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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-27 18:24:20 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-27 18:24:20 +0000 |
commit | 483eb2f56657e8e7f419ab1a4fab8dce9ade8609 (patch) | |
tree | e5d88d25d870d5dedacb6bbdbe2a966086a0a5cf /src/seastar/fmt/doc/index.rst | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | ceph-483eb2f56657e8e7f419ab1a4fab8dce9ade8609.tar.xz ceph-483eb2f56657e8e7f419ab1a4fab8dce9ade8609.zip |
Adding upstream version 14.2.21.upstream/14.2.21upstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'src/seastar/fmt/doc/index.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | src/seastar/fmt/doc/index.rst | 210 |
1 files changed, 210 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/seastar/fmt/doc/index.rst b/src/seastar/fmt/doc/index.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000..a8dc05e5 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/seastar/fmt/doc/index.rst @@ -0,0 +1,210 @@ +Overview +======== + +**fmt** (formerly cppformat) is an open-source formatting library. +It can be used as a fast and safe alternative to printf and IOStreams. + +.. raw:: html + + <div class="panel panel-default"> + <div class="panel-heading">What users say:</div> + <div class="panel-body"> + Thanks for creating this library. It’s been a hole in C++ for a long + time. I’ve used both boost::format and loki::SPrintf, and neither felt + like the right answer. This does. + </div> + </div> + +.. _format-api-intro: + +Format API +---------- + +The replacement-based Format API provides a safe alternative to ``printf``, +``sprintf`` and friends with comparable or `better performance +<http://zverovich.net/2013/09/07/integer-to-string-conversion-in-cplusplus.html>`_. +The `format string syntax <syntax.html>`_ is similar to the one used by +`str.format <http://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#str.format>`_ +in Python: + +.. code:: c++ + + fmt::format("The answer is {}.", 42); + +The ``fmt::format`` function returns a string "The answer is 42.". You can use +``fmt::memory_buffer`` to avoid constructing ``std::string``: + +.. code:: c++ + + fmt::memory_buffer out; + format_to(out, "For a moment, {} happened.", "nothing"); + out.data(); // returns a pointer to the formatted data + +The ``fmt::print`` function performs formatting and writes the result to a stream: + +.. code:: c++ + + fmt::print(stderr, "System error code = {}\n", errno); + +The file argument can be omitted in which case the function prints to +``stdout``: + +.. code:: c++ + + fmt::print("Don't {}\n", "panic"); + +The Format API also supports positional arguments useful for localization: + +.. code:: c++ + + fmt::print("I'd rather be {1} than {0}.", "right", "happy"); + +Named arguments can be created with ``fmt::arg``. This makes it easier to track +what goes where when multiple values are being inserted: + +.. code:: c++ + + fmt::print("Hello, {name}! The answer is {number}. Goodbye, {name}.", + fmt::arg("name", "World"), fmt::arg("number", 42)); + +If your compiler supports C++11 user-defined literals, the suffix ``_a`` offers +an alternative, slightly terser syntax for named arguments: + +.. code:: c++ + + fmt::print("Hello, {name}! The answer is {number}. Goodbye, {name}.", + "name"_a="World", "number"_a=42); + +The ``_format`` suffix may be used to format string literals similar to Python: + +.. code:: c++ + + std::string message = "{0}{1}{0}"_format("abra", "cad"); + +Other than the placement of the format string on the left of the operator, +``_format`` is functionally identical to ``fmt::format``. In order to use the +literal operators, they must be made visible with the directive +``using namespace fmt::literals;``. Note that this brings in only ``_a`` and +``_format`` but nothing else from the ``fmt`` namespace. + +.. _safety: + +Safety +------ + +The library is fully type safe, automatic memory management prevents buffer +overflow, errors in format strings are reported using exceptions or at compile +time. For example, the code + +.. code:: c++ + + fmt::format("The answer is {:d}", "forty-two"); + +throws a ``format_error`` exception with description "unknown format code 'd' for +string", because the argument ``"forty-two"`` is a string while the format code +``d`` only applies to integers, while + +.. code:: c++ + + format(fmt("The answer is {:d}"), "forty-two"); + +reports a compile-time error for the same reason on compilers that support +relaxed ``constexpr``. + +The following code + +.. code:: c++ + + fmt::format("Cyrillic letter {}", L'\x42e'); + +produces a compile-time error because wide character ``L'\x42e'`` cannot be +formatted into a narrow string. You can use a wide format string instead: + +.. code:: c++ + + fmt::format(L"Cyrillic letter {}", L'\x42e'); + +For comparison, writing a wide character to ``std::ostream`` results in +its numeric value being written to the stream (i.e. 1070 instead of letter 'ю' +which is represented by ``L'\x42e'`` if we use Unicode) which is rarely what is +needed. + +Compact binary code +------------------- + +The library is designed to produce compact per-call compiled code. For example +(`godbolt <https://godbolt.org/g/TZU4KF>`_), + +.. code:: c++ + + #include <fmt/core.h> + + int main() { + fmt::print("The answer is {}.", 42); + } + +compiles to just + +.. code:: asm + + main: # @main + sub rsp, 24 + mov qword ptr [rsp], 42 + mov rcx, rsp + mov edi, offset .L.str + mov esi, 17 + mov edx, 2 + call fmt::v5::vprint(fmt::v5::basic_string_view<char>, fmt::v5::format_args) + xor eax, eax + add rsp, 24 + ret + .L.str: + .asciz "The answer is {}." + +.. _portability: + +Portability +----------- + +The library is highly portable and relies only on a small set of C++11 features: + +* variadic templates +* type traits +* rvalue references +* decltype +* trailing return types +* deleted functions + +These are available since GCC 4.4, Clang 2.9 and MSVC 18.0 (2013). For older +compilers use fmt `version 4.x +<https://github.com/fmtlib/fmt/releases/tag/4.1.0>`_ which continues to be +maintained and only requires C++98. + +The output of all formatting functions is consistent across platforms. In +particular, formatting a floating-point infinity always gives ``inf`` while the +output of ``printf`` is platform-dependent in this case. For example, + +.. code:: + + fmt::print("{}", std::numeric_limits<double>::infinity()); + +always prints ``inf``. + +.. _ease-of-use: + +Ease of Use +----------- + +fmt has a small self-contained code base with the core library consisting of +just three header files and no external dependencies. +A permissive BSD `license <https://github.com/fmtlib/fmt#license>`_ allows +using the library both in open-source and commercial projects. + +.. raw:: html + + <a class="btn btn-success" href="https://github.com/fmtlib/fmt">GitHub Repository</a> + + <div class="section footer"> + <iframe src="http://ghbtns.com/github-btn.html?user=fmtlib&repo=fmt&type=watch&count=true" + class="github-btn" width="100" height="20"></iframe> + </div> |