On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 1:42 AM, Helmut Jarausch <jarau...@skynet.be> wrote: > On Fri, 01 Mar 2013 01:22:48 +1100, Chris Angelico wrote: > >> On Fri, Mar 1, 2013 at 1:11 AM, Helmut Jarausch <jarau...@skynet.be> >> wrote: >>> Hi, >>> >>> I'd like to print a string with the string format method which uses >>> {0}, ... >>> >>> Unfortunately, the string contains TeX commands which use lots of >>> braces. Therefore I would have to double all these braces just for the >>> format method which makes the string hardly readable. >>> >>> Is there anything like a "raw" format string and any other means to >>> circumvent this? >> >> You could use a different string formatting function, such as >> percent-formatting: >> >> "Hello, {0}, this is %s" % some_string >> >> The {0} will be output literally, and the %s will be replaced by the >> string. Braces are ignored, percent signs are significant. >> >> ChrisA > > Originally I had used percent-formatting > But isn't it deprecated in Python 3.X ?
No, it's still fully supported. Every now and then someone suggests that it's worse than .format() for some reason or another, but the fact is that it's not going away. Use whichever one makes the most sense. Yes, this is a slight violation of "one obvious way to do it". But it's handy to have both format methods; they have overlapping but distinct feature sets. ChrisA -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list