093b39ca5 Update docs for meson (#4291) 2c3a5698e Simplify a copying the fill from basic_specs fc1b0f348 Clarify use of FMT_THROW in a comment 1d066890c Resolve C4702 unreachable code warnings dad323751 Fix a bug when copying the fill from basic_specs 880e1494d Improve xchar support for std::bitset formatter e3ddede6c Update version e9ec4fdc8 Bump version feb72126b Readd FMT_NO_UNIQUE_ADDRESS 8d517e54c Update changelog 563fc74ae Update changelog 3e04222d5 Restore ABI compatibility with 11.0.2 853df39d0 Mention compile-time formatting 11742a09c Clarify that format_string should be used instead of fstring da24fac10 Document fstring 5fa4bdd75 Define CMake components to allow docs to be installed separately (#4276) 3c8aad8df Update the release script 0e8aad961 Update version debe784aa Update changelog f6d112567 Update changelog 73d0d3f75 Fix github API call 08f60f1ef Update changelog faf3f8408 Bump version f3a41441d Replace requests with urllib 3f33cb21d Update changelog b07a90386 Update changelog a6fba5177 Update changelog 25e292998 Update changelog 00ab2e98b Update changelog a3ef285ae Always inline const_check to improve debug codegen in clang 28d1abc9d Update changelog 90704b9ef Update changelog 86dae01c2 Fix compatibility with older versions of VS (#4271) d8a79eafd Document formatting of bit-fields and fields of packed structs 7c3d0152e Use the _MSVC_STL_UPDATE macro to detect STL (#4267) 7c50da538 Allow getting size of dynamic format arg store (#4270) 873670ba3 Make parameter basic_memory_buffer<char, SIZE>& buf of to_string const 735d4cc05 Update changelog 141380172 Allow disabling <filesystem> by define FMT_CPP_LIB_FILESYSTEM=0 (#4259) 4302d7429 Update changelog 0f51ea79d Update changelog 9600fee02 Include <filesystem> only if FMT_CPP_LIB_FILESYSTEM is set (#4258) 47a66c5ec Bump msys2/setup-msys2 from 2.24.0 to 2.25.0 (#4250) 385c01dc7 Allow bit_cast to work for 80bit long double (#4246) df249d8ad Remove an old workaround dfad80d1c Remove an old workaround 536cabd56 Export all range join overloads (#4239) b1a054706 Remove more MSVC 2015 workarounds and fix string_view checks bfd95392c Remove MSVC 2015 workaround 9ced61bca Replace std::forward for clang-tidy (#4236) 75e5be6ad Sort specifiers a169d7fa4 Fix chrono formatting syntax doc (#4235) a6c45dfea Fix modular build a35389b3c Corrently handle buffer flush 5a3576acc Implement fmt::join for tuple-like objects (#4230) 542600013 Suppress MSVC warnings "C4127: conditional expression is constant" by used const_check (#4233) 720da57ba Remove reference to unused intrinsic 680db66c3 Explicitly export symbols from detail 56ce41ef6 Remove initializer_list dependency cf50e4d6a Fix const[expr] in context API 6580d7b80 Cleanup the format API 7e73566ce Minor cleanup 8523dba2d Make constexpr precede explicit consistently e3d3b24fc Minor cleanup 1521bba70 Use consistent types for argument count 00649552a Bump github/codeql-action from 3.26.6 to 3.27.0 (#4223) 4b8e2838f More cleanup 7d4662f7a Remove FMT_BUILTIN_CTZ 27110bc47 Minor cleanup 68f315376 Fix narrowing conversion warning in struct fstring (#4210) 168df9a06 Implement fmt::format_to into std::vector<char> (#4211) 4daa3d591 Fix error: cannot use 'try' with exceptions disabled in Win LLVM Clang (#4208) e9eaa27e5 Add std::exception to the docs 2b6a786e3 Use standard context in print a16ff5787 Add support for code units > 0xFFFF in fill 601be1cbe Add support for code units > 0xFFFF in fill 58c185b63 Changing type of data_ to size_t to avoid compilation warnings (#4200) a0a9ba2af Fix hashes cc2ba8f9e Cleanup cifuzz action a18d42b20 Simplify lint (#4197) 4046f9727 Fix -Wmissing-noreturn warning (#4194) 6bdc12a19 detail_exported -> detail 786a4b096 Cleanup fixed_string 2cb3b7c64 Update README.md e9cba6905 Update README.md 02537548f Cleanup an example c68c5fa7c Test FMT_BUILTIN_TYPES 22701d5f6 Address build failures when using Tip-of-Tree clang. (#4187) e62c41ffb Conform `std::iterator_traits<fmt::appender>` to [iterator.traits]/1 (#4185) 18792893d Silencing Wextra-semi warning (#4188) c90bc9186 Bump actions/checkout from 4.1.6 to 4.2.0 (#4182) c95722ad6 Improve naming consistency db06b0df8 Use countl_zero in bigint b9ec48d9c Cleanup bigint 3faf6f181 Add min_of/max_of d64b100a3 Relax constexpr ff9ee0461 Fix handling FMT_BUILTIN_TYPES 1c5883bef Test nondeterministic conversion to format string cacc3108c Don't assume repeated evaluation of string literal produce the same pointer fade652ad Require clang >=15 for _BitInt support (#4176) 96dca569a Module linkage fixes for shared build (#4169) 891c9a73a Cleanup format API 9282222b7 Export more e5b20ff0d Deprecate detail::locale_ref ff9222354 Simplify locale handling 80c4d42c6 Cleanup format.h git-subtree-dir: external/fmt git-subtree-split: 093b39ca5eea129b111060839602bcfaf295125a
19 KiB
{fmt} is an open-source formatting library providing a fast and safe alternative to C stdio and C++ iostreams.
If you like this project, please consider donating to one of the funds that help victims of the war in Ukraine: https://www.stopputin.net/.
Q&A: ask questions on StackOverflow with the tag fmt.
Try {fmt} in Compiler Explorer.
Features
- Simple format API with positional arguments for localization
- Implementation of C++20 std::format and C++23 std::print
- Format string syntax similar to Python's format
- Fast IEEE 754 floating-point formatter with correct rounding, shortness and round-trip guarantees using the Dragonbox algorithm
- Portable Unicode support
- Safe printf implementation including the POSIX extension for positional arguments
- Extensibility: support for user-defined types
- High performance: faster than common standard library
implementations of
(s)printf, iostreams,to_stringandto_chars, see Speed tests and Converting a hundred million integers to strings per second - Small code size both in terms of source code with the minimum
configuration consisting of just three files,
core.h,format.handformat-inl.h, and compiled code; see Compile time and code bloat - Reliability: the library has an extensive set of tests and is continuously fuzzed
- Safety: the library is fully type-safe, errors in format strings can be reported at compile time, automatic memory management prevents buffer overflow errors
- Ease of use: small self-contained code base, no external dependencies, permissive MIT license
- Portability with consistent output across platforms and support for older compilers
- Clean warning-free codebase even on high warning levels such as
-Wall -Wextra -pedantic - Locale independence by default
- Optional header-only configuration enabled with the
FMT_HEADER_ONLYmacro
See the documentation for more details.
Examples
Print to stdout (run)
#include <fmt/core.h>
int main() {
fmt::print("Hello, world!\n");
}
Format a string (run)
std::string s = fmt::format("The answer is {}.", 42);
// s == "The answer is 42."
Format a string using positional arguments (run)
std::string s = fmt::format("I'd rather be {1} than {0}.", "right", "happy");
// s == "I'd rather be happy than right."
Print dates and times (run)
#include <fmt/chrono.h>
int main() {
auto now = std::chrono::system_clock::now();
fmt::print("Date and time: {}\n", now);
fmt::print("Time: {:%H:%M}\n", now);
}
Output:
Date and time: 2023-12-26 19:10:31.557195597
Time: 19:10
Print a container (run)
#include <vector>
#include <fmt/ranges.h>
int main() {
std::vector<int> v = {1, 2, 3};
fmt::print("{}\n", v);
}
Output:
[1, 2, 3]
Check a format string at compile time
std::string s = fmt::format("{:d}", "I am not a number");
This gives a compile-time error in C++20 because d is an invalid
format specifier for a string.
Write a file from a single thread
#include <fmt/os.h>
int main() {
auto out = fmt::output_file("guide.txt");
out.print("Don't {}", "Panic");
}
This can be 5 to 9 times faster than fprintf.
Print with colors and text styles
#include <fmt/color.h>
int main() {
fmt::print(fg(fmt::color::crimson) | fmt::emphasis::bold,
"Hello, {}!\n", "world");
fmt::print(fg(fmt::color::floral_white) | bg(fmt::color::slate_gray) |
fmt::emphasis::underline, "Olá, {}!\n", "Mundo");
fmt::print(fg(fmt::color::steel_blue) | fmt::emphasis::italic,
"你好{}!\n", "世界");
}
Output on a modern terminal with Unicode support:
Benchmarks
Speed tests
| Library | Method | Run Time, s |
|---|---|---|
| libc | printf | 0.91 |
| libc++ | std::ostream | 2.49 |
| {fmt} 9.1 | fmt::print | 0.74 |
| Boost Format 1.80 | boost::format | 6.26 |
| Folly Format | folly::format | 1.87 |
{fmt} is the fastest of the benchmarked methods, ~20% faster than
printf.
The above results were generated by building tinyformat_test.cpp on
macOS 12.6.1 with clang++ -O3 -DNDEBUG -DSPEED_TEST -DHAVE_FORMAT, and
taking the best of three runs. In the test, the format string
"%0.10f:%04d:%+g:%s:%p:%c:%%\n" or equivalent is filled 2,000,000
times with output sent to /dev/null; for further details refer to the
source.
{fmt} is up to 20-30x faster than std::ostringstream and sprintf on
IEEE754 float and double formatting
(dtoa-benchmark) and faster
than double-conversion
and ryu:
Compile time and code bloat
The script bloat-test.py from format-benchmark tests compile
time and code bloat for nontrivial projects. It generates 100 translation units
and uses printf() or its alternative five times in each to simulate a
medium-sized project. The resulting executable size and compile time (Apple
clang version 15.0.0 (clang-1500.1.0.2.5), macOS Sonoma, best of three) is shown
in the following tables.
Optimized build (-O3)
| Method | Compile Time, s | Executable size, KiB | Stripped size, KiB |
|---|---|---|---|
| printf | 1.6 | 54 | 50 |
| IOStreams | 25.9 | 98 | 84 |
| fmt 83652df | 4.8 | 54 | 50 |
| tinyformat | 29.1 | 161 | 136 |
| Boost Format | 55.0 | 530 | 317 |
{fmt} is fast to compile and is comparable to printf in terms of per-call
binary size (within a rounding error on this system).
Non-optimized build
| Method | Compile Time, s | Executable size, KiB | Stripped size, KiB |
|---|---|---|---|
| printf | 1.4 | 54 | 50 |
| IOStreams | 23.4 | 92 | 68 |
| {fmt} 83652df | 4.4 | 89 | 85 |
| tinyformat | 24.5 | 204 | 161 |
| Boost Format | 36.4 | 831 | 462 |
libc, lib(std)c++, and libfmt are all linked as shared libraries
to compare formatting function overhead only. Boost Format is a
header-only library so it doesn't provide any linkage options.
Running the tests
Please refer to Building the library for instructions on how to build the library and run the unit tests.
Benchmarks reside in a separate repository, format-benchmarks, so to run the benchmarks you first need to clone this repository and generate Makefiles with CMake:
$ git clone --recursive https://github.com/fmtlib/format-benchmark.git
$ cd format-benchmark
$ cmake .
Then you can run the speed test:
$ make speed-test
or the bloat test:
$ make bloat-test
Migrating code
clang-tidy v18 provides the
modernize-use-std-print
check that is capable of converting occurrences of printf and
fprintf to fmt::print if configured to do so. (By default it
converts to std::print.)
Notable projects using this library
- 0 A.D.: a free, open-source, cross-platform real-time strategy game
- AMPL/MP: an open-source library for mathematical programming
- Apple's FoundationDB: an open-source, distributed, transactional key-value store
- Aseprite: animated sprite editor & pixel art tool
- AvioBook: a comprehensive aircraft operations suite
- Blizzard Battle.net: an online gaming platform
- Celestia: real-time 3D visualization of space
- Ceph: a scalable distributed storage system
- ccache: a compiler cache
- ClickHouse: an analytical database management system
- ContextVision: medical imaging software
- Contour: a modern terminal emulator
- CUAUV: Cornell University's autonomous underwater vehicle
- Drake: a planning, control, and analysis toolbox for nonlinear dynamical systems (MIT)
- Envoy: C++ L7 proxy and communication bus (Lyft)
- FiveM: a modification framework for GTA V
- fmtlog: a performant fmtlib-style logging library with latency in nanoseconds
- Folly: Facebook open-source library
- GemRB: a portable open-source implementation of Bioware's Infinity Engine
- Grand Mountain Adventure: a beautiful open-world ski & snowboarding game
- HarpyWar/pvpgn: Player vs Player Gaming Network with tweaks
- KBEngine: an open-source MMOG server engine
- Keypirinha: a semantic launcher for Windows
- Kodi (formerly xbmc): home theater software
- Knuth: high-performance Bitcoin full-node
- libunicode: a modern C++17 Unicode library
- MariaDB: relational database management system
- Microsoft Verona: research programming language for concurrent ownership
- MongoDB: distributed document database
- MongoDB Smasher: a small tool to generate randomized datasets
- OpenSpace: an open-source astrovisualization framework
- PenUltima Online (POL): an MMO server, compatible with most Ultima Online clients
- PyTorch: an open-source machine learning library
- quasardb: a distributed, high-performance, associative database
- Quill: asynchronous low-latency logging library
- QKW: generalizing aliasing to simplify navigation, and execute complex multi-line terminal command sequences
- redis-cerberus: a Redis cluster proxy
- redpanda: a 10x faster Kafka® replacement for mission-critical systems written in C++
- rpclib: a modern C++ msgpack-RPC server and client library
- Salesforce Analytics Cloud: business intelligence software
- Scylla: a Cassandra-compatible NoSQL data store that can handle 1 million transactions per second on a single server
- Seastar: an advanced, open-source C++ framework for high-performance server applications on modern hardware
- spdlog: super fast C++ logging library
- Stellar: financial platform
- Touch Surgery: surgery simulator
- TrinityCore: open-source MMORPG framework
- 🐙 userver framework: open-source asynchronous framework with a rich set of abstractions and database drivers
- Windows Terminal: the new Windows terminal
If you are aware of other projects using this library, please let me know by email or by submitting an issue.
Motivation
So why yet another formatting library?
There are plenty of methods for doing this task, from standard ones like the printf family of function and iostreams to Boost Format and FastFormat libraries. The reason for creating a new library is that every existing solution that I found either had serious issues or didn't provide all the features I needed.
printf
The good thing about printf is that it is pretty fast and readily
available being a part of the C standard library. The main drawback is
that it doesn't support user-defined types. printf also has safety
issues although they are somewhat mitigated with __attribute__
((format (printf,
...)) in
GCC. There is a POSIX extension that adds positional arguments required
for
i18n
to printf but it is not a part of C99 and may not be available on some
platforms.
iostreams
The main issue with iostreams is best illustrated with an example:
std::cout << std::setprecision(2) << std::fixed << 1.23456 << "\n";
which is a lot of typing compared to printf:
printf("%.2f\n", 1.23456);
Matthew Wilson, the author of FastFormat, called this "chevron hell". iostreams don't support positional arguments by design.
The good part is that iostreams support user-defined types and are safe although error handling is awkward.
Boost Format
This is a very powerful library that supports both printf-like format
strings and positional arguments. Its main drawback is performance.
According to various benchmarks, it is much slower than other methods
considered here. Boost Format also has excessive build times and severe
code bloat issues (see Benchmarks).
FastFormat
This is an interesting library that is fast, safe and has positional arguments. However, it has significant limitations, citing its author:
Three features that have no hope of being accommodated within the current design are:
- Leading zeros (or any other non-space padding)
- Octal/hexadecimal encoding
- Runtime width/alignment specification
It is also quite big and has a heavy dependency, on STLSoft, which might be too restrictive for use in some projects.
Boost Spirit.Karma
This is not a formatting library but I decided to include it here for
completeness. As iostreams, it suffers from the problem of mixing
verbatim text with arguments. The library is pretty fast, but slower on
integer formatting than fmt::format_to with format string compilation
on Karma's own benchmark, see Converting a hundred million integers to
strings per
second.
License
{fmt} is distributed under the MIT license.
Documentation License
The Format String Syntax section in the documentation is based on the one from Python string module documentation. For this reason, the documentation is distributed under the Python Software Foundation license available in doc/python-license.txt. It only applies if you distribute the documentation of {fmt}.
Maintainers
The {fmt} library is maintained by Victor Zverovich (vitaut) with contributions from many other people. See Contributors and Releases for some of the names. Let us know if your contribution is not listed or mentioned incorrectly and we'll make it right.
Security Policy
To report a security issue, please disclose it at security advisory.
This project is maintained by a team of volunteers on a reasonable-effort basis. As such, please give us at least 90 days to work on a fix before public exposure.
