Menu
×
   ❮     
HTML CSS JAVASCRIPT SQL PYTHON JAVA PHP HOW TO W3.CSS C C++ C# BOOTSTRAP REACT MYSQL JQUERY EXCEL XML DJANGO NUMPY PANDAS NODEJS R TYPESCRIPT ANGULAR GIT POSTGRESQL MONGODB ASP AI GO KOTLIN SASS VUE DSA GEN AI SCIPY AWS CYBERSECURITY DATA SCIENCE
     ❯   

Python Tutorial

Python HOME Python Intro Python Get Started Python Syntax Python Comments Python Variables Python Data Types Python Numbers Python Casting Python Strings Python Booleans Python Operators Python Lists Python Tuples Python Sets Python Dictionaries Python If...Else Python While Loops Python For Loops Python Functions Python Lambda Python Arrays Python Classes/Objects Python Inheritance Python Iterators Python Polymorphism Python Scope Python Modules Python Dates Python Math Python JSON Python RegEx Python PIP Python Try...Except Python User Input Python String Formatting

File Handling

Python File Handling Python Read Files Python Write/Create Files Python Delete Files

Python Modules

NumPy Tutorial Pandas Tutorial SciPy Tutorial Django Tutorial

Python Matplotlib

Matplotlib Intro Matplotlib Get Started Matplotlib Pyplot Matplotlib Plotting Matplotlib Markers Matplotlib Line Matplotlib Labels Matplotlib Grid Matplotlib Subplot Matplotlib Scatter Matplotlib Bars Matplotlib Histograms Matplotlib Pie Charts

Machine Learning

Getting Started Mean Median Mode Standard Deviation Percentile Data Distribution Normal Data Distribution Scatter Plot Linear Regression Polynomial Regression Multiple Regression Scale Train/Test Decision Tree Confusion Matrix Hierarchical Clustering Logistic Regression Grid Search Categorical Data K-means Bootstrap Aggregation Cross Validation AUC - ROC Curve K-nearest neighbors

Python MySQL

MySQL Get Started MySQL Create Database MySQL Create Table MySQL Insert MySQL Select MySQL Where MySQL Order By MySQL Delete MySQL Drop Table MySQL Update MySQL Limit MySQL Join

Python MongoDB

MongoDB Get Started MongoDB Create DB MongoDB Collection MongoDB Insert MongoDB Find MongoDB Query MongoDB Sort MongoDB Delete MongoDB Drop Collection MongoDB Update MongoDB Limit

Python Reference

Python Overview Python Built-in Functions Python String Methods Python List Methods Python Dictionary Methods Python Tuple Methods Python Set Methods Python File Methods Python Keywords Python Exceptions Python Glossary

Module Reference

Random Module Requests Module Statistics Module Math Module cMath Module

Python How To

Remove List Duplicates Reverse a String Add Two Numbers

Python Examples

Python Examples Python Compiler Python Exercises Python Quiz Python Server Python Interview Q&A Python Bootcamp Python Certificate

Python String Formatting


F-String was introduced in Python 3.6, and is now the preferred way of formatting strings.

Before Python 3.6 we had to use the format() method.


F-Strings

F-string allows you to format selected parts of a string.

To specify a string as an f-string, simply put an f in front of the string literal, like this:

Example

Create an f-string:

txt = f"The price is 49 dollars"
print(txt)
Try it Yourself »

Placeholders and Modifiers

To format values in an f-string, add placeholders {}, a placeholder can contain variables, operations, functions, and modifiers to format the value.

Example

Add a placeholder for the price variable:

price = 59
txt = f"The price is {price} dollars"
print(txt)
Try it Yourself »

A placeholder can also include a modifier to format the value.

A modifier is included by adding a colon : followed by a legal formatting type, like .2f which means fixed point number with 2 decimals:

Example

Display the price with 2 decimals:

price = 59
txt = f"The price is {price:.2f} dollars"
print(txt)
Try it Yourself »

You can also format a value directly without keeping it in a variable:

Example

Display the value 95 with 2 decimals:

txt = f"The price is {95:.2f} dollars"
print(txt)
Try it Yourself »


Perform Operations in F-Strings

You can perform Python operations inside the placeholders.

You can do math operations:

Example

Perform a math operation in the placeholder, and return the result:

txt = f"The price is {20 * 59} dollars"
print(txt)
Try it Yourself »

You can perform math operations on variables:

Example

Add taxes before displaying the price:

price = 59
tax = 0.25
txt = f"The price is {price + (price * tax)} dollars"
print(txt)
Try it Yourself »

You can perform if...else statements inside the placeholders:

Example

Return "Expensive" if the price is over 50, otherwise return "Cheap":

price = 49
txt = f"It is very {'Expensive' if price>50 else 'Cheap'}"

print(txt)
Try it Yourself »

Execute Functions in F-Strings

You can execute functions inside the placeholder:

Example

Use the string method upper()to convert a value into upper case letters:

fruit = "apples"
txt = f"I love {fruit.upper()}"
print(txt)
Try it Yourself »

The function does not have to be a built-in Python method, you can create your own functions and use them:

Example

Create a function that converts feet into meters:

def myconverter(x):
  return x * 0.3048

txt = f"The plane is flying at a {myconverter(30000)} meter altitude"
print(txt)
Try it Yourself »

More Modifiers

At the beginning of this chapter we explained how to use the .2f modifier to format a number into a fixed point number with 2 decimals.

There are several other modifiers that can be used to format values:

Example

Use a comma as a thousand separator:

price = 59000
txt = f"The price is {price:,} dollars"
print(txt)
Try it Yourself »

Here is a list of all the formatting types.

Formatting Types
:< Try it Left aligns the result (within the available space)
:> Try it Right aligns the result (within the available space)
:^ Try it Center aligns the result (within the available space)
:= Try it Places the sign to the left most position
:+ Try it Use a plus sign to indicate if the result is positive or negative
:- Try it Use a minus sign for negative values only
Try it Use a space to insert an extra space before positive numbers (and a minus sign before negative numbers)
:, Try it Use a comma as a thousand separator
:_ Try it Use a underscore as a thousand separator
:b Try it Binary format
:c Converts the value into the corresponding Unicode character
:d Try it Decimal format
:e Try it Scientific format, with a lower case e
:E Try it Scientific format, with an upper case E
:f Try it Fix point number format
:F Try it Fix point number format, in uppercase format (show inf and nan as INF and NAN)
:g General format
:G General format (using a upper case E for scientific notations)
:o Try it Octal format
:x Try it Hex format, lower case
:X Try it Hex format, upper case
:n Number format
:% Try it Percentage format

String format()

Before Python 3.6 we used the format() method to format strings.

The format() method can still be used, but f-strings are faster and the preferred way to format strings.

The next examples in this page demonstrates how to format strings with the format() method.

The format() method also uses curly brackets as placeholders {}, but the syntax is slightly different:

Example

Add a placeholder where you want to display the price:

price = 49
txt = "The price is {} dollars"
print(txt.format(price))
Try it Yourself »

You can add parameters inside the curly brackets to specify how to convert the value:

Example

Format the price to be displayed as a number with two decimals:

txt = "The price is {:.2f} dollars"
Try it Yourself »

Check out all formatting types in our String format() Reference.


Multiple Values

If you want to use more values, just add more values to the format() method:

print(txt.format(price, itemno, count))

And add more placeholders:

Example

quantity = 3
itemno = 567
price = 49
myorder = "I want {} pieces of item number {} for {:.2f} dollars."
print(myorder.format(quantity, itemno, price))
Try it Yourself »

Index Numbers

You can use index numbers (a number inside the curly brackets {0}) to be sure the values are placed in the correct placeholders:

Example

quantity = 3
itemno = 567
price = 49
myorder = "I want {0} pieces of item number {1} for {2:.2f} dollars."
print(myorder.format(quantity, itemno, price))
Try it Yourself »

Also, if you want to refer to the same value more than once, use the index number:

Example

age = 36
name = "John"
txt = "His name is {1}. {1} is {0} years old."
print(txt.format(age, name))
Try it Yourself »

Named Indexes

You can also use named indexes by entering a name inside the curly brackets {carname}, but then you must use names when you pass the parameter values txt.format(carname = "Ford"):

Example

myorder = "I have a {carname}, it is a {model}."
print(myorder.format(carname = "Ford", model = "Mustang"))
Try it Yourself »


×

Contact Sales

If you want to use W3Schools services as an educational institution, team or enterprise, send us an e-mail:
[email protected]

Report Error

If you want to report an error, or if you want to make a suggestion, send us an e-mail:
[email protected]

W3Schools is optimized for learning and training. Examples might be simplified to improve reading and learning. Tutorials, references, and examples are constantly reviewed to avoid errors, but we cannot warrant full correctness of all content. While using W3Schools, you agree to have read and accepted our terms of use, cookie and privacy policy.

Copyright 1999-2024 by Refsnes Data. All Rights Reserved. W3Schools is Powered by W3.CSS.