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author | Raymond Hettinger <python@rcn.com> | 2004-09-14 06:32:20 (GMT) |
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committer | Raymond Hettinger <python@rcn.com> | 2004-09-14 06:32:20 (GMT) |
commit | 879ddf30d001c7472e0bdf253e14f5f7ee73970b (patch) | |
tree | 9efc9c44367d99e553f5c3c44c41da6eb07a7793 /Doc | |
parent | 29c6a79b7d33d9fd8a7ed44886e6aad782c2c1b9 (diff) | |
download | cpython-879ddf30d001c7472e0bdf253e14f5f7ee73970b.zip cpython-879ddf30d001c7472e0bdf253e14f5f7ee73970b.tar.gz cpython-879ddf30d001c7472e0bdf253e14f5f7ee73970b.tar.bz2 |
Tweak the wording. Improve examples. Make more brief.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/tut/tut.tex | 41 |
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 26 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/tut/tut.tex b/Doc/tut/tut.tex index 102ffea..886db14 100644 --- a/Doc/tut/tut.tex +++ b/Doc/tut/tut.tex @@ -4841,26 +4841,26 @@ with group separators: The \ulink{\module{string}}{../lib/module-string.html} module includes a versatile \class{Template} class with a simplified syntax suitable for editing by end-users. This allows users to customize their applications -without having to alter the Python program. +without having to alter the application. -The format uses \samp{\$} for placeholder names that are valid Python +The format uses placeholder names formed by \samp{\$} with valid Python identifiers (alphanumeric characters and underscores). Surrounding the placeholder with braces allows it to be followed by more alphanumeric letters -with no intervening spaces. \samp{\$\$} is the way to create a single escaped +with no intervening spaces. Writing \samp{\$\$} creates a single escaped \samp{\$}: \begin{verbatim} >>> from string import Template >>> t = Template('${village}folk send $$10 to $cause.') ->>> t.substitute(village='nottingham', cause='the ditch fund') -'nottinghamfolk send $10 to the ditch fund.' +>>> t.substitute(village='Nottingham', cause='the ditch fund') +'Nottinghamfolk send $10 to the ditch fund.' \end{verbatim} The \method{substitute} method raises a \exception{KeyError} when a -placeholder is not supplied in a dictionary or a keyword argument. -For mail-merge style applications, user supplied data may be incomplete -and the \method{safe_substitute} method may be more appropriate --- it -will leave placeholders unchanged if data is missing: +placeholder is not supplied in a dictionary or a keyword argument. For +mail-merge style applications, user supplied data may be incomplete and the +\method{safe_substitute} method may be more appropriate --- it will leave +placeholders unchanged if data is missing: \begin{verbatim} >>> t = Template('Return the $item to $owner.') @@ -4875,7 +4875,7 @@ KeyError: 'owner' Template subclasses can specify a custom delimiter. For example, a batch renaming utility for a photo browser may elect to use percent signs for -metadata such as the current date, image sequence number, or file format: +placeholders such as the current date, image sequence number, or file format: \begin{verbatim} >>> import time, os.path @@ -4885,11 +4885,11 @@ metadata such as the current date, image sequence number, or file format: >>> fmt = raw_input('Enter rename style (%d-date %n-seqnum %f-format): ') Enter rename style (%d-date %n-seqnum %f-format): Ashley_%n%f ->>> rename = BatchRename(fmt) +>>> t = BatchRename(fmt) >>> date = time.strftime('%d%b%y') >>> for i, filename in enumerate(photofiles): ... base, ext = os.path.splitext(filename) -... newname = rename.substitute(d=date, n=i, f=ext) +... newname = t.substitute(d=date, n=i, f=ext) ... print '%s --> %s' % (filename, newname) img_1074.jpg --> Ashley_0.jpg @@ -4897,20 +4897,9 @@ img_1076.jpg --> Ashley_1.jpg img_1077.jpg --> Ashley_2.jpg \end{verbatim} -For internationalization applications, it may be appropriate to coerce all -templates to \class{unicode}. This can be done with subclassing and -overriding the \method{__init__} method: - -\begin{verbatim} ->>> class UnicodeTemplate(unicode, Template): -... def __init__(self, template): -... self.template = unicode(template) ->>> t = UnicodeTemplate('Knights who say $what') ->>> t.substitute(what='Ni') -u'Knights who say Ni' ->>> t.capitalize() -u'Knights who say $what' -\end{verbatim} +Another application for templating is separating program logic from the +details of multiple output formats. The makes it possible to substitute +custom templates for XML files, plain text reports, and HMTL web reports. \section{Working with Binary Data Record Layouts\label{binary-formats}} |