format
Function
The format
function produces a string by formatting a number of other values according
to a specification string. It is similar to the printf
function in C, and
other similar functions in other programming languages.
format(spec, values...)
Examples
> format("Hello, %s!", "Ander")
Hello, Ander!
> format("There are %d lights", 4)
There are 4 lights
Simple format verbs like %s
and %d
behave similarly to template
interpolation syntax, which is often more readable.
> format("Hello, %s!", var.name)
Hello, Valentina!
> "Hello, ${var.name}!"
Hello, Valentina!
The formatting verb %#v
accepts a value of any type and presents it using JSON encoding, similar to jsonencode. This can be useful for describing the values given to a module in custom condition check error messages.
> format("%#v", "hello")
"\"hello\""
> format("%#v", true)
"true"
> format("%#v", 1)
"1"
> format("%#v", {a = 1})
"{\"a\":1}"
> format("%#v", [true])
"[true]"
> format("%#v", null)
"null"
The format
function is most useful when you use more complex format specifications.
Specification Syntax
The specification is a string that includes formatting verbs that are introduced
with the %
character. The function call must then have one additional argument
for each verb sequence in the specification. The verbs are matched with
consecutive arguments and formatted as directed, as long as each given argument
is convertible to the type required by the format verb.
By default, %
sequences consume successive arguments starting with the first.
Introducing a [n]
sequence immediately before the verb letter, where n
is a
decimal integer, explicitly chooses a particular value argument by its
one-based index. Subsequent calls without an explicit index will then proceed
with n
+1, n
+2, etc.
The function produces an error if the format string requests an impossible conversion or access more arguments than are given. An error is produced also for an unsupported format verb.
Verbs
The specification may contain the following verbs.
Verb | Result |
---|---|
%% | Literal percent sign, consuming no value. |
%v | Default formatting based on the value type. Accepts all types, including items of null , list , and map types. |
%#v | JSON serialization of the value, as with jsonencode . Accepts all types, including items of null , list , and map types. |
%t | Convert to boolean and produce true or false . |
%b | Convert to integer number and produce binary representation. |
%d | Convert to integer number and produce decimal representation. |
%o | Convert to integer number and produce octal representation. |
%x | Convert to integer number and produce hexadecimal representation with lowercase letters. |
%X | Like %x , but use uppercase letters. |
%e | Convert to number and produce scientific notation, like -1.234456e+78 . |
%E | Like %e , but use an uppercase E to introduce the exponent. |
%f | Convert to number and produce decimal fraction notation with no exponent, like 123.456 . |
%g | Like %e for large exponents or like %f otherwise. |
%G | Like %E for large exponents or like %f otherwise. |
%s | Convert to string and insert the string's characters. |
%q | Convert to string and produce a JSON quoted string representation. |
Default Format Verbs
When %v
is used, OpenTF chooses the appropriate format verb based on the value type.
Type | Verb |
---|---|
string | %s |
number | %g |
bool | %t |
any other | %#v |
Null values produce the string null
if formatted with %v
or %#v
, and cause an error for other verbs.
Width Modifier
Use a width modifier with an optional decimal number immediately
preceding the verb letter to specify how many characters will be used to represent the value. You can specify precision after the (optional) width with a period (.
) followed by a decimal number. If width or precision are omitted, OpenTF selects default values based on the given value.
The following examples demonstrate example use cases for the width modifier.
Sequence | Result |
---|---|
%f | Default width and precision. |
%9f | Width 9, default precision. |
%.2f | Default width, precision 2. |
%9.2f | Width 9, precision 2. |
-> Note: Width and precision modifiers with non-numeric types such as
strings (%s
) are interpreted differently. Setting either width or precision to
zero is the same as not including them at all.
Additional Format Options
Use the following symbols immediately after the %
symbol to set additional formatting requirements.
Symbol | Result |
---|---|
space | Leave a space where the sign would be if a number is positive. |
+ | Show the sign of a number even if it is positive. |
- | Pad the width with spaces on the right rather than the left. |
0 | Pad the width with leading zeros rather than spaces. |
Related Functions
formatdate
is a specialized formatting function for human-readable timestamps.formatlist
uses the same specification syntax to produce a list of strings.