5. 10. Format |
| 5. 10. 1. | String formatting is done with the string formatting operator, the percent (%) sign. | | |
| 5. 10. 2. | Formatted String | | |
| 5. 10. 3. | String format | | |
| 5. 10. 4. | A basic conversion specifier | | |
| 5. 10. 5. | use the string format operator ( % ), or put all of the substrings in a list, and using one join() call to put them all together | | |
| 5. 10. 6. | The syntax for using the format operator is as follows: format_string % (arguments_to_convert) | | |
| 5. 10. 7. | Format Operator Auxiliary Directives | | |
| 5. 10. 8. | String Formatting Conversion Types | | |
| 5. 10. 9. | print paired with the string format operator ( % ) | | |
| 5. 10. 10. | Width and Precision | | |
| 5. 10. 11. | Signs, Alignment, and Zero-Padding | | |
| 5. 10. 12. | A minus sign (-) left-aligns the value: | | |
| 5. 10. 13. | A blank (" ") means that a blank should be put in front of positive numbers | | |
| 5. 10. 14. | a plus (+) means that a sign should precede both positive and negative numbers | | |
| 5. 10. 15. | String formatting. | | |
| 5. 10. 16. | String-formatting codes | | |
| 5. 10. 17. | %[(name)][flags][width][.precision]code | | |
| 5. 10. 18. | The %e, %f, and %g formats display floating-point numbers in different ways, as the following interaction demonstrates: | | |
| 5. 10. 19. | Dictionary-Based String Formatting | | |