How do I use Python to easily expand variables to strings?
For python 2 do:
print name,'is a',adjective,noun,'that',verb
For python 3 add parens:
print(name,'is a',adjective,noun,'that',verb)
If you need to save it to a string, you'll have to concatenate with the +
operator and you'll have to insert spaces. print
inserts a space at all the ,
unless there is a trailing comma at the end of the parameters, in which case it forgoes the newline.
To save to string var:
result = name+' is a '+adjective+' '+noun+' that '+verb
Since Python 3.6 you can now use this syntax, called f-strings, which is very similar to your suggestion 9 years ago ð
print(f"{name} is a {adjective} {noun} that {verb}")
f-strings or formatted string literals will use variables from the scope they're used in, or other valid Python expressions.
print(f"1 + 1 = {1 + 1}") # prints "1 + 1 = 2"
- Here's a link to the documentation of Formatted string literals: https://docs.python.org/3/reference/lexical_analysis.html#f-strings
- And here's a link to the PEP that formalizes the feature: https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0498/
"{name} is a {adjective} {noun} that {verb}".format(**locals())
locals()
gives a reference to the current namespace (as a dictionary).**locals()
unpacks that dictionary into keyword arguments (f(**{'a': 0, 'b': 1})
isf(a=0, b=1)
)..format()
is "the new string formatting", which can by the way do a lot more (e.g.{0.name}
for the name attribute of the first positional argument).
Alternatively, string.template
(again, with locals if you want to avoid a redundant {'name': name, ...}
dict literal).
use string.Template
>>> from string import Template
>>> t = Template("$name is a $adjective $noun that $verb")
>>> t.substitute(name="Lionel", adjective="awesome", noun="dude", verb="snores")
'Lionel is a awesome dude that snores'