Copyright (c) 2009-2017 Daniel Mester Pirttijärvi
Fork by Georgii Dolzhykov
This is a JavaScript library for string, date and number formatting. Formatting is done with format strings and is almost completely compatible with the String.Format method in Microsoft .NET Framework.
The goal of this fork is to add support for Node.js and to explore compatibility with .NET.
Links to the original library: home page with usage examples, repo.
Reference information regarding .NET format strings
To use the library, include the library itself and optionally the cultures you are targeting. Note that if no culture files are included, the invariant culture will be used.
<script src="sffjs.min.js"></script>
<script src="cultures/stringformat.en.js"></script>
<script src="cultures/stringformat.sv.js"></script>
Then you're ready to go.
String.format("Welcome back, {0}! Last seen {1:M}", "John Doe", new Date(1985, 3, 7, 12, 33));
// Outputs:
// Welcome back, John Doe! Last seen April 07
By default the browser culture will be used, given that the appropriate culture
file has been referenced from the page. To set culture explicitly, use the
sffjs.setCulture
method, which accepts a IETF language code.
sffjs.setCulture("sv");
var sffjs = require('sffjs');
console.log(sffjs("Welcome back, {0}! Last seen {1:M}", "John Doe", new Date(1985, 3, 7, 12, 33)));
// Outputs:
// Welcome back, John Doe! Last seen April 07
Built-in objects aren't modified unless you explicitly call sffjs.unsafe()
.
console.log(typeof String.format);
// undefined
sffjs.unsafe();
console.log(typeof String.format);
// function
Cultures are loaded automatically by the setCulture
method. There is no need to require
them.
console.log(sffjs("{0:N} -- {1:M}", 1234.567, new Date(1985, 3, 7, 12, 33)));
// 1,234.57 -- April 07
sffjs.setCulture("tr");
console.log(sffjs("{0:N} -- {1:M}", 1234.567, new Date(1985, 3, 7, 12, 33)));
// 1.234,57 -- 07 Nisan
The output of this library is highly compatible with the output from the .NET implementation. In this section differences will be listed
-
Date format
- Date format specifier
O
is not supported - Date format specifier
R
is not supported
- Date format specifier
-
Number format
- Number format specifier
c
ignores specified precision - Number format specifier
G
formats the number according to how a double is formatted in .NET. Other numeric data type are formatted differently in .NET.
- Number format specifier
Other types don't have a format implementation, and are thus serialized to a
string by the __Format
function or the Javascript runtime using the toString
function.
These are additions in this implementation, and thus not supported by the .NET implementation:
- Object paths/named parameters (
String.format('Hello, {user.name}', { user: { name: 'John' } })
).