How do I put a variable inside a string?

I would like to put an int into a string. This is what I am doing at the moment:

num = 40
plot.savefig('hanning40.pdf') #problem line

I have to run the program for several different numbers, so I'd like to do a loop. But inserting the variable like this doesn't work:

plot.savefig('hanning', num, '.pdf')

How do I insert a variable into a Python string?


Oh, the many, many ways...

String concatenation:

plot.savefig('hanning' + str(num) + '.pdf')

Conversion Specifier:

plot.savefig('hanning%s.pdf' % num)

Using local variable names:

plot.savefig('hanning%(num)s.pdf' % locals()) # Neat trick

Using str.format():

plot.savefig('hanning{0}.pdf'.format(num)) # Note: This is the preferred way since 3.6

Using f-strings:

plot.savefig(f'hanning{num}.pdf') # added in Python 3.6

This is the new preferred way:

  • PEP-502
  • RealPython
  • PEP-536

Using string.Template:

plot.savefig(string.Template('hanning${num}.pdf').substitute(locals()))

plot.savefig('hanning(%d).pdf' % num)

The % operator, when following a string, allows you to insert values into that string via format codes (the %d in this case). For more details, see the Python documentation:

https://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html#printf-style-string-formatting


With the introduction of formatted string literals ("f-strings" for short) in Python 3.6, it is now possible to write this with a briefer syntax:

>>> name = "Fred"
>>> f"He said his name is {name}."
'He said his name is Fred.'

With the example given in the question, it would look like this

plot.savefig(f'hanning{num}.pdf')