I'm just trying to convert some C code over to Java and I'm having a little trouble with String.printf
.
In C, to get a specific width based on a variable, I can use:
printf("Current index = %*d\n", sz, index);
and i开发者_Go百科t will format the integer to be a specific size based on sz
.
Trying:
System.out.println(String.format("Current index = %*d\n", sz, index));
results in an error since it doesn't like the *
.
I currently have the following kludge:
System.out.println(String.format("Current index = %" + sz + "d\n", index));
but I'm hoping there's a slightly better way, yes?
Declare an extra variable before using printf
:
String format = "%" + fieldSize + "d";
System.out.printf(format, yourVariables);
(this is the first solution I found from a web search)
This is arguably no better than your "kludge", but here's a method you can embed into the call to printf
that will substitute widths for the asterisks that you pass to it. Its result is used as the real format.
For example, consider this call:
System.out.printf("%04d %2s %-7d;%n", 65, "a", 6);
I will replace the first and third widths via an embedded function:
System.out.printf( wf("%0*d %2s %-*d;%n", 4, 7), 65, "a", 6);
And here's the code:
public static String wf(String fmt, int... widths) {
return metaWidthFormat('*', fmt, widths);
}
public static String metaWidthFormat(char wmeta, String fmt, int ... widths) {
if (fmt == null) return null;
int wix = 0;
boolean outside = true;
// initial capacity is sufficient for each substituted width to be 2 digs
StringBuilder result = new StringBuilder(fmt.length() + widths.length);
for (char ch : fmt.toCharArray()) {
if (outside) {
result.append(ch);
outside = (ch != '%');
} else {
if (ch == wmeta) {
result.append(widths[wix++]);
} else {
result.append(ch);
}
outside = (ch == wmeta) || (ch == '%') || Character.isAlphabetic(ch);
}
}
return result.toString();
}
Presuming that index fits inside sz you can do something like:
char[] temp = new char[sz];
Arrays.fill(temp, '0');
DecimalFormat df = new DecimalFormat(new String(temp));
System.out.println(String.format("Current index = %s\n", df.format(index)));
Note, by not using Format
or any of its subclasses, there is no Locale
dependent characters like ' ', '.' or ',' added to the output.
maybe it's too late but putting it here for others
int width = 5;
int precision = 2;
float f = 12.34567f;
System.out.printf("%"+width+"."+precision+"f%n",f);
tested in java 1.8
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