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I want to create a custom f-string. For example, a CPT interpolator that always converts things it formats to capital letters:

a = "World"
normal_f_string = f"Hello {a}" # "Hello World"
my_custom_interpolator = CPT"Hello {a}" # "Hello WORLD"
HappyFace
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  • Why you want to do this? – abhiarora Apr 13 '20 at 10:12
  • @abhiarora I have a class that implements a bridge between the shell and Python. I want to create sth like `sh"echo {var}"` that quotes the given variables, runs the command and returns stdout, stderr and return code. – HappyFace Apr 13 '20 at 10:13

1 Answers1

3

I find the answer on Trigger f-string parse on python string in variable . Specifically, here is the code adapted to my question:

from string import Formatter
import sys

def idem(x):
    return x

_conversions = {'a': ascii, 'r': repr, 's': str, 'e': idem}
# 'e' is new, for cancelling capitalization. Note that using any conversion has this effect, e is just doesn't do anything else.

def z(template, locals_=None):
    if locals_ is None:
        previous_frame = sys._getframe(1)
        previous_frame_locals = previous_frame.f_locals
        locals_ = previous_frame_locals
        # locals_ = globals()
    result = []
    parts = Formatter().parse(template)
    for part in parts:
        literal_text, field_name, format_spec, conversion = part
        if literal_text:
            result.append(literal_text)
        if not field_name:
            continue
        value = eval(field_name, locals_) #.__format__()
        if conversion:
            value = _conversions[conversion](value)
        if format_spec:
            value = format(value, format_spec)
        else:
            value = str(value)
        if not conversion:
            value = value.upper() # Here we capitalize the thing.
        result.append(value)
    res = ''.join(result)
    return res

# Usage:

a = 'World'
b = 10
z('Hello {a} --- {a:^30} --- {67+b} --- {a!r}')
HappyFace
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