Named string formatting in C#
There is no built-in method for handling this.
Here's one method
string myString = "{foo} is {bar} and {yadi} is {yada}".Inject(o);
Here's another
Status.Text = "{UserName} last logged in at {LastLoginDate}".FormatWith(user);
A third improved method partially based on the two above, from Phil Haack
I have an implementation I just posted to my blog here: http://haacked.com/archive/2009/01/04/fun-with-named-formats-string-parsing-and-edge-cases.aspx
It addresses some issues that these other implementations have with brace escaping. The post has details. It does the DataBinder.Eval thing too, but is still very fast.
Interpolated strings were added into C# 6.0 and Visual Basic 14
Both were introduced through new Roslyn compiler in Visual Studio 2015.
C# 6.0:
return "\{someVariable} and also \{someOtherVariable}"
OR
return $"{someVariable} and also {someOtherVariable}"
source: what's new in C#6.0
VB 14:
return $"{someVariable} and also {someOtherVariable}"
- source: what's new in VB 14
Noteworthy features (in Visual Studio 2015 IDE):
- syntax coloring is supported - variables contained in strings are highlighted
- refactoring is supported - when renaming, variables contained in strings get renamed, too
- actually not only variable names, but expressions are supported - e.g. not only
{index}
works, but also{(index + 1).ToString().Trim()}
Enjoy! (& click "Send a Smile" in the VS)