! There are three possible ways to specify the desired `precision`: +//! +//! There are three possible ways to specify the desired `precision`: +//! 1. An integer `.N`, +//! 2. an integer followed by dollar sign `.N$`, or +//! 3. an asterisk `.*`. +//! +//! The first specification, `.N`, means the integer `N` itself is the precision. +//! +//! The second, `.N$`, means use format *argument* `N` (which must be a `usize`) as the precision. +//! +//! Finally, `.*` means that this `{...}` is associated with *two* format inputs rather than one: +//! the first input holds the `usize` precision, and the second holds the value to print. Note +//! that in this case, if one uses the format string `{:.*}`, then the `` part +//! refers to the *value* to print, and the `precision` must come in the input preceding ``. +//! +//! For example, these: +//! +//! ``` +//! // Hello {arg 0 (x)} is {arg 1 (0.01} with precision specified inline (5)} +//! println!("Hello {0} is {1:.5}", "x", 0.01); +//! +//! // Hello {arg 1 (x)} is {arg 2 (0.01} with precision specified in arg 0 (5)} +//! println!("Hello {1} is {2:.0$}", 5, "x", 0.01); +//! +//! // Hello {arg 0 (x)} is {arg 2 (0.01} with precision specified in arg 1 (5)} +//! println!("Hello {0} is {2:.1$}", "x", 5, 0.01); +//! +//! // Hello {next arg (x)} is {second of next two args (0.01} with precision +//! // specified in first of next two args (5)} +//! println!("Hello {} is {:.*}", "x", 5, 0.01); +//! +//! // Hello {next arg (x)} is {arg 2 (0.01} with precision +//! // specified in its predecessor (5)} +//! println!("Hello {} is {2:.*}", "x", 5, 0.01); +//! ``` +//! +//! All print the same thing: +//! +//! ```text +//! Hello x is 0.01000 +//! ``` +//! +//! While these: +//! +//! ``` +//! println!("{}, `{name:.*}` has 3 fractional digits", "Hello", 3, name=1234.56); +//! println!("{}, `{name:.*}` has 3 characters", "Hello", 3, name="1234.56"); +//! ``` +//! +//! print two significantly different things: +//! +//! ```text +//! Hello, `1234.560` has 3 fractional digits +//! Hello, `123` has 3 characters +//! ``` //! //! # Escaping //!