I want to fill out a string with spaces. I know that the following works for zero’s:
>>> print "'%06d'"%4 '000004'
But what should I do when I want this?:
'hi '
of course I can measure string length and do str+" "*leftover, but I’d like the shortest way.
Answers:
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Method 1
You can do this with str.ljust(width[, fillchar]):
Return the string left justified in a string of length width. Padding is done using the specified fillchar (default is a space). The original string is returned if width is less than
len(s).
>>> 'hi'.ljust(10) 'hi '
Method 2
For a flexible method that works even when formatting complicated string, you probably should use the string-formatting mini-language,
using either f-strings
>>> f'{"Hi": <16} StackOverflow!' # Python >= 3.6
'Hi StackOverflow!'
or the str.format() method
>>> '{0: <16} StackOverflow!'.format('Hi') # Python >=2.6
'Hi StackOverflow!'
Method 3
The new(ish) string format method lets you do some fun stuff with nested keyword arguments. The simplest case:
>>> '{message: <16}'.format(message='Hi')
'Hi '
If you want to pass in 16 as a variable:
>>> '{message: <{width}}'.format(message='Hi', width=16)
'Hi '
If you want to pass in variables for the whole kit and kaboodle:
'{message:{fill}{align}{width}}'.format(
message='Hi',
fill=' ',
align='<',
width=16,
)
Which results in (you guessed it):
'Hi '
And for all these, you can use python 3.6+ f-strings:
message = 'Hi'
fill = ' '
align = '<'
width = 16
f'{message:{fill}{align}{width}}'
And of course the result:
'Hi '
Method 4
You can try this:
print "'%-100s'" % 'hi'
Method 5
Correct way of doing this would be to use Python’s format syntax as described in the official documentation
For this case it would simply be:
'{:10}'.format('hi')
which outputs:
'hi '
Explanation:
format_spec ::= [[fill]align][sign][#][0][width][,][.precision][type] fill ::= <any character> align ::= "<" | ">" | "=" | "^" sign ::= "+" | "-" | " " width ::= integer precision ::= integer type ::= "b" | "c" | "d" | "e" | "E" | "f" | "F" | "g" | "G" | "n" | "o" | "s" | "x" | "X" | "%"
Pretty much all you need to know is there ^.
Update:
as of python 3.6 it’s even more convenient with literal string interpolation!
foo = 'foobar'
print(f'{foo:10} is great!')
# foobar is great!
Method 6
Use str.ljust():
>>> 'Hi'.ljust(6) 'Hi '
You should also consider string.zfill(), str.ljust() and str.center() for string formatting. These can be chained and have the ‘fill‘ character specified, thus:
>>> ('3'.zfill(8) + 'blind'.rjust(8) + 'mice'.ljust(8, '.')).center(40)
' 00000003 blindmice.... '
These string formatting operations have the advantage of working in Python v2 and v3.
Take a look at pydoc str sometime: there’s a wealth of good stuff in there.
Method 7
As of Python 3.6 you can just do
>>> strng = 'hi'
>>> f'{strng: <10}'
with literal string interpolation.
Or, if your padding size is in a variable, like this (thanks @Matt M.!):
>>> to_pad = 10
>>> f'{strng: <{to_pad}}'
Method 8
you can also center your string:
'{0: ^20}'.format('nice')
Method 9
TL;DR
text = 'hi'
print(f'{text:10}') # 'hi '
Longer explanation
Since Python3.6 you can use f-strings literal interpolation.
Variable space:
value = 4
space = 10
# move value to left
print(f'foo {value:<{space}} bar') # foo 4 bar
# move value to right
print(f'foo {value:>{space}} bar') # foo 4 bar
# center value
print(f'foo {value:^{space}} bar') # foo 4 bar
Constant space:
value = 4
# move value to left
print(f'foo {value:<10} bar') # foo 4 bar
# move value to right
print(f'foo {value:>10} bar') # foo 4 bar
# center value
print(f'foo {value:^10} bar') # foo 4 bar
If you want to padd with some other char then space, specify it at the beginning:
value = 4
space = 10
padd = '_'
print(f'foo {value:{padd}^{space}} bar') # foo ____4_____ bar
print(f'foo {value:_^10} bar') # foo ____4_____ bar
Method 10
Use Python 2.7’s mini formatting for strings:
'{0: <8}'.format('123')
This left aligns, and pads to 8 characters with the ‘ ‘ character.
Method 11
Just remove the 0 and it will add space instead:
>>> print "'%6d'"%4
Method 12
Wouldn’t it be more pythonic to use slicing?
For example, to pad a string with spaces on the right until it’s 10 characters long:
>>> x = "string" >>> (x + " " * 10)[:10] 'string '
To pad it with spaces on the left until it’s 15 characters long:
>>> (" " * 15 + x)[-15:]
' string'
It requires knowing how long you want to pad to, of course, but it doesn’t require measuring the length of the string you’re starting with.
Method 13
A nice trick to use in place of the various print formats:
(1) Pad with spaces to the right:
('hi' + ' ')[:8]
(2) Pad with leading zeros on the left:
('0000' + str(2))[-4:]
Method 14
You could do it using list comprehension, this’d give you an idea about the number of spaces too and would be a one liner.
"hello" + " ".join([" " for x in range(1,10)]) output --> 'hello '
All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0