Repositorio del curso CCOM4030 el semestre B91 del proyecto Artesanías con el Instituto de Cultura
Christian Matos 35195f1065 IOS 3 anni fa
..
lib IOS 3 anni fa
test IOS 3 anni fa
.gitmodules IOS 3 anni fa
.npmignore IOS 3 anni fa
CHANGES.md IOS 3 anni fa
CONTRIBUTING.md IOS 3 anni fa
LICENSE IOS 3 anni fa
Makefile IOS 3 anni fa
Makefile.targ IOS 3 anni fa
README.md IOS 3 anni fa
jsl.node.conf IOS 3 anni fa
package.json IOS 3 anni fa

README.md

extsprintf: extended POSIX-style sprintf

Stripped down version of s[n]printf(3c). We make a best effort to throw an exception when given a format string we don’t understand, rather than ignoring it, so that we won’t break existing programs if/when we go implement the rest of this.

This implementation currently supports specifying

  • field alignment (‘-’ flag),
  • zero-pad (‘0’ flag)
  • always show numeric sign (‘+’ flag),
  • field width
  • conversions for strings, decimal integers, and floats (numbers).
  • argument size specifiers. These are all accepted but ignored, since Javascript has no notion of the physical size of an argument.

Everything else is currently unsupported, most notably: precision, unsigned numbers, non-decimal numbers, and characters.

Besides the usual POSIX conversions, this implementation supports:

  • %j: pretty-print a JSON object (using node’s “inspect”)
  • %r: pretty-print an Error object

Example

First, install it:

# npm install extsprintf

Now, use it:

var mod_extsprintf = require('extsprintf');
console.log(mod_extsprintf.sprintf('hello %25s', 'world'));

outputs:

hello                     world

Also supported

printf: same args as sprintf, but prints the result to stdout

fprintf: same args as sprintf, preceded by a Node stream. Prints the result to the given stream.