string.templatelib
— Support for template string literals¶
Source code: Lib/string/templatelib.py
Template strings¶
Added in version 3.14.
Template strings are a mechanism for custom string processing.
They have the full flexibility of Python’s f-strings,
but return a Template
instance that gives access
to the static and interpolated (in curly braces) parts of a string
before they are combined.
To write a t-string, use a 't'
prefix instead of an 'f'
, like so:
>>> pi = 3.14
>>> t't-strings are new in Python {pi!s}!'
Template(
strings=('t-strings are new in Python ', '.'),
interpolations=(Interpolation(3.14, 'pi', 's', ''),)
)
Types¶
- class string.templatelib.Template¶
The
Template
class describes the contents of a template string. It is immutable, meaning that attributes of a template cannot be reassigned.The most common way to create a
Template
instance is to use the template string literal syntax. This syntax is identical to that of f-strings, except that it uses at
prefix in place of anf
:>>> cheese = 'Red Leicester' >>> template = t"We're fresh out of {cheese}, sir." >>> type(template) <class 'string.templatelib.Template'>
Templates are stored as sequences of literal
strings
and dynamicinterpolations
. Avalues
attribute holds the values of the interpolations:>>> cheese = 'Camembert' >>> template = t'Ah! We do have {cheese}.' >>> template.strings ('Ah! We do have ', '.') >>> template.interpolations (Interpolation('Camembert', ...),) >>> template.values ('Camembert',)
The
strings
tuple has one more element thaninterpolations
andvalues
; the interpolations “belong” between the strings. This may be easier to understand when tuples are alignedtemplate.strings: ('Ah! We do have ', '.') template.values: ( 'Camembert', )
Attributes
- strings: tuple[str, ...]¶
A
tuple
of the static strings in the template.>>> cheese = 'Camembert' >>> template = t'Ah! We do have {cheese}.' >>> template.strings ('Ah! We do have ', '.')
Empty strings are included in the tuple:
>>> response = 'We do have ' >>> cheese = 'Camembert' >>> template = t'Ah! {response}{cheese}.' >>> template.strings ('Ah! ', '', '.')
The
strings
tuple is never empty, and always contains one more string than theinterpolations
andvalues
tuples:>>> t''.strings ('',) >>> t''.values () >>> t'{'cheese'}'.strings ('', '') >>> t'{'cheese'}'.values ('cheese',)
- interpolations: tuple[Interpolation, ...]¶
A
tuple
of the interpolations in the template.>>> cheese = 'Camembert' >>> template = t'Ah! We do have {cheese}.' >>> template.interpolations (Interpolation('Camembert', 'cheese', None, ''),)
The
interpolations
tuple may be empty and always contains one fewer values than thestrings
tuple:>>> t'Red Leicester'.interpolations ()
- values: tuple[object, ...]¶
A tuple of all interpolated values in the template.
>>> cheese = 'Camembert' >>> template = t'Ah! We do have {cheese}.' >>> template.values ('Camembert',)
The
values
tuple always has the same length as theinterpolations
tuple. It is always equivalent totuple(i.value for i in template.interpolations)
.
Methods
- __new__(*args: str | Interpolation)¶
While literal syntax is the most common way to create a
Template
, it is also possible to create them directly using the constructor:>>> from string.templatelib import Interpolation, Template >>> cheese = 'Camembert' >>> template = Template( ... 'Ah! We do have ', Interpolation(cheese, 'cheese'), '.' ... ) >>> list(template) ['Ah! We do have ', Interpolation('Camembert', 'cheese', None, ''), '.']
If multiple strings are passed consecutively, they will be concatenated into a single value in the
strings
attribute. For example, the following code creates aTemplate
with a single final string:>>> from string.templatelib import Template >>> template = Template('Ah! We do have ', 'Camembert', '.') >>> template.strings ('Ah! We do have Camembert.',)
If multiple interpolations are passed consecutively, they will be treated as separate interpolations and an empty string will be inserted between them. For example, the following code creates a template with empty placeholders in the
strings
attribute:>>> from string.templatelib import Interpolation, Template >>> template = Template( ... Interpolation('Camembert', 'cheese'), ... Interpolation('.', 'punctuation'), ... ) >>> template.strings ('', '', '')
- iter(template)
Iterate over the template, yielding each non-empty string and
Interpolation
in the correct order:>>> cheese = 'Camembert' >>> list(t'Ah! We do have {cheese}.') ['Ah! We do have ', Interpolation('Camembert', 'cheese', None, ''), '.']
Caution
Empty strings are not included in the iteration:
>>> response = 'We do have ' >>> cheese = 'Camembert' >>> list(t'Ah! {response}{cheese}.') ['Ah! ', Interpolation('We do have ', 'response', None, ''), Interpolation('Camembert', 'cheese', None, ''), '.']
- template + other
- template += other
Concatenate this template with another, returning a new
Template
instance:>>> cheese = 'Camembert' >>> list(t'Ah! ' + t'We do have {cheese}.') ['Ah! We do have ', Interpolation('Camembert', 'cheese', None, ''), '.']
Concatenating a
Template
and astr
is not supported. This is because it is unclear whether the string should be treated as a static string or an interpolation. If you want to concatenate aTemplate
with a string, you should either wrap the string directly in aTemplate
(to treat it as a static string) or use anInterpolation
(to treat it as dynamic):>>> from string.templatelib import Interpolation, Template >>> template = t'Ah! ' >>> # Treat 'We do have ' as a static string >>> template += Template('We do have ') >>> # Treat cheese as an interpolation >>> cheese = 'Camembert' >>> template += Template(Interpolation(cheese, 'cheese')) >>> list(template) ['Ah! We do have ', Interpolation('Camembert', 'cheese', None, '')]
- class string.templatelib.Interpolation¶
The
Interpolation
type represents an expression inside a template string. It is immutable, meaning that attributes of an interpolation cannot be reassigned.Interpolations support pattern matching, allowing you to match against their attributes with the match statement:
>>> from string.templatelib import Interpolation >>> interpolation = t'{1. + 2.:.2f}'.interpolations[0] >>> interpolation Interpolation(3.0, '1. + 2.', None, '.2f') >>> match interpolation: ... case Interpolation(value, expression, conversion, format_spec): ... print(value, expression, conversion, format_spec, sep=' | ') ... 3.0 | 1. + 2. | None | .2f
Attributes
- expression: str¶
The text of a valid Python expression, or an empty string.
The
expression
is the original text of the interpolation’s Python expression, if the interpolation was created from a t-string literal. Developers creating interpolations manually should either set this to an empty string or choose a suitable valid Python expression.>>> t'{1 + 2}'.interpolations[0].expression '1 + 2'
- conversion: Literal['a', 'r', 's'] | None¶
The conversion to apply to the value, or
None
.The
conversion
is the optional conversion to apply to the value:>>> t'{1 + 2!a}'.interpolations[0].conversion 'a'
Note
Unlike f-strings, where conversions are applied automatically, the expected behavior with t-strings is that code that processes the
Template
will decide how to interpret and whether to apply theconversion
. For convenience, theconvert()
function can be used to mimic f-string conversion semantics.
- format_spec: str¶
The format specification to apply to the value.
The
format_spec
is an optional, arbitrary string used as the format specification to present the value:>>> t'{1 + 2:.2f}'.interpolations[0].format_spec '.2f'
Note
Unlike f-strings, where format specifications are applied automatically via the
format()
protocol, the expected behavior with t-strings is that code that processes the interpolation will decide how to interpret and whether to apply the format specification. As a result,format_spec
values in interpolations can be arbitrary strings, including those that do not conform to theformat()
protocol.
Methods
- __new__(value: object, expression: str, conversion: Literal['a', 'r', 's'] | None = None, format_spec: str = '')¶
Create a new
Interpolation
object from component parts.- Parameters:
value – The evaluated, in-scope result of the interpolation.
expression – The text of a valid Python expression, or an empty string.
conversion – The conversion to be used, one of
None
,'a'
,'r'
, or's'
.format_spec – An optional, arbitrary string used as the format specification to present the value.
Helper functions¶
- string.templatelib.convert(obj, /, conversion)¶
Applies formatted string literal conversion semantics to the given object obj. This is frequently useful for custom template string processing logic.
Three conversion flags are currently supported:
's'
which callsstr()
on the value (like!s
),'r'
which callsrepr()
(like!r
), and'a'
which callsascii()
(like!a
).
If the conversion flag is
None
, obj is returned unchanged.