python输出布尔值true,打印布尔值真/假在Python中的格式()方法

I was trying to print a truth table for Boolean expressions. While doing this, I stumbled upon the following:

>>> format(True, "") # shows True in a string representation, same as str(True)

'True'

>>> format(True, "^") # centers True in the middle of the output string

'1'

As soon as I specify a format specifier, format() converts True to 1. I know that bool is a subclass of int, so that True evaluates to 1:

>>> format(True, "d") # shows True in a decimal format

'1'

But why does using the format specifier change 'True' to 1 in the first example?

I turned to the docs for clarification. The only thing it says is:

A general convention is that an empty format string ("") produces the same result as if you had called str() on the value. A non-empty format string typically modifies the result.

So the string gets modified when you use a format specifier. But why the change from True to 1 if only an alignment operator (e.g. ^) is specified?

解决方案

Excellent question! I believe I have the answer. This requires digging around through the Python source code in C, so bear with me.

First, format(obj, format_spec) is just syntactic sugar for obj.__format__(format_spec). For specifically where this occurs, you'd have to look in abstract.c, in the function:

PyObject *

PyObject_Format(PyObject* obj, PyObject *format_spec)

{

PyObject *empty = NULL;

PyObject *result = NULL;

...

if (PyInstance_Check(obj)) {

/* We're an instance of a classic class */

HERE -> PyObject *bound_method = PyObject_GetAttrString(obj, "__format__");

if (bound_method != NULL) {

result = PyObject_CallFunctionObjArgs(bound_method,

format_spec,

NULL);

...

}

To find the exact call, we have to look in intobject.c:

static PyObject *

int__format__(PyObject *self, PyObject *args)

{

PyObject *format_spec;

...

return _PyInt_FormatAdvanced(self,

^ PyBytes_AS_STRING(format_spec),

| PyBytes_GET_SIZE(format_spec));

LET'S FIND THIS

...

}

_PyInt_FormatAdvanced is actually defined as a macro in formatter_string.c as a function found in formatter.h:

static PyObject*

format_int_or_long(PyObject* obj,

STRINGLIB_CHAR *format_spec,

Py_ssize_t format_spec_len,

IntOrLongToString tostring)

{

PyObject *result = NULL;

PyObject *tmp = NULL;

InternalFormatSpec format;

/* check for the special case of zero length format spec, make

it equivalent to str(obj) */

if (format_spec_len == 0) {

result = STRINGLIB_TOSTR(obj);

goto done;

}

... // Otherwise, format the object as if it were an integer

}

And therein lies your answer. A simple check for whether format_spec_len is 0, and if it is, convert obj into a string. As you well know, str(True) is 'True', and the mystery is over!