'How can I selectively escape percent (%) in Python strings?

I have the following code

test = "have it break."
selectiveEscape = "Print percent % in sentence and not %s" % test

print(selectiveEscape)

I would like to get the output:

Print percent % in sentence and not have it break.

What actually happens:

    selectiveEscape = "Use percent % in sentence and not %s" % test
TypeError: %d format: a number is required, not str


Solution 1:[1]

>>> test = "have it break."
>>> selectiveEscape = "Print percent %% in sentence and not %s" % test
>>> print selectiveEscape
Print percent % in sentence and not have it break.

Solution 2:[2]

Alternatively, as of Python 2.6, you can use new string formatting (described in PEP 3101):

'Print percent % in sentence and not {0}'.format(test)

which is especially handy as your strings get more complicated.

Solution 3:[3]

try using %% to print % sign .

Solution 4:[4]

You can't selectively escape %, as % always has a special meaning depending on the following character.

In the documentation of Python, at the bottem of the second table in that section, it states:

'%'        No argument is converted, results in a '%' character in the result.

Therefore you should use:

selectiveEscape = "Print percent %% in sentence and not %s" % (test, )

(please note the expicit change to tuple as argument to %)

Without knowing about the above, I would have done:

selectiveEscape = "Print percent %s in sentence and not %s" % ('%', test)

with the knowledge you obviously already had.

Solution 5:[5]

If you are using Python 3.6 or newer, you can use f-string:

>>> test = "have it break."
>>> selectiveEscape = f"Print percent % in sentence and not {test}"
>>> print(selectiveEscape)
... Print percent % in sentence and not have it break.

Solution 6:[6]

If the formatting template was read from a file, and you cannot ensure the content doubles the percent sign, then you probably have to detect the percent character and decide programmatically whether it is the start of a placeholder or not. Then the parser should also recognize sequences like %d (and other letters that can be used), but also %(xxx)s etc.

Similar problem can be observed with the new formats -- the text can contain curly braces.

Sources

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Source: Stack Overflow

Solution Source
Solution 1 Nolen Royalty
Solution 2 Karmel
Solution 3 Botz3000
Solution 4
Solution 5 Jaroslav Bezděk
Solution 6 pepr