# Formatted output ```rust,editable,ignore,mdbook-runnable fn main() { // In general, the `{}` will be automatically replaced with any // arguments. These will be stringified. println!("{} days", 31); // Without a suffix, 31 becomes an i32. You can change what type 31 is // by providing a suffix. The number 31i64 for example has the type i64. // There are various optional patterns this works with. Positional // arguments can be used. println!("{0}, this is {1}. {1}, this is {0}", "Alice", "Bob"); // As can named arguments. println!("{subject} {verb} {object}", object="the lazy dog", subject="the quick brown fox", verb="jumps over"); // Special formatting can be specified after a `:`. println!("{} of {:b} people know binary, the other half doesn't", 1, 2); // You can right-align text with a specified width. This will output // " 1". 5 white spaces and a "1". println!("{number:>width$}", number=1, width=6); // You can pad numbers with extra zeroes. This will output "000001". println!("{number:0>width$}", number=1, width=6); // Rust even checks to make sure the correct number of arguments are // used. println!("My name is {0}, {1} {0}", "Bond"); // FIXME ^ Add the missing argument: "James" // Create a structure named `Structure` which contains an `i32`. #[allow(dead_code)] struct Structure(i32); // However, custom types such as this structure require more complicated // handling. This will not work. println!("This struct `{}` won't print...", Structure(3)); // FIXME ^ Comment out this line. // For Rust 1.58 and above, you can directly capture the argument from // surrounding variable. Just like the above, this will output // " 1". 5 white spaces and a "1". let number: f64 = 1.0; let width: usize = 6; println!("{number:>width$}"); } ``` [`std::fmt`][fmt] contains many [`traits`][traits] which govern the display of text. The base form of two important ones are listed below: * `fmt::Debug`: Uses the `{:?}` marker. Format text for debugging purposes. * `fmt::Display`: Uses the `{}` marker. Format text in a more elegant, user friendly fashion. Here, we used `fmt::Display` because the std library provides implementations for these types. To print text for custom types, more steps are required. Implementing the `fmt::Display` trait automatically implements the [`ToString`] trait which allows us to [convert] the type to [`String`][string].