rprintf is an adaptive builder for formatted strings. Currently it provides a set of tools for building formatted strings under various replacement rules:
sprintf
The primary goal of this package is to make it easier to produce formatted strings in all popular styles.
You can install from CRAN with
install.packages("rprintf")
or you can install the latest development version from GitHub with
devtools::install_github("rprintf","renkun-ken")
The following examples demonstrate how rprintf
functions works. You should be familiar with how sprintf
works first. See the documentation for more details.
library(rprintf)
rprintf("Hello, %s", "world")
[1] "Hello, world"
rprintf("%s (%d years old)", "Ken", 24)
[1] "Ken (24 years old)"
rprintf("He is %d but has a height of %.1fcm", 18, 190)
[1] "He is 18 but has a height of 190.0cm"
rprintf("Hello, {1}", "world")
[1] "Hello, world"
rprintf("{1} ({2} years old)","Ken",24)
[1] "Ken (24 years old)"
rprintf("He is {1} but has a height of {2:.2f}cm",18,190)
[1] "He is 18 but has a height of 190.00cm"
rprintf("{1}, {2:.1f}, {3:+.2f}, {2}, {1:.0f}",1.56,2.34,3.78)
[1] "1.56, 2.3, +3.78, 2.34, 2"
rprintf("{2},{1}","x","y")
[1] "y,x"
rprintf("Hello, $name", name="world")
[1] "Hello, world"
rprintf("$name ($age years old)",name="Ken",age=24)
[1] "Ken (24 years old)"
rprintf("He is $age but has a height of $height:.2fcm",age=18,height=190)
[1] "He is 18 but has a height of 190.00cm"
rprintf("$a, $b:.1f, $c:+.2f, $b, $a:.0f",a=1.56,b=2.34,c=3.78)
[1] "1.56, 2.3, +3.78, 2.34, 2"
For each type of formatting, a specialized function is also provided. rprintv
only handles named variable-based formatting, and rprintn
only handles number-based formatting.
This package is under MIT License.