The format() method can be used to change the alignment of the string. You have to do it with a format expression of the form :[fill_char][align_operator][width] where align_operator is one of:
\\< forces the field to be left-aligned within width.\\> forces the field to be right-aligned within width.^ forces the field to be centered within width.= forces the padding to be placed after the sign (numeric types only).fill_char (if omitted default is whitespace) is the character used for the padding.
'{:~<9s}, World'.format('Hello')
# 'Hello~~~~, World'
'{:~>9s}, World'.format('Hello')
# '~~~~Hello, World'
'{:~^9s}'.format('Hello')
# '~~Hello~~'
'{:0=6d}'.format(-123)
# '-00123'
Note: you could achieve the same results using the string functions ljust(), rjust(), center(), zfill(), however these functions are deprecated since version 2.5.