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[3.12] gh-102856: Update "Formatted string literals" docs section aft…
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…er PEP701 (GH-104861) (#104865)

(cherry picked from commit 8e5b3b9)

Co-authored-by: Lysandros Nikolaou <[email protected]>
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miss-islington and lysnikolaou authored May 24, 2023
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Showing 1 changed file with 35 additions and 17 deletions.
52 changes: 35 additions & 17 deletions Doc/reference/lexical_analysis.rst
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -741,16 +741,28 @@ Expressions in formatted string literals are treated like regular
Python expressions surrounded by parentheses, with a few exceptions.
An empty expression is not allowed, and both :keyword:`lambda` and
assignment expressions ``:=`` must be surrounded by explicit parentheses.
Replacement expressions can contain line breaks (e.g. in triple-quoted
strings), but they cannot contain comments. Each expression is evaluated
in the context where the formatted string literal appears, in order from
left to right.
Each expression is evaluated in the context where the formatted string literal
appears, in order from left to right. Replacement expressions can contain
newlines in both single-quoted and triple-quoted f-strings and they can contain
comments. Everything that comes after a ``#`` inside a replacement field
is a comment (even closing braces and quotes). In that case, replacement fields
must be closed in a different line.

.. code-block:: text
>>> f"abc{a # This is a comment }"
... + 3}"
'abc5'
.. versionchanged:: 3.7
Prior to Python 3.7, an :keyword:`await` expression and comprehensions
containing an :keyword:`async for` clause were illegal in the expressions
in formatted string literals due to a problem with the implementation.

.. versionchanged:: 3.12
Prior to Python 3.12, comments were not allowed inside f-string replacement
fields.

When the equal sign ``'='`` is provided, the output will have the expression
text, the ``'='`` and the evaluated value. Spaces after the opening brace
``'{'``, within the expression and after the ``'='`` are all retained in the
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -813,24 +825,30 @@ Some examples of formatted string literals::
'line = "The mill\'s closed" '


A consequence of sharing the same syntax as regular string literals is
that characters in the replacement fields must not conflict with the
quoting used in the outer formatted string literal::
Reusing the outer f-string quoting type inside a replacement field is
permitted::

f"abc {a["x"]} def" # error: outer string literal ended prematurely
f"abc {a['x']} def" # workaround: use different quoting
>>> a = dict(x=2)
>>> f"abc {a["x"]} def"
'abc 2 def'

Backslashes are not allowed in format expressions and will raise
an error::
.. versionchanged:: 3.12
Prior to Python 3.12, reuse of the same quoting type of the outer f-string
inside a replacement field was not possible.

f"newline: {ord('\n')}" # raises SyntaxError
Backslashes are also allowed in replacement fields and are evaluated the same
way as in any other context::

To include a value in which a backslash escape is required, create
a temporary variable.
>>> a = ["a", "b", "c"]
>>> print(f"List a contains:\n{"\n".join(a)}")
List a contains:
a
b
c

>>> newline = ord('\n')
>>> f"newline: {newline}"
'newline: 10'
.. versionchanged:: 3.12
Prior to Python 3.12, backslashes were not permitted inside an f-string
replacement field.

Formatted string literals cannot be used as docstrings, even if they do not
include expressions.
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