package ppx_custom_printf
Install
Dune Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
sha256=127eacc196a1c04b0c31cf4c5bd3b405899e49be24804753bb6bbce1aa1e6785
md5=b7cf49585319576dd77f6ddd6db95b21
Description
Part of the Jane Street's PPX rewriters collection.
Published: 22 Mar 2018
README
ppx_custom_printf
Extensions to printf-style format-strings for user-defined string conversion.
ppx_custom_printf
is a ppx rewriter that allows the use of user-defined string conversion functions in format strings (that is, strings passed to printf, sprintf, etc.).
No new syntax is introduced. Instead a previously ill-typed use of the !
operator is re-purposed.
Basic Usage
The basic usage is as follows:
printf !"The time is %{Time} and the timezone is %{Time.Zone}."
time zone
The ppx rewriter will turn the !
-string into a format of type (Time.t -> Time.Zone.t -> unit, unit, string) format
. This is done by embedding the Time.to_string
and Time.Zone.to_string
functions into the format, using the low-level format mechanism of the stdlib.
In general, specifiers like %{<Module-path>}
produce a call to Module-path.to_string
. The module path can even be empty, in which case the generated code calls to_string
.
Note that you have to prepend the format string with a !
, so that the ppx rewriter knows to operate on it.
Sexps
The syntax %{sexp:<type>}
is also supported. For example:
printf !"The time is %{sexp:Time.t}." time
The time
argument will be turned into a string using:
fun x -> Sexplib.Sexp.to_string_hum ([%sexp_of: Time.t] x)
This supports arbitrary type expressions.
You can use Sexplib.Sexp.to_string_mach
instead of Sexplib.Sexp.to_string_hum
by using %{sexp#mach:<type>}
Using functions other than M.to_string
The format specifier %{<Module-path>.<lowercase_identifier>}
corresponds to that function. So, for example:
printf !"The date is %{Core.Date.to_string_iso8601_basic}" date
will turn date
to a string using the following code:
fun x -> Core.Date.to_string_iso8601_basic x
Further, the format specifier %{<Module-path>#<lowercase_identifier>}
corresponds to the function <Module_path>.to_string_<lowercase_identifier>
. So, for example:
printf !"The date is %{Core.Date#american}" date
will turn date
to a string using:
fun x -> Core.Date.to_string_american x
Subformats disallowed
In a regular format string, you can use format specifiers of the form %{<spec>%}
and %(<spec>%)
where <spec>
is another format specifier.
Using these specifiers is disallowed in format strings that are processed with custom-printf.
Dependencies (6)
-
ppxlib
>= "0.1.0" & < "0.9.0"
-
ocaml-migrate-parsetree
>= "1.0" & < "2.0.0"
-
jbuilder
>= "1.0+beta18.1"
-
ppx_sexp_conv
>= "v0.11" & < "v0.12"
-
base
>= "v0.11" & < "v0.12"
-
ocaml
>= "4.04.1"
Dev Dependencies
None
Used by (6)
Conflicts
None