...one of the most highly
regarded and expertly designed C++ library projects in the
world.
— Herb Sutter and Andrei
Alexandrescu, C++
Coding Standards
Format arguments into a URL.
Defined in header <boost/url/format.hpp>
template< class... Args> url format( core::string_view fmt, Args&&... args);
Format arguments according to the format URL string into a url
. The rules for a format URL
string are the same as for a std::format_string
,
where replacement fields are delimited by curly braces. The URL components
to which replacement fields belong are identified before replacement is
applied and any invalid characters for that formatted argument are percent-escaped.
Hence, the delimiters between URL components, such as :
,
//
, ?
,
and #
, should be included
in the URL format string. Likewise, a format string with a single "{}"
is interpreted as a path and
any replacement characters invalid in this component will be encoded to
form a valid URL.
assert(format( "{}" , "Hello world!" ).buffer() == "Hello%20world%21" );
All replacement fields must be valid and the resulting URL should be valid after arguments are formatted into the URL. Because any invalid characters for a URL component are encoded by this function, only replacements in the scheme and port components might be invalid, as these components do not allow percent-encoding of arbitrary characters.
A URL holding the formatted result.
Name |
Description |
---|---|
|
The format URL string. |
|
Arguments to be formatted. |
Type |
Thrown On |
---|---|
|
|
replacement_field ::= "{" [arg_id] [ ":" (format_spec | chrono_format_spec)] "}" arg_id ::= integer | identifier integer ::= digit+ digit ::= "0" ... "9" identifier ::= id_start id_continue* id_start ::= "a" ... "z" | "A" ... "Z" | "_" id_continue ::= id_start | digit
Convenience header <boost/url.hpp>