# std::formatter ``` namespace std { template <> struct formatter; } ``` Specialization to make JSON values formattable with [`std::format`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/utility/format/format) (and the other members of C++20's `` header, such as `std::format_to`). A subset of the [standard format spec grammar](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/utility/format/spec) is supported, repurposed for JSON pretty-printing; any other spec component (sign, the `0` flag, precision, `L`, a dynamic width such as `"{:{}}"`, or a trailing type character) throws [`std::format_error`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/utility/format/format_error): - `"{}"` serializes the value the same way as [`dump()`](https://json.nlohmann.me/api/basic_json/dump/index.md) (compact, no whitespace). - `"{:#}"` ("alternate form") serializes the value the same way as `dump(4)` (pretty-printed with an indent of 4). - A width, with or without `"#"` (e.g. `"{:2}"` or `"{:#2}"`), serializes the value the same way as `dump(width)` — a width on its own implies pretty-printing, since an indent size has no meaning for compact output. - `fill-and-align` (e.g. `"{:.>#}"` or `"{:.>3}"`) picks a custom indent character, the same way as `dump(indent, indent_char)`. The alignment direction itself (`'<'`, `'>'`, `'^'`) has no separate meaning for JSON values — only the fill character before it is used, and any of the three directions is accepted. This specialization is only available for `char`-based JSON values and only if the standard library provides ``, controlled by the [`JSON_HAS_STD_FORMAT`](https://json.nlohmann.me/api/macros/json_has_std_format/index.md) macro. ## Examples Example The example shows how to format JSON values with `std::format`. ``` #include #include #include using json = nlohmann::json; int main() { json j = {{"one", 1}, {"two", 2}}; // compact formatting, like dump() std::cout << std::format("{}", j) << "\n\n"; // pretty-printed formatting, like dump(4) std::cout << std::format("{:#}", j) << "\n\n"; // a width sets the indent, like dump(2) std::cout << std::format("{:2}", j) << "\n\n"; // fill-and-align sets the indent character, like dump(4, '.') std::cout << std::format("{:.>#}", j) << std::endl; } ``` Output: ``` {"one":1,"two":2} { "one": 1, "two": 2 } { "one": 1, "two": 2 } { ...."one": 1, ...."two": 2 } ``` ## See also - [dump](https://json.nlohmann.me/api/basic_json/dump/index.md) - serialization - [operator\<<(std::ostream&)](https://json.nlohmann.me/api/operator_ltlt/index.md) - serialize to stream - [format_as](https://json.nlohmann.me/api/basic_json/format_as/index.md) - customization point used by `fmt::format` (fmtlib) - [Serialization](https://json.nlohmann.me/features/serialization/index.md) - the serialization article ## Version history - Added in version 3.13.0.