# String Formatting Format strings in gallery-dl follow the general rules of [`str.format()`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/string.html#format-string-syntax) ([PEP 3101](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3101/)) plus several extras. The syntax for replacement fields is `{!:}`, where `!` and `:` are both optional and can be used to specify how the value selected by `` should be transformed. ## Field Names Field names select the metadata value to use in a replacement field. While simple names are usually enough, more complex forms like accessing values by attribute, element index, or slicing are also supported. | | Example | Result | | ---------------- | ----------------- | ---------------------- | | Name | `{title}` | `Hello World` | | Element Index | `{title[6]}` | `W` | | Slicing | `{title[3:8]}` | `lo Wo` | | Alternatives | `{empty\|title}` | `Hello World` | | Element Access | `{user[name]}` | `John Doe` | | Attribute Access | `{extractor.url}` | `https://example.org/` | All of these methods can be combined as needed. For example `{title[24]|empty|extractor.url[15:-1]}` would result in `.org`. ## Conversions Conversion specifiers allow to *convert* the value to a different form or type. Such a specifier must only consist of 1 character. gallery-dl supports the default three (`s`, `r`, `a`) as well as several others:
Conversion Description Example Result
l Convert a string to lowercase {foo!l} foo bar
u Convert a string to uppercase {foo!u} FOO BAR
c Capitalize a string, i.e. convert the first character to uppercase and all others to lowercase {foo!c} Foo bar
C Capitalize each word in a string {foo!C} Foo Bar
t Trim a string, i.e. remove leading and trailing whitespace characters {bar!t} FooBar
T Convert a datetime object to a unix timestamp {date!T} 1262304000
d Convert a unix timestamp to a datetime object {created!d} 2010-01-01 00:00:00
s Convert value to str {tags!s} ['sun', 'tree', 'water']
S Convert value to str while providing a human-readable representation for lists {tags!S} sun, tree, water
r Convert value to str using repr()
a Convert value to str using ascii()
## Format Specifiers Format specifiers can be used for advanced formatting by using the options provided by Python (see [Format Specification Mini-Language](https://docs.python.org/3/library/string.html#format-specification-mini-language)) like zero-filling a number (`{num:>03}`) or formatting a [`datetime`](https://docs.python.org/3/library/datetime.html#datetime.datetime) object (`{date:%Y%m%d}`), or with gallery-dl's extra formatting specifiers:
Format Specifier Description Example Result
?<before>/<after>/ Adds <before> and <after> to the actual value if it evaluates to True. Otherwise the whole replacement field becomes an empty string. {foo:?[/]/} [Foo Bar]
{empty:?[/]/}
L<maxlen>/<repl>/ Replaces the entire output with <repl> if its length exceeds <maxlen> {foo:L15/long/} Foo Bar
{foo:L3/long/} long
J<separator>/ Concatenates elements of a list with <separator> using str.join() {tags:J - /} sun - tree - water
R<old>/<new>/ Replaces all occurrences of <old> with <new> using str.replace() {foo:Ro/()/} F()() Bar
All special format specifiers (`?`, `L`, `J`, `R`) can be chained and combined with one another, but must always come before any standard format specifiers: For example `{foo:?//RF/B/Ro/e/> 10}` -> `   Bee Bar` - `?//` - Tests if `foo` has a value - `RF/B/` - Replaces `F` with `B` - `Ro/e/` - Replaces `o` with `e` - `> 10` - Left-fills the string with spaces until it is 10 characters long