ECMAScript proposal, specs, tests, and reference implementation for String.prototype.padStart/padEnd.
This initial proposal was drafted by @KevinGrandon with input from @rwaldron and @dherman. Updated spec drafted by @ljharb with input from @rwaldron, @allenwb, and @dherman.
This proposal is currently at stage 4 of the process.
Designated TC39 reviewers: @littledan @michaelficarra
Without a reasonable way to pad a string using native methods, working with JavaScript strings today is more painful than it should be. Without these functions, the language feels incomplete, and is a paper cut to what could be a very polished experience.
Due to common use, string padding functions exist in a majority of websites and frameworks. For example, nearly every app in FirefoxOS had implemented a left pad function, because they all needed some generic string padding operation.
It is highly probable that the majority of current string padding implementations are inefficient. Bringing this into the platform will improve performance of the web, and developer productivity as they no longer have to implement these common functions.
You can view the spec in markdown format or rendered as HTML.
For consistency with trimStart/trimRight, and
Update per November 2015 TC39 meeting: the names will be reduce
/reduceRight
, despite the existence of startsWith
/endsWith
, we have settled on padLeft
and padRight
.padStart
/padEnd
, trimLeft
/trimRight
will change to trimStart
/trimEnd
, and trimLeft
/trimRight
aliases will be added to Annex B for web compatibility.
While updating this proposal with spec language, we discussed at length whether the first parameter should determine the minimum length or the maximum length of the padded string. Specifically, "min length" semantics says 'foo'.padEnd(4, '12')
would output foo12
, and "max length" semantics would output foo1
. Since one of the primary use cases of padStart
/padEnd
is for formatting monospaced text in columns, and since "min length" semantics can be achieved via String#repeat
, we decided that "max length" was the far more useful approach.
Per #6, the only languages we found that support multiple character fill strings that provide both "left" and "right" functionality are Ruby and PHP. Both language’s form of “pad on the left” takes the first part of the fill string, not the last. The clear example of why this matters is: "abc".padStart(10, "0123456789")
- taking the last part of the fill string gives "3456789abc"
, whereas taking the first part gives "0123456abc"
. In other words, string.padStart(mask.length, mask)
should do what one expects.