include module type of struct include Format end
Introduction
For a gentle introduction to the basics of pretty-printing using Format
, read http://caml.inria.fr/resources/doc/guides/format.en.html.
You may consider this module as providing an extension to the printf
facility to provide automatic line splitting. The addition of pretty-printing annotations to your regular printf
format strings gives you fancy indentation and line breaks. Pretty-printing annotations are described below in the documentation of the function Format.fprintf
.
You may also use the explicit pretty-printing box management and printing functions provided by this module. This style is more basic but more verbose than the concise fprintf
format strings.
For instance, the sequence open_box 0; print_string "x ="; print_space ();
print_int 1; close_box (); print_newline ()
that prints x = 1
within a pretty-printing box, can be abbreviated as printf "@[%s@ %i@]@." "x =" 1
, or even shorter printf "@[x =@ %i@]@." 1
.
Rule of thumb for casual users of this library:
- use simple pretty-printing boxes (as obtained by
open_box 0
); - use simple break hints as obtained by
print_cut ()
that outputs a simple break hint, or by print_space ()
that outputs a space indicating a break hint; - once a pretty-printing box is open, display its material with basic printing functions (e. g.
print_int
and print_string
); - when the material for a pretty-printing box has been printed, call
close_box ()
to close the box; - at the end of pretty-printing, flush the pretty-printer to display all the remaining material, e.g. evaluate
print_newline ()
.
The behavior of pretty-printing commands is unspecified if there is no open pretty-printing box. Each box opened by one of the open_
functions below must be closed using close_box
for proper formatting. Otherwise, some of the material printed in the boxes may not be output, or may be formatted incorrectly.
In case of interactive use, each phrase is executed in the initial state of the standard pretty-printer: after each phrase execution, the interactive system closes all open pretty-printing boxes, flushes all pending text, and resets the standard pretty-printer.
Warning: mixing calls to pretty-printing functions of this module with calls to Stdlib
low level output functions is error prone.
The pretty-printing functions output material that is delayed in the pretty-printer queue and stacks in order to compute proper line splitting. In contrast, basic I/O output functions write directly in their output device. As a consequence, the output of a basic I/O function may appear before the output of a pretty-printing function that has been called before. For instance,
Stdlib.print_string "<";
Format.print_string "PRETTY";
Stdlib.print_string ">";
Format.print_string "TEXT";
leads to output <>PRETTYTEXT
.
Abstract data corresponding to a pretty-printer (also called a formatter) and all its machinery. See also Defining formatters.
Pretty-printing boxes
The pretty-printing engine uses the concepts of pretty-printing box and break hint to drive indentation and line splitting behavior of the pretty-printer.
Each different pretty-printing box kind introduces a specific line splitting policy:
- within an horizontal box, break hints never split the line (but the line may be split in a box nested deeper),
- within a vertical box, break hints always split the line,
- within an horizontal/vertical box, if the box fits on the current line then break hints never split the line, otherwise break hint always split the line,
- within a compacting box, a break hint never splits the line, unless there is no more room on the current line.
Note that line splitting policy is box specific: the policy of a box does not rule the policy of inner boxes. For instance, if a vertical box is nested in an horizontal box, all break hints within the vertical box will split the line.
Moreover, opening a box after the maximum indentation limit splits the line whether or not the box would end up fitting on the line.
val open_box : int -> unit
pp_open_box ppf d
opens a new compacting pretty-printing box with offset d
in the formatter ppf
.
Within this box, the pretty-printer prints as much as possible material on every line.
A break hint splits the line if there is no more room on the line to print the remainder of the box.
Within this box, the pretty-printer emphasizes the box structure: if a structural box does not fit fully on a simple line, a break hint also splits the line if the splitting ``moves to the left'' (i.e. the new line gets an indentation smaller than the one of the current line).
This box is the general purpose pretty-printing box.
If the pretty-printer splits the line in the box, offset d
is added to the current indentation.
val open_hbox : unit -> unit
pp_open_hbox ppf ()
opens a new 'horizontal' pretty-printing box.
This box prints material on a single line.
Break hints in a horizontal box never split the line. (Line splitting may still occur inside boxes nested deeper).
val open_vbox : int -> unit
pp_open_vbox ppf d
opens a new 'vertical' pretty-printing box with offset d
.
This box prints material on as many lines as break hints in the box.
Every break hint in a vertical box splits the line.
If the pretty-printer splits the line in the box, d
is added to the current indentation.
val open_hvbox : int -> unit
pp_open_hvbox ppf d
opens a new 'horizontal/vertical' pretty-printing box with offset d
.
This box behaves as an horizontal box if it fits on a single line, otherwise it behaves as a vertical box.
If the pretty-printer splits the line in the box, d
is added to the current indentation.
val pp_open_hovbox : formatter -> int -> unit
val open_hovbox : int -> unit
pp_open_hovbox ppf d
opens a new 'horizontal-or-vertical' pretty-printing box with offset d
.
This box prints material as much as possible on every line.
A break hint splits the line if there is no more room on the line to print the remainder of the box.
If the pretty-printer splits the line in the box, d
is added to the current indentation.
val pp_print_string : formatter -> string -> unit
val print_string : string -> unit
pp_print_string ppf s
prints s
in the current pretty-printing box.
val pp_print_as : formatter -> int -> string -> unit
val print_as : int -> string -> unit
pp_print_as ppf len s
prints s
in the current pretty-printing box. The pretty-printer formats s
as if it were of length len
.
val print_int : int -> unit
Print an integer in the current pretty-printing box.
val pp_print_float : formatter -> float -> unit
val print_float : float -> unit
Print a floating point number in the current pretty-printing box.
val pp_print_char : formatter -> char -> unit
val print_char : char -> unit
Print a character in the current pretty-printing box.
val pp_print_bool : formatter -> bool -> unit
val print_bool : bool -> unit
Print a boolean in the current pretty-printing box.
Break hints
A 'break hint' tells the pretty-printer to output some space or split the line whichever way is more appropriate to the current pretty-printing box splitting rules.
Break hints are used to separate printing items and are mandatory to let the pretty-printer correctly split lines and indent items.
Simple break hints are:
- the 'space': output a space or split the line if appropriate,
- the 'cut': split the line if appropriate.
Note: the notions of space and line splitting are abstract for the pretty-printing engine, since those notions can be completely redefined by the programmer. However, in the pretty-printer default setting, ``output a space'' simply means printing a space character (ASCII code 32) and ``split the line'' means printing a newline character (ASCII code 10).
val pp_print_space : formatter -> unit -> unit
val print_space : unit -> unit
pp_print_space ppf ()
emits a 'space' break hint: the pretty-printer may split the line at this point, otherwise it prints one space.
pp_print_space ppf ()
is equivalent to pp_print_break ppf 1 0
.
val print_cut : unit -> unit
pp_print_cut ppf ()
emits a 'cut' break hint: the pretty-printer may split the line at this point, otherwise it prints nothing.
pp_print_cut ppf ()
is equivalent to pp_print_break ppf 0 0
.
val pp_print_break : formatter -> int -> int -> unit
val print_break : int -> int -> unit
pp_print_break ppf nspaces offset
emits a 'full' break hint: the pretty-printer may split the line at this point, otherwise it prints nspaces
spaces.
If the pretty-printer splits the line, offset
is added to the current indentation.
val pp_print_custom_break :
formatter ->
fits:(string * int * string) ->
breaks:(string * int * string) ->
unit
pp_print_custom_break ppf ~fits:(s1, n, s2) ~breaks:(s3, m, s4)
emits a custom break hint: the pretty-printer may split the line at this point.
If it does not split the line, then the s1
is emitted, then n
spaces, then s2
.
If it splits the line, then it emits the s3
string, then an indent (according to the box rules), then an offset of m
spaces, then the s4
string.
While n
and m
are handled by formatter_out_functions.out_indent
, the strings will be handled by formatter_out_functions.out_string
. This allows for a custom formatter that handles indentation distinctly, for example, outputs <br/>
tags or
entities.
The custom break is useful if you want to change which visible (non-whitespace) characters are printed in case of break or no break. For example, when printing a list
[a; b; c]
, you might want to add a trailing semicolon when it is printed vertically:
[
a;
b;
c;
]
You can do this as follows:
printf "@[<v 0>[@;<0 2>@[<v 0>a;@,b;@,c@]%t]@]@\n"
(pp_print_custom_break ~fits:("", 0, "") ~breaks:(";", 0, ""))
val pp_force_newline : formatter -> unit -> unit
val pp_print_if_newline : formatter -> unit -> unit
val print_if_newline : unit -> unit
Execute the next formatting command if the preceding line has just been split. Otherwise, ignore the next formatting command.
Pretty-printing termination
val pp_print_flush : formatter -> unit -> unit
val print_flush : unit -> unit
End of pretty-printing: resets the pretty-printer to initial state.
All open pretty-printing boxes are closed, all pending text is printed. In addition, the pretty-printer low level output device is flushed to ensure that all pending text is really displayed.
Note: never use print_flush
in the normal course of a pretty-printing routine, since the pretty-printer uses a complex buffering machinery to properly indent the output; manually flushing those buffers at random would conflict with the pretty-printer strategy and result to poor rendering.
Only consider using print_flush
when displaying all pending material is mandatory (for instance in case of interactive use when you want the user to read some text) and when resetting the pretty-printer state will not disturb further pretty-printing.
Warning: If the output device of the pretty-printer is an output channel, repeated calls to print_flush
means repeated calls to Stdlib.flush
to flush the out channel; these explicit flush calls could foil the buffering strategy of output channels and could dramatically impact efficiency.
val pp_print_newline : formatter -> unit -> unit
val print_newline : unit -> unit
End of pretty-printing: resets the pretty-printer to initial state.
All open pretty-printing boxes are closed, all pending text is printed.
Equivalent to print_flush
followed by a new line. See corresponding words of caution for print_flush
.
Note: this is not the normal way to output a new line; the preferred method is using break hints within a vertical pretty-printing box.
Margin
val get_margin : unit -> int
Returns the position of the right margin.
Maximum indentation limit
val pp_set_max_indent : formatter -> int -> unit
val pp_get_max_indent : formatter -> unit -> int
val get_max_indent : unit -> int
Return the maximum indentation limit (in characters).
Geometry
Geometric functions can be used to manipulate simultaneously the coupled variables, margin and maxixum indentation limit.
Check if the formatter geometry is valid: 1 < max_indent < margin
val pp_set_geometry : formatter -> max_indent:int -> margin:int -> unit
val set_geometry : max_indent:int -> margin:int -> unit
val pp_safe_set_geometry : formatter -> max_indent:int -> margin:int -> unit
val safe_set_geometry : max_indent:int -> margin:int -> unit
pp_set_geometry ppf ~max_indent ~margin
sets both the margin and maximum indentation limit for ppf
.
When 1 < max_indent < margin
, pp_set_geometry ppf ~max_indent ~margin
is equivalent to pp_set_margin ppf margin; pp_set_max_indent ppf max_indent
; and avoids the subtly incorrect pp_set_max_indent ppf max_indent; pp_set_margin ppf margin
;
Outside of this domain, pp_set_geometry
raises an invalid argument exception whereas pp_safe_set_geometry
does nothing.
pp_update_geometry ppf (fun geo -> { geo with ... })
lets you update a formatter's geometry in a way that is robust to extension of the geometry
record with new fields.
Raises an invalid argument exception if the returned geometry does not satisfy check_geometry
.
Return the current geometry of the formatter
The maximum formatting depth is the maximum number of pretty-printing boxes simultaneously open.
Material inside boxes nested deeper is printed as an ellipsis (more precisely as the text returned by get_ellipsis_text
()
).
val pp_set_max_boxes : formatter -> int -> unit
val pp_get_max_boxes : formatter -> unit -> int
val get_max_boxes : unit -> int
Returns the maximum number of pretty-printing boxes allowed before ellipsis.
val pp_over_max_boxes : formatter -> unit -> bool
Tabulation boxes
A tabulation box prints material on lines divided into cells of fixed length. A tabulation box provides a simple way to display vertical columns of left adjusted text.
This box features command set_tab
to define cell boundaries, and command print_tab
to move from cell to cell and split the line when there is no more cells to print on the line.
Note: printing within tabulation box is line directed, so arbitrary line splitting inside a tabulation box leads to poor rendering. Yet, controlled use of tabulation boxes allows simple printing of columns within module Format
.
val open_tbox : unit -> unit
open_tbox ()
opens a new tabulation box.
This box prints lines separated into cells of fixed width.
Inside a tabulation box, special tabulation markers defines points of interest on the line (for instance to delimit cell boundaries). Function Format.set_tab
sets a tabulation marker at insertion point.
A tabulation box features specific tabulation breaks to move to next tabulation marker or split the line. Function Format.print_tbreak
prints a tabulation break.
val pp_close_tbox : formatter -> unit -> unit
val print_tab : unit -> unit
print_tab ()
emits a 'next' tabulation break hint: if not already set on a tabulation marker, the insertion point moves to the first tabulation marker on the right, or the pretty-printer splits the line and insertion point moves to the leftmost tabulation marker.
It is equivalent to print_tbreak 0 0
.
val pp_print_tbreak : formatter -> int -> int -> unit
val print_tbreak : int -> int -> unit
print_tbreak nspaces offset
emits a 'full' tabulation break hint.
If not already set on a tabulation marker, the insertion point moves to the first tabulation marker on the right and the pretty-printer prints nspaces
spaces.
If there is no next tabulation marker on the right, the pretty-printer splits the line at this point, then insertion point moves to the leftmost tabulation marker of the box.
If the pretty-printer splits the line, offset
is added to the current indentation.
Ellipsis
val pp_set_ellipsis_text : formatter -> string -> unit
val pp_get_ellipsis_text : formatter -> unit -> string
val get_ellipsis_text : unit -> string
Return the text of the ellipsis.
Semantic tags (or simply tags) are user's defined annotations to associate user's specific operations to printed entities.
Common usage of semantic tags is text decoration to get specific font or text size rendering for a display device, or marking delimitation of entities (e.g. HTML or TeX elements or terminal escape sequences). More sophisticated usage of semantic tags could handle dynamic modification of the pretty-printer behavior to properly print the material within some specific tags. For instance, we can define an RGB tag like so:
type stag += RGB of {r:int;g:int;b:int}
In order to properly delimit printed entities, a semantic tag must be opened before and closed after the entity. Semantic tags must be properly nested like parentheses using pp_open_stag
and pp_close_stag
.
Tag specific operations occur any time a tag is opened or closed, At each occurrence, two kinds of operations are performed tag-marking and tag-printing:
- The tag-marking operation is the simpler tag specific operation: it simply writes a tag specific string into the output device of the formatter. Tag-marking does not interfere with line-splitting computation.
- The tag-printing operation is the more involved tag specific operation: it can print arbitrary material to the formatter. Tag-printing is tightly linked to the current pretty-printer operations.
Roughly speaking, tag-marking is commonly used to get a better rendering of texts in the rendering device, while tag-printing allows fine tuning of printing routines to print the same entity differently according to the semantic tags (i.e. print additional material or even omit parts of the output).
More precisely: when a semantic tag is opened or closed then both and successive 'tag-printing' and 'tag-marking' operations occur:
- Tag-printing a semantic tag means calling the formatter specific function
print_open_stag
(resp. print_close_stag
) with the name of the tag as argument: that tag-printing function can then print any regular material to the formatter (so that this material is enqueued as usual in the formatter queue for further line splitting computation). - Tag-marking a semantic tag means calling the formatter specific function
mark_open_stag
(resp. mark_close_stag
) with the name of the tag as argument: that tag-marking function can then return the 'tag-opening marker' (resp. `tag-closing marker') for direct output into the output device of the formatter.
Being written directly into the output device of the formatter, semantic tag marker strings are not considered as part of the printing material that drives line splitting (in other words, the length of the strings corresponding to tag markers is considered as zero for line splitting).
Thus, semantic tag handling is in some sense transparent to pretty-printing and does not interfere with usual indentation. Hence, a single pretty-printing routine can output both simple 'verbatim' material or richer decorated output depending on the treatment of tags. By default, tags are not active, hence the output is not decorated with tag information. Once set_tags
is set to true
, the pretty-printer engine honors tags and decorates the output accordingly.
Default tag-marking functions behave the HTML way: string tags are enclosed in "<" and ">" while other tags are ignored; hence, opening marker for tag string "t"
is "<t>"
and closing marker is "</t>"
.
Default tag-printing functions just do nothing.
Tag-marking and tag-printing functions are user definable and can be set by calling set_formatter_stag_functions
.
Semantic tag operations may be set on or off with set_tags
. Tag-marking operations may be set on or off with set_mark_tags
. Tag-printing operations may be set on or off with set_print_tags
.
type stag +=
| String_tag of tag
String_tag s
is a string tag s
. String tags can be inserted either by explicitly using the constructor String_tag
or by using the dedicated format syntax "@{<s> ... @}"
.
val open_stag : stag -> unit
pp_open_stag ppf t
opens the semantic tag named t
.
The print_open_stag
tag-printing function of the formatter is called with t
as argument; then the opening tag marker for t
, as given by mark_open_stag t
, is written into the output device of the formatter.
val pp_close_stag : formatter -> unit -> unit
val close_stag : unit -> unit
pp_close_stag ppf ()
closes the most recently opened semantic tag t
.
The closing tag marker, as given by mark_close_stag t
, is written into the output device of the formatter; then the print_close_stag
tag-printing function of the formatter is called with t
as argument.
Return the current status of tag-printing operations.
Return the current status of tag-marking operations.
Redirecting the standard formatter output
Return the current output functions of the standard pretty-printer.
Redefining formatter output
The Format
module is versatile enough to let you completely redefine the meaning of pretty-printing output: you may provide your own functions to define how to handle indentation, line splitting, and even printing of all the characters that have to be printed!
Redefining output functions
The set of output functions specific to a formatter:
- the
out_string
function performs all the pretty-printer string output. It is called with a string s
, a start position p
, and a number of characters n
; it is supposed to output characters p
to p + n - 1
of s
. - the
out_flush
function flushes the pretty-printer output device. out_newline
is called to open a new line when the pretty-printer splits the line.- the
out_spaces
function outputs spaces when a break hint leads to spaces instead of a line split. It is called with the number of spaces to output. - the
out_indent
function performs new line indentation when the pretty-printer splits the line. It is called with the indentation value of the new line.
By default:
- fields
out_string
and out_flush
are output device specific; (e.g. Stdlib.output_string
and Stdlib.flush
for a Stdlib.out_channel
device, or Buffer.add_substring
and Stdlib.ignore
for a Buffer.t
output device), - field
out_newline
is equivalent to out_string "\n" 0 1
; - fields
out_spaces
and out_indent
are equivalent to out_string (String.make n ' ') 0 n
.
Return the current output functions of the pretty-printer, including line splitting and indentation functions. Useful to record the current setting and restore it afterwards.
The semantic tag handling functions specific to a formatter: mark
versions are the 'tag-marking' functions that associate a string marker to a tag in order for the pretty-printing engine to write those markers as 0 length tokens in the output device of the formatter. print
versions are the 'tag-printing' functions that can perform regular printing when a tag is closed or opened.
pp_set_formatter_stag_functions ppf tag_funs
changes the meaning of opening and closing semantic tag operations to use the functions in tag_funs
when printing on ppf
.
When opening a semantic tag with name t
, the string t
is passed to the opening tag-marking function (the mark_open_stag
field of the record tag_funs
), that must return the opening tag marker for that name. When the next call to close_stag ()
happens, the semantic tag name t
is sent back to the closing tag-marking function (the mark_close_stag
field of record tag_funs
), that must return a closing tag marker for that name.
The print_
field of the record contains the tag-printing functions that are called at tag opening and tag closing time, to output regular material in the pretty-printer queue.
Return the current semantic tag operation functions of the standard pretty-printer.
Defining new formatters permits unrelated output of material in parallel on several output devices. All the parameters of a formatter are local to the formatter: right margin, maximum indentation limit, maximum number of pretty-printing boxes simultaneously open, ellipsis, and so on, are specific to each formatter and may be fixed independently.
For instance, given a Buffer.t
buffer b
, formatter_of_buffer
b
returns a new formatter using buffer b
as its output device. Similarly, given a Stdlib.out_channel
output channel oc
, formatter_of_out_channel
oc
returns a new formatter using channel oc
as its output device.
Alternatively, given out_funs
, a complete set of output functions for a formatter, then formatter_of_out_functions
out_funs
computes a new formatter using those functions for output.
formatter_of_out_channel oc
returns a new formatter writing to the corresponding output channel oc
.
formatter_of_buffer b
returns a new formatter writing to buffer b
. At the end of pretty-printing, the formatter must be flushed using pp_print_flush
or pp_print_newline
, to print all the pending material into the buffer.
The string buffer in which str_formatter
writes.
Returns the material printed with str_formatter
, flushes the formatter and resets the corresponding buffer.
make_formatter out flush
returns a new formatter that outputs with function out
, and flushes with function flush
.
For instance,
make_formatter
(Stdlib.output oc)
(fun () -> Stdlib.flush oc)
returns a formatter to the Stdlib.out_channel
oc
.
formatter_of_out_functions out_funs
returns a new formatter that writes with the set of output functions out_funs
.
See definition of type formatter_out_functions
for the meaning of argument out_funs
.
Symbolic pretty-printing
Symbolic pretty-printing is pretty-printing using a symbolic formatter, i.e. a formatter that outputs symbolic pretty-printing items.
When using a symbolic formatter, all regular pretty-printing activities occur but output material is symbolic and stored in a buffer of output items. At the end of pretty-printing, flushing the output buffer allows post-processing of symbolic output before performing low level output operations.
In practice, first define a symbolic output buffer b
using:
let sob = make_symbolic_output_buffer ()
. Then define a symbolic formatter with:let ppf = formatter_of_symbolic_output_buffer sob
Use symbolic formatter ppf
as usual, and retrieve symbolic items at end of pretty-printing by flushing symbolic output buffer sob
with:
flush_symbolic_output_buffer sob
.
type symbolic_output_item = Format.symbolic_output_item =
| Output_flush
| Output_newline
| Output_string of string
Output_string s
: symbolic output for string s
| Output_spaces of int
Output_spaces n
: symbolic command to output n
spaces
| Output_indent of int
Output_indent i
: symbolic indentation of size i
Items produced by symbolic pretty-printers
The output buffer of a symbolic pretty-printer.
make_symbolic_output_buffer ()
returns a fresh buffer for symbolic output.
clear_symbolic_output_buffer sob
resets buffer sob
.
get_symbolic_output_buffer sob
returns the contents of buffer sob
.
flush_symbolic_output_buffer sob
returns the contents of buffer sob
and resets buffer sob
. flush_symbolic_output_buffer sob
is equivalent to let items = get_symbolic_output_buffer sob in
clear_symbolic_output_buffer sob; items
add_symbolic_output_item sob itm
adds item itm
to buffer sob
.
formatter_of_symbolic_output_buffer sob
returns a symbolic formatter that outputs to symbolic_output_buffer
sob
.
pp_print_list ?pp_sep pp_v ppf l
prints items of list l
, using pp_v
to print each item, and calling pp_sep
between items (pp_sep
defaults to pp_print_cut
. Does nothing on empty lists.
val pp_print_text : formatter -> string -> unit
pp_print_option ?none pp_v ppf o
prints o
on ppf
using pp_v
if o
is Some v
and none
if it is None
. none
prints nothing by default.
pp_print_result ~ok ~error ppf r
prints r
on ppf
using ok
if r
is Ok _
and error
if r
is Error _
.
Formatted pretty-printing
Module Format
provides a complete set of printf
like functions for pretty-printing using format string specifications.
Specific annotations may be added in the format strings to give pretty-printing commands to the pretty-printing engine.
Those annotations are introduced in the format strings using the @
character. For instance, @
means a space break, @,
means a cut, @[
opens a new box, and @]
closes the last open box.
fprintf ff fmt arg1 ... argN
formats the arguments arg1
to argN
according to the format string fmt
, and outputs the resulting string on the formatter ff
.
The format string fmt
is a character string which contains three types of objects: plain characters and conversion specifications as specified in the Printf
module, and pretty-printing indications specific to the Format
module.
The pretty-printing indication characters are introduced by a @
character, and their meanings are:
@[
: open a pretty-printing box. The type and offset of the box may be optionally specified with the following syntax: the <
character, followed by an optional box type indication, then an optional integer offset, and the closing >
character. Pretty-printing box type is one of h
, v
, hv
, b
, or hov
. 'h
' stands for an 'horizontal' pretty-printing box, 'v
' stands for a 'vertical' pretty-printing box, 'hv
' stands for an 'horizontal/vertical' pretty-printing box, 'b
' stands for an 'horizontal-or-vertical' pretty-printing box demonstrating indentation, 'hov
' stands a simple 'horizontal-or-vertical' pretty-printing box. For instance, @[<hov 2>
opens an 'horizontal-or-vertical' pretty-printing box with indentation 2 as obtained with open_hovbox 2
. For more details about pretty-printing boxes, see the various box opening functions open_*box
.@]
: close the most recently opened pretty-printing box.@,
: output a 'cut' break hint, as with print_cut ()
.@
: output a 'space' break hint, as with print_space ()
.@;
: output a 'full' break hint as with print_break
. The nspaces
and offset
parameters of the break hint may be optionally specified with the following syntax: the <
character, followed by an integer nspaces
value, then an integer offset
, and a closing >
character. If no parameters are provided, the good break defaults to a 'space' break hint.@.
: flush the pretty-printer and split the line, as with print_newline ()
.@<n>
: print the following item as if it were of length n
. Hence, printf "@<0>%s" arg
prints arg
as a zero length string. If @<n>
is not followed by a conversion specification, then the following character of the format is printed as if it were of length n
.@\{
: open a semantic tag. The name of the tag may be optionally specified with the following syntax: the <
character, followed by an optional string specification, and the closing >
character. The string specification is any character string that does not contain the closing character '>'
. If omitted, the tag name defaults to the empty string. For more details about semantic tags, see the functions open_stag
and close_stag
.@\}
: close the most recently opened semantic tag.@?
: flush the pretty-printer as with print_flush ()
. This is equivalent to the conversion %!
.@\n
: force a newline, as with force_newline ()
, not the normal way of pretty-printing, you should prefer using break hints inside a vertical pretty-printing box.
Note: To prevent the interpretation of a @
character as a pretty-printing indication, escape it with a %
character. Old quotation mode @@
is deprecated since it is not compatible with formatted input interpretation of character '@'
.
Example: printf "@[%s@ %d@]@." "x =" 1
is equivalent to open_box (); print_string "x ="; print_space ();
print_int 1; close_box (); print_newline ()
. It prints x = 1
within a pretty-printing 'horizontal-or-vertical' box.
Same as fprintf
above, but output on std_formatter
.
Same as fprintf
above, but output on err_formatter
.
Same as printf
above, but instead of printing on a formatter, returns a string containing the result of formatting the arguments. The type of asprintf
is general enough to interact nicely with %a
conversions.
Same as fprintf
, except the formatter is the last argument. dprintf "..." a b c
is a function of type formatter -> unit
which can be given to a format specifier %t
.
This can be used as a replacement for asprintf
to delay formatting decisions. Using the string returned by asprintf
in a formatting context forces formatting decisions to be taken in isolation, and the final string may be created prematurely. dprintf
allows delay of formatting decisions until the final formatting context is known. For example:
let t = Format.dprintf "%i@ %i@ %i" 1 2 3 in
...
Format.printf "@[<v>%t@]" t
Same as fprintf
above, but does not print anything. Useful to ignore some material when conditionally printing.
Formatted Pretty-Printing with continuations.
Same as fprintf
above, but instead of returning immediately, passes the formatter to its first argument at the end of printing.
Same as dprintf
above, but instead of returning immediately, passes the suspended printer to its first argument at the end of printing.
Same as kfprintf
above, but does not print anything. Useful to ignore some material when conditionally printing.
Same as asprintf
above, but instead of returning the string, passes it to the first argument.
Deprecated
val kprintf : (string -> 'a) -> ('b, unit, string, 'a) format4 -> 'b
val open_tag : tag -> unit
This function will erase non-string tag formatting functions.