The Java Tutorials have been written for JDK 8. Examples and practices described in this page don't take advantage of improvements introduced in later releases and might use technology no longer available.
See Java Language Changes for a summary of updated language features in Java SE 9 and subsequent releases.
See JDK Release Notes for information about new features, enhancements, and removed or deprecated options for all JDK releases.
Stream objects that implement formatting are instances of either
PrintWriter
, a character stream class, or
PrintStream
, a byte stream class.
PrintStream
objects you are likely to need are
System.out
and
System.err
. (See I/O from the Command Line for more on these objects.) When you need to create a formatted output stream, instantiate PrintWriter
, not PrintStream
.
Like all byte and character stream objects, instances of PrintStream
and PrintWriter
implement a standard set of write
methods for simple byte and character output. In addition, both PrintStream
and PrintWriter
implement the same set of methods for converting internal data into formatted output. Two levels of formatting are provided:
print
and println
format individual values in a standard way.format
formats almost any number of values based on a format string, with many options for precise formatting.print
and println
MethodsInvoking print
or println
outputs a single value after converting the value using the appropriate toString
method. We can see this in the
Root
example:
public class Root { public static void main(String[] args) { int i = 2; double r = Math.sqrt(i); System.out.print("The square root of "); System.out.print(i); System.out.print(" is "); System.out.print(r); System.out.println("."); i = 5; r = Math.sqrt(i); System.out.println("The square root of " + i + " is " + r + "."); } }
Here is the output of Root
:
The square root of 2 is 1.4142135623730951. The square root of 5 is 2.23606797749979.
The i
and r
variables are formatted twice: the first time using code in an overload of print
, the second time by conversion code automatically generated by the Java compiler, which also utilizes toString
. You can format any value this way, but you don't have much control over the results.
format
MethodThe format
method formats multiple arguments based on a format string. The format string consists of static text embedded with format specifiers; except for the format specifiers, the format string is output unchanged.
Format strings support many features. In this tutorial, we'll just cover some basics. For a complete description, see
format string syntax
in the API specification.
The
Root2
example formats two values with a single format
invocation:
public class Root2 { public static void main(String[] args) { int i = 2; double r = Math.sqrt(i); System.out.format("The square root of %d is %f.%n", i, r); } }
Here is the output:
The square root of 2 is 1.414214.
Like the three used in this example, all format specifiers begin with a %
and end with a 1- or 2-character conversion that specifies the kind of formatted output being generated. The three conversions used here are:
d
formats an integer value as a decimal value.f
formats a floating point value as a decimal value.n
outputs a platform-specific line terminator.Here are some other conversions:
x
formats an integer as a hexadecimal value.s
formats any value as a string.tB
formats an integer as a locale-specific month name.There are many other conversions.
Except for %%
and %n
, all format specifiers must match an argument. If they don't, an exception is thrown.
In the Java programming language, the \n
escape always generates the linefeed character (\u000A
). Don't use \n
unless you specifically want a linefeed character. To get the correct line separator for the local platform, use %n
.
In addition to the conversion, a format specifier can contain several additional elements that further customize the formatted output. Here's an example,
Format
, that uses every possible kind of element.
public class Format { public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.format("%f, %1$+020.10f %n", Math.PI); } }
Here's the output:
3.141593, +00000003.1415926536
The additional elements are all optional. The following figure shows how the longer specifier breaks down into elements.
Elements of a Format Specifier.
The elements must appear in the order shown. Working from the right, the optional elements are:
s
and other general conversions, this is the maximum width of the formatted value; the value is right-truncated if necessary.Format
example, the +
flag specifies that the number should always be formatted with a sign, and the 0
flag specifies that 0
is the padding character. Other flags include -
(pad on the right) and ,
(format number with locale-specific thousands separators). Note that some flags cannot be used with certain other flags or with certain conversions.<
to match the same argument as the previous specifier. Thus the example could have said: System.out.format("%f, %<+020.10f %n", Math.PI);