41
votes

I am reading through a python script that takes an input of XML files and outputs an XML file. However, I do not understand the printing syntax. Can someone please explain what f in print(f"...") does?

args = parser.parser_args()

print(f"Input directory: {args.input_directory}")
print(f"Output directory: {args.output_directory}")
4
f-strings.This syntax is available only from python 3.6 onwards - Abdul Niyas P M
They are f-string. It's a newly introduced concept from Python 3.6 realpython.com/python-f-strings - ranka47

4 Answers

41
votes

The f means Formatted string literals and it's new in Python 3.6.


A formatted string literal or f-string is a string literal that is prefixed with 'f' or 'F'. These strings may contain replacement fields, which are expressions delimited by curly braces {}. While other string literals always have a constant value, formatted strings are really expressions evaluated at run time.


Some examples of formatted string literals:

>>> name = "Fred"
>>> f"He said his name is {name}."
"He said his name is Fred."

>>> name = "Fred"
>>> f"He said his name is {name!r}."
"He said his name is Fred."

>>> f"He said his name is {repr(name)}." # repr() is equivalent to !r
"He said his name is Fred."

>>> width = 10
>>> precision = 4
>>> value = decimal.Decimal("12.34567")
>>> f"result: {value:{width}.{precision}}" # nested fields
result: 12.35

>>> today = datetime(year=2017, month=1, day=27)
>>> f"{today:%B %d, %Y}" # using date format specifier
January 27, 2017

>>> number = 1024
>>> f"{number:#0x}" # using integer format specifier
0x400
6
votes

the f string is also known as the literal string to insert a variable into the string and make it part so instead of doing

x = 12
y = 10

word_string = x + ' plus ' + y + 'equals: ' + (x+y)

instead, you can do

x = 12
y = 10

word_string = f'{x} plus {y} equals: {x+y}'
output: 12 plus 10 equals: 22

this will also help with spacing due to it will do exactly as the string is written

4
votes

In Python 3.6, the f-string was introduced(PEP 498). In short, it is a way to format your string that is more readable and fast.

Example:

agent_name = 'James Bond'
kill_count = 9

# old ways
print('{0} has killed {1} enemies '.format(agent_name,kill_count))

# f-strings way
print(f'{agent_name} has killed {kill_count} enemies')

The f or F in front of strings tell Python to look at the values inside {} and substitute them with the variables values if exists. The best thing about the is that you can do cool stuff in {}, e.g. {kill_count * 100}.

Readings:

1
votes
args = parser.parser_args()

print(f"Input directory: {args.input_directory}")
print(f"Output directory: {args.output_directory}")

is the same as

print("Input directory: {}".format(args.input_directory))
print("Output directory: {}".format(args.output_directory))

it is also the same as

print("Input directory: "+args.input_directory)
print("Output directory: "+args.output_directory)