Article 4QF6W String interpolation in Python and R

String interpolation in Python and R

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John
from John D. Cook on (#4QF6W)

One of the things I liked about Perl was string interpolation. If you use a variable name in a string, the variable will expand to its value. For example, if you a variable $x which equals 42, then the string

 "The answer is $x."

will expand to "The answer is 42." Perl requires variables to start with sigils, like the $ in front of scalar variables. Sigils are widely considered to be ugly, but they have their benefits. Here, for example, $x is clearly a variable name, whereas x would not be.

You can do something similar to Perl's string interpolation in Python with so-called f-strings. If you put an f in front of an opening quotation mark, an expression in braces will be replaced with its value.

 >>> x = 42 >>> f"The answer is {x}." 'The answer is 42.'

You could also say

 >>> f"The answer is {6*7}."

for example. The f-string is just a string; it's only printed because we're working from the Python REPL.

The glue package for R lets you do something very similar to Python's f-strings.

 > library(glue) > x <- 42 > glue("The answer is {x}.") The answer is 42. > glue("The answer is {6*7}.") The answer is 42.

As with f-strings, glue returns a string. It doesn't print the string, though the string is displayed because we're working from the REPL, the R REPL in this case.

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