# ETL Format & Print ## 1. Overview ETL provides text formatting facilities modelled on C++20 `std::format` and C++23 `std::print`. They allow type-safe, positional formatting of values into strings or directly to a character output device — without heap allocation. **Minimum language standard:** C++11 (`ETL_USING_CPP11`). **Headers:** | Header | Provides | |---|---| | `etl/format.h` | `etl::format_to`, `etl::format_to_n`, `etl::formatted_size` | | `etl/print.h` | `etl::print`, `etl::println` (includes `etl/format.h`) | ## 2. `etl::format_to` ### Generic output-iterator overload ```cpp template OutputIt format_to(OutputIt out, format_string fmt, Args&&... args); ``` Formats `args` according to the format string `fmt` and writes the result through the output iterator `out`. Returns an iterator past the last character written. `OutputIt` can be any output iterator whose dereferenced type is assignable from `char`, for example `etl::istring::iterator` or `etl::back_insert_iterator`. ```cpp etl::string<100> s; // Using a raw iterator — you must resize the string yourself etl::istring::iterator result = etl::format_to(s.begin(), "{0} {1}", 34, 56); s.uninitialized_resize(static_cast(result - s.begin())); // s == "34 56" // Using a back_insert_iterator — string grows automatically s.clear(); etl::back_insert_iterator it(s); etl::format_to(it, "{} {}", 65, 34); // s == "65 34" ``` ### `etl::istring&` overload (ETL-specific) ```cpp template etl::istring::iterator format_to(etl::istring& out, format_string fmt, Args&&... args); ``` Convenience overload that writes into an `etl::istring` (or any derived `etl::string`). The string is automatically resized to the number of characters written, up to `out.max_size()`. Returns an iterator past the last character written. ```cpp etl::string<100> s; etl::format_to(s, "Hello, {}!", "world"); // s == "Hello, world!" ``` ### `etl::format_to_n` ```cpp template OutputIt format_to_n(OutputIt out, size_t n, format_string fmt, Args&&... args); ``` Like `format_to`, but writes **at most** `n` characters. Characters beyond the limit are silently discarded. ```cpp etl::string<10> s = "abcdefghij"; etl::format_to_n(s.begin(), 3, "xy{}", 123); // s == "xy1defghij" (only 3 chars written) ``` ## 3. `etl::formatted_size` ```cpp template size_t formatted_size(format_string fmt, Args&&... args); ``` Returns the total number of characters that `format_to` would produce, without actually writing anything. Useful for pre-computing buffer sizes. ```cpp size_t n; n = etl::formatted_size(""); // 0 n = etl::formatted_size("{}", ""); // 0 n = etl::formatted_size("xyz{}", 12); // 5 n = etl::formatted_size("{}", "abc"); // 3 ``` ## 4. `etl::print` and `etl::println` Declared in `etl/print.h`. ### `etl::print` ```cpp template void print(etl::format_string fmt, Args&&... args); ``` Formats the arguments and outputs each character by calling `etl_putchar()`. ### `etl::println` ```cpp // With arguments — prints formatted text followed by '\n' template void println(etl::format_string fmt, Args&&... args); // Without arguments — prints a bare newline void println(); ``` ### Implementing `etl_putchar` `etl/print.h` declares (but does not define) the following C-linkage function: ```cpp extern "C" void etl_putchar(int c); ``` You **must** provide a definition in your project. The `int` parameter follows the convention of the standard `putchar()` and carries a single `char` value. Typical implementations forward to a UART, a debug probe, `putchar`, or any other single-character output sink: ```cpp // Example: forward to standard putchar extern "C" void etl_putchar(int c) { putchar(c); } ``` ### Example ```cpp etl::print("x = {}, y = {}\n", 10, 20); // "x = 10, y = 20\n" etl::println("Hello, {}!", "world"); // "Hello, world!\n" etl::println(); // "\n" ``` ## 5. Format String Syntax A format string is ordinary text with **replacement fields** delimited by braces: ``` "literal text {} more text {1:>10} end" ``` ### Replacement field grammar ``` replacement_field ::= '{' [arg_id] [':' format_spec] '}' arg_id ::= integer // e.g. 0, 1, 2 … format_spec ::= [[fill]align] [sign] ['#'] ['0'] [width] ['.' precision] ['L'] [type] ``` | Component | Syntax | Description | |---|---|---| | **Argument index** | `{0}`, `{1}`, … | Manual positional indexing. Cannot be mixed with automatic indexing. | | **Automatic index** | `{}` | Uses the next argument in order. Cannot be mixed with manual indexing. | | **Fill character** | any character except `{` or `}` | Used together with an alignment specifier. Default is space (` `). | | **Alignment** | `<` left, `>` right, `^` center | Aligns the formatted value within the given *width*. | | **Sign** | `+` always, `-` negative only (default), ` ` space for positive | Controls sign display for numeric types. | | **`#` (alt form)** | `#` | Adds `0x`/`0X` for hex, `0b`/`0B` for binary, `0` for octal. | | **`0` (zero-pad)** | `0` | Pads the number with leading zeros (after sign/prefix). | | **Width** | integer, or `{}` / `{n}` | Minimum field width. Supports nested replacement fields for dynamic width. | | **Precision** | `.` integer, or `.{}` / `.{n}` | For strings: maximum characters to output. For floats: number of decimal digits. Supports nested replacement fields. | | **`L`** | `L` | Locale-specific flag (parsed but currently ignored). | | **Type** | see [Presentation Types](#7-presentation-types-per-argument-kind) | Selects the output representation. | ### Examples ```cpp etl::format_to(s, "{:>10}", 42); // " 42" etl::format_to(s, "{:*^10}", 42); // "****42****" etl::format_to(s, "{:+05d}", 67); // "+00067" etl::format_to(s, "{:#x}", 0x3f4); // "0x3f4" etl::format_to(s, "{:.3s}", "abcdef"); // "abc" etl::format_to(s, "{1} {0}", 1, 2); // "2 1" ``` ## 6. Supported Argument Types The core set of formattable types (matching `std::basic_format_arg`): | Category | Types | |---|---| | Boolean | `bool` | | Character | `char` | | Signed integer | `int`, `long long int` | | Unsigned integer | `unsigned int`, `unsigned long long int` | | Floating-point *(opt-in)* | `float`, `double`, `long double` — requires `ETL_USING_FORMAT_FLOATING_POINT` | | String | `const char*`, `etl::string_view` | | Pointer | `const void*` | ### Implicit conversions Types not listed above are converted automatically before formatting: | Source type | Stored as | |---|---| | `short` | `int` | | `unsigned short`, `uint16_t` | `unsigned int` | | `long int` | `int` or `long long int` (platform-dependent) | | `unsigned long int`, `size_t` | `unsigned int` or `unsigned long long int` | | `int8_t` (`signed char`) | `char` | | `uint8_t` (`unsigned char`) | `char` | | `int16_t` | `int` | | `uint32_t` | `unsigned int` | | `int32_t` | `int` | | `etl::string` | `etl::string_view` (lifetime of the temporary is guaranteed) | | any pointer `T*` | `const void*` | ## 7. Presentation Types per Argument Kind ### Integers (`int`, `unsigned int`, `long long int`, `unsigned long long int`) | Type | Meaning | Example | |---|---|---| | `d` *(default)* | Decimal | `134` → `"134"` | | `x` | Lowercase hexadecimal | `0x3f4` → `"3f4"` | | `X` | Uppercase hexadecimal | `0x3f4` → `"3F4"` | | `o` | Octal | `034` → `"34"` | | `b` | Lowercase binary | `0b1010` → `"1010"` | | `B` | Uppercase binary | `0b1010` → `"1010"` | | `c` | Character (value as char) | `67` → `"C"` | With `#`: prefixes `0x`/`0X`, `0b`/`0B`, or leading `0` for octal. ### Characters (`char`, `signed char`, `unsigned char`) | Type | Meaning | Example | |---|---|---| | `c` *(default)* | Character itself | `'s'` → `"s"` | | `?` | Debug / escaped | `'\n'` → `"'\\n'"` | | `d` | Decimal code point | `'a'` → `"97"` | | `x` / `X` | Hex code point | `'a'` → `"61"` | ### Booleans (`bool`) | Type | Meaning | Example | |---|---|---| | *(default)* | `false` / `true` | `true` → `"true"` | | `s` | Same as default | `true` → `"true"` | | `d` | `0` / `1` | `true` → `"1"` | | `x` / `X` | Hex `0` / `1` | `true` → `"1"` | | `o` | Octal (with `#`: `01`) | `true` → `"01"` | ### Strings (`const char*`, `etl::string_view`, `etl::string`) | Type | Meaning | Example | |---|---|---| | `s` *(default)* | String output | `"data1"` → `"data1"` | | `?` | Debug / escaped | `"data1\n"` → `"\"data1\\n\""` | Width and precision apply: width sets the minimum field width; precision (`.N`) truncates the string to at most *N* characters. ```cpp etl::format_to(s, "{:>10s}", "data1"); // " data1" etl::format_to(s, "{:.3s}", "abcdef"); // "abc" etl::format_to(s, ".{:^8.3s}!", "data1"); // ". dat !" ``` ### Pointers (`const void*`) | Type | Meaning | Example | |---|---|---| | `p` *(default)* | Lowercase hex with `0x` prefix | `nullptr` → `"0x0"` | | `P` | Uppercase hex with `0X` prefix | `nullptr` → `"0X0"` | ### Floating-point (`float`, `double`, `long double`) Requires `ETL_USING_FORMAT_FLOATING_POINT`. | Type | Meaning | Example | |---|---|---| | *(default)* | Shortest representation | `1.5f` → `"1.5"` | | `e` / `E` | Scientific notation | `1.0f` → `"1.000000e+00"` | | `f` / `F` | Fixed-point notation | `1.125f` → `"1.125000"` | | `g` / `G` | General (fixed or scientific) | `1e10f` → `"1.000000e+10"` | | `a` / `A` | Hexadecimal floating-point | `1.5f` → `"0x1.8p+0"` | `nan`, `inf` (lowercase for `e`/`f`/`g`/`a`, uppercase for `E`/`F`/`G`/`A`). ## 8. Escape Sequences and Literal Braces ### Literal braces Because `{` and `}` delimit replacement fields, they must be escaped by doubling: | Input | Output | |---|---| | `{{` | `{` | | `}}` | `}` | ```cpp etl::format_to(s, "abc{{def"); // "abc{def" etl::format_to(s, "}}abc"); // "}abc" ``` ### Debug / escaped presentation (`?`) The `?` type specifier produces a debug representation: - **Characters** are wrapped in single quotes with C-style escape sequences: | Character | Output | |---|---| | `\t` | `'\\t'` | | `\n` | `'\\n'` | | `\r` | `'\\r'` | | `"` | `'\\\"'` | | `'` | `'\\''` | | `\\` | `'\\\\'` | - **Strings** are wrapped in double quotes with the same escape sequences: ```cpp etl::format_to(s, "{:?}", "data1\n"); // "\"data1\\n\"" ``` ## 9. Error Handling Invalid format strings cause an `etl::bad_format_string_exception` (derived from `etl::format_exception`, which is derived from `etl::exception`). Common error conditions: | Condition | Example | |---|---| | Missing closing brace | `"a{b"` | | Unescaped `}` without matching `{` | `"a}b"` | | Invalid characters inside `{}` | `"a{b}"` | | Argument index out of range | `"{1}"` with only one argument | | Mixing manual and automatic indexing | `"{0} {}"` | | Invalid type specifier for the argument | `"{:d}"` on a `string_view` | | Double colon in format spec | `"{::}"` | | Precision on an integer | `"{:+#05.5X}"` on an `int` | ```cpp etl::string<100> s; // These all throw etl::bad_format_string_exception: etl::format_to(s, "a{b}", 1); // bad index spec etl::format_to(s, "a{b", 1); // closing brace missing etl::format_to(s, "a}b"); // unescaped } etl::format_to(s, "{:d}", sv); // invalid type for string_view ``` > **Note:** On C++20 and later, compile-time format string validation through > `consteval` is planned but not yet fully implemented. ## 10. Differences from `std::format` | Area | `std::format` (C++20/23) | ETL | |---|---|---| | **Output target** | Returns `std::string` | Writes through an output iterator or into `etl::istring&` — no heap allocation. | | **`etl::istring&` overload** | Not available | `format_to(etl::istring&, ...)` automatically resizes the string. | | **`print` / `println` output** | Writes to `FILE*` / `stdout` | Writes character-by-character via user-defined `etl_putchar(int)`. | | **Floating-point support** | Always available | Opt-in via `ETL_USING_FORMAT_FLOATING_POINT`. | | **User-defined formatters** | `std::formatter` specialisations | Not yet supported. | | **Locale** | `L` flag uses `std::locale` | `L` flag is parsed but has no effect. | | **Compile-time validation** | Enforced via `consteval` on C++20 | Planned; currently validates at run time and throws `etl::bad_format_string_exception`. | | **`format_to_n` return type** | `std::format_to_n_result` | Returns the underlying `OutputIt` directly. |