RaviVarma Thumati’s Blog

December 5, 2008

String Formatting in C#

Filed under: C# — ravivarmathumati @ 3:00 pm
Tags:

I couldn’t find a quick reference to .NET string formatting using the String.Format() function, so I created this one (which has also spawned this String Formatting FAQ and strangely enough, this cartoon.

When I started working with the .NET framework, one thing puzzled me. I couldn’t find sprintf(). sprintf() is the C function that takes an output buffer, a format string, and any number of arguments, and builds a string for you. For example:

char szError[256];
sprintf(szError, “Error %d occurred.n”, nError);

This would write “Error 12 occurred.” into the szError buffer (assuming nError was 12). It’s a basic part of C programming and most C++ programmers still use it though better functionality is available in the STL because sprintf is simple to use and clear. The STL equivalent would be:

str << “Error ” << nError << ” occurred.” << endl;

Or something close to that. It’s type-safe, and more OO than sprintf, but not as easy to read and not as easy to localize.

The .NET framework handles strings very nicely – but it takes some getting used to. The rough equivalent of sprintf in .NET is the static String.Format function, which takes a format string and some arguments, and generates an output string. (This is a nice improvement over sprintf since there’s no chance you’ll overflow the output buffer). For example:

string errorString = String.Format(”Error {0} occurred.”, nError);

Teeming with metadata, the .NET environment doesn’t need the format string to say what type of data you’re formatting, just where you want it. (A common sprintf bug is supplying the wrong data type – there’s no protection from using %s instead of %d and having your program crash when sprintf is called).

The {0} in the string above is replaced with the value of nError, but what if you want to specify the number of digits to use? Or the base (hexadecimal etc)? The framework supports all this, but where it seemed confusing is that it’s not the String.Format function that does the string formatting, but rather the types themselves.

Every object has a method called ToString that returns a string representation of the object. The ToString method can accept a string parameter, which tells the object how to format itself – in the String.Format call, the formatting string is passed after the position, for example, “{0:##}”

The text inside the curly braces is {index[,alignment][:formatString]}. If alignment is positive, the text is right-aligned in a field the given number of spaces; if it’s negative, it’s left-aligned.

Strings

There really isn’t any formatting within a string, beyond it’s alignment. Alignment works for any argument being printed in a String.Format call.

Sample

Generates

String.Format(”->{1,10}<-”, “Hello”);

-> Hello<-

String.Format(”->{1,-10}<-”, “Hello”);

->Hello <-

Numbers

Basic number formatting specifiers:

Specifier

Type

Format

Output (Passed Double 1.42)

Output (Passed Int -12400)

c

Currency

{0:c}

$1.42

-$12,400

d

Decimal (Whole number)

{0:d}

System.FormatException

-12400

e

Scientific

{0:e}

1.420000e+000

-1.240000e+004

f

Fixed point

{0:f}

1.42

-12400.00

g

General

{0:g}

1.42

-12400

n

Number with commas for thousands

{0:n}

1.42

-12,400

r

Round trippable

{0:r}

1.42

System.FormatException

x

Hexadecimal

{0:x4}

System.FormatException

cf90

Custom number formatting:

Specifier

Type

Example

Output (Passed Double 1500.42)

Note

0

Zero placeholder

{0:00.0000}

1500.4200

Pads with zeroes.

#

Digit placeholder

{0:(#).##}

(1500).42

 

.

Decimal point

{0:0.0}

1500.4

 

,

Thousand separator

{0:0,0}

1,500

Must be between two zeroes.

,.

Number scaling

{0:0,.}

2

Comma adjacent to Period scales by 1000.

%

Percent

{0:0%}

150042%

Multiplies by 100, adds % sign.

e

Exponent placeholder

{0:00e+0}

15e+2

Many exponent formats available.

;

Group separator

see below

 

 

The group separator is especially useful for formatting currency values which require that negative values be enclosed in parentheses. This currency formatting example at the bottom of this document makes it obvious:

Dates

Note that date formatting is especially dependant on the system’s regional settings; the example strings here are from my local locale.

Specifier

Type

Example (Passed System.DateTime.Now)

d

Short date

10/12/2002

D

Long date

December 10, 2002

t

Short time

10:11 PM

T

Long time

10:11:29 PM

f

Full date & time

December 10, 2002 10:11 PM

F

Full date & time (long)

December 10, 2002 10:11:29 PM

g

Default date & time

10/12/2002 10:11 PM

G

Default date & time (long)

10/12/2002 10:11:29 PM

M

Month day pattern

December 10

r

RFC1123 date string

Tue, 10 Dec 2002 22:11:29 GMT

s

Sortable date string

2002-12-10T22:11:29

u

Universal sortable, local time

2002-12-10 22:13:50Z

U

Universal sortable, GMT

December 11, 2002 3:13:50 AM

Y

Year month pattern

December, 2002

The ‘U’ specifier seems broken; that string certainly isn’t sortable.

Custom date formatting:

Specifier

Type

Example

Example Output

dd

Day

{0:dd}

10

ddd

Day name

{0:ddd}

Tue

dddd

Full day name

{0:dddd}

Tuesday

f, ff, …

Second fractions

{0:fff}

932

gg, …

Era

{0:gg}

A.D.

hh

2 digit hour

{0:hh}

10

HH

2 digit hour, 24hr format

{0:HH}

22

mm

Minute 00-59

{0:mm}

38

MM

Month 01-12

{0:MM}

12

MMM

Month abbreviation

{0:MMM}

Dec

MMMM

Full month name

{0:MMMM}

December

ss

Seconds 00-59

{0:ss}

46

tt

AM or PM

{0:tt}

PM

yy

Year, 2 digits

{0:yy}

02

yyyy

Year

{0:yyyy}

2002

zz

Timezone offset, 2 digits

{0:zz}

-05

zzz

Full timezone offset

{0:zzz}

-05:00

:

Separator

{0:hh:mm:ss}

10:43:20

/

Separator

{0:dd/MM/yyyy}

10/12/2002

Enumerations

Specifier

Type

g

Default (Flag names if available, otherwise decimal)

f

Flags always

d

Integer always

x

Eight digit hex.

Some Useful Examples

String.Format(”{0:$#,##0.00;($#,##0.00);Zero}”, value);

This will output “$1,240.00″ if passed 1243.50. It will output the same format but in parentheses if the number is negative, and will output the string “Zero” if the number is zero.

String.Format(”{0:(###) ###-####}”, 8005551212);

This will output “(800) 555-1212″.

 

No Comments Yet »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Blog at WordPress.com.