Message341379
| Author | eric.smith |
|---|---|
| Recipients | dirn, eric.smith, gregory.p.smith, paul.moore, serhiy.storchaka, steven.daprano, xtreak |
| Date | 2019-05-04.11:52:51 |
| SpamBayes Score | -1.0 |
| Marked as misclassified | Yes |
| Message-id | <1556970772.05.0.649953662623.issue36774@roundup.psfhosted.org> |
| In-reply-to |
| Content | |
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And for those who *really* want to be able to apply a format spec to the result of the entire !d expression, you can always use nested f-strings: >>> for x in [3.1415, 0.5772156649, 100]: ... print(f'{f"{x!d:.1f}":*^20}') ... *******x=3.1******** *******x=0.6******** ******x=100.0******* Not that I recommend this, but at least it's possible. |
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| History | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Date | User | Action | Args |
| 2019-05-04 11:52:52 | eric.smith | set | recipients: + eric.smith, gregory.p.smith, paul.moore, steven.daprano, dirn, serhiy.storchaka, xtreak |
| 2019-05-04 11:52:52 | eric.smith | set | messageid: <1556970772.05.0.649953662623.issue36774@roundup.psfhosted.org> |
| 2019-05-04 11:52:52 | eric.smith | link | issue36774 messages |
| 2019-05-04 11:52:51 | eric.smith | create | |