views:

218

answers:

3

When formatting a string, my string may contain a modulo "%" that I do not wish to have converted. I can escape the string and change each "%" to "%%" as a workaround.

e.g.,
'Day old bread, 50%% sale %s' % 'today!'
output:
'Day old bread, 50% sale today'

But are there any alternatives to escaping? I was hoping that using a dict would make it so Python would ignore any non-keyword conversions.
e.g.,
'Day old bread, 50% sale %(when)s' % {'when': 'today'}
but Python still sees the first modulo % and gives a:
TypeError: not enough arguments for format string

A: 

Not really - escaping your % signs is the price you pay for using string formatting. You could use string concatenation instead: 'Day old bread, 50% sale ' + whichday if that helps...

psmears
For where I need to support Python 2.5 or prior, this is the method I'll use.
Stephen Gornick
A: 

Escaping a '%' as '%%' is not a workaround. If you use String formatting that is the way to represent a '%' sign. If you don't want that, you can always do something like:

print "Day old bread, 50% sale " + "today"

e.g. not using formatting.

Please note that when using string concatenation, be sure that the variable is a string (and not e.g. None) or use str(varName). Otherwise you get something like 'Can't concatenate str and NoneType'.

extraneon
+2  A: 

You could (and should) use the new string .format() method (if you have Python 2.6 or higher) instead:

"Day old bread, 50% sale {0}".format("today")

The manual can be found here.

The docs also say that the old % formatting will eventually be removed from the language, although that will surely take some time. The new formatting methods are way more powerful, so that's a Good Thing.

Tim Pietzcker
Unless you want to print "{{0}} = {0}".format("today"), then you won't like doubling up the curly braces. :^)
Mark Tolonen