Align printf output in Java
You can try the below example. Do use '-' before the width to ensure left indentation. By default they will be right indented; which may not suit your purpose.
System.out.printf("%2d. %-20s $%.2f%n", i + 1, BOOK_TYPE[i], COST[i]);
Format String Syntax: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/Formatter.html#syntax
Formatting Numeric Print Output: https://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/data/numberformat.html
PS: This could go as a comment to DwB's answer, but i still don't have permissions to comment and so answering it.
A simple solution that springs to mind is to have a String
block of spaces:
String indent = " "; // 20 spaces.
When printing out a string, compute the actual indent and add it to the end:
String output = "Newspaper";
output += indent.substring(0, indent.length - output.length);
This will mediate the number of spaces to the string, and put them all in the same column.
Format specifications for printf and printf-like methods take an optional width parameter.
System.out.printf( "%10d. %25s $%25.2f\n",
i + 1, BOOK_TYPE[i], COST[i] );
Adjust widths to desired values.
Here's a potential solution that will set the width of the bookType column (i.e. format of the bookTypes value) based on the longest bookTypes value.
public class Test {
public static void main(String[] args) {
String[] bookTypes = { "Newspaper", "Paper Back", "Hardcover book", "Electronic book", "Magazine" };
double[] costs = { 1.0, 7.5, 10.0, 2.0, 3.0 };
// Find length of longest bookTypes value.
int maxLengthItem = 0;
boolean firstValue = true;
for (String bookType : bookTypes) {
maxLengthItem = (firstValue) ? bookType.length() : Math.max(maxLengthItem, bookType.length());
firstValue = false;
}
// Display rows of data
for (int i = 0; i < bookTypes.length; i++) {
// Use %6.2 instead of %.2 so that decimals line up, assuming max
// book cost of $999.99. Change 6 to a different number if max cost
// is different
String format = "%d. %-" + Integer.toString(maxLengthItem) + "s \t\t $%9.2f\n";
System.out.printf(format, i + 1, bookTypes[i], costs[i]);
}
}
}
You can refer to this blog for printing formatted coloured text on console
https://javaforqa.wordpress.com/java-print-coloured-table-on-console/
public class ColourConsoleDemo {
/**
*
* @param args
*
* "\033[0m BLACK" will colour the whole line
*
* "\033[37m WHITE\033[0m" will colour only WHITE.
* For colour while Opening --> "\033[37m" and closing --> "\033[0m"
*
*
*/
public static void main(String[] args) {
// TODO code application logic here
System.out.println("\033[0m BLACK");
System.out.println("\033[31m RED");
System.out.println("\033[32m GREEN");
System.out.println("\033[33m YELLOW");
System.out.println("\033[34m BLUE");
System.out.println("\033[35m MAGENTA");
System.out.println("\033[36m CYAN");
System.out.println("\033[37m WHITE\033[0m");
//printing the results
String leftAlignFormat = "| %-20s | %-7d | %-7d | %-7d |%n";
System.out.format("|---------Test Cases with Steps Summary -------------|%n");
System.out.format("+----------------------+---------+---------+---------+%n");
System.out.format("| Test Cases |Passed |Failed |Skipped |%n");
System.out.format("+----------------------+---------+---------+---------+%n");
String formattedMessage = "TEST_01".trim();
leftAlignFormat = "| %-20s | %-7d | %-7d | %-7d |%n";
System.out.print("\033[31m"); // Open print red
System.out.printf(leftAlignFormat, formattedMessage, 2, 1, 0);
System.out.print("\033[0m"); // Close print red
System.out.format("+----------------------+---------+---------+---------+%n");
}