Interpolated strings is one of the new features of C# 6.0.
According to MSDN, the syntax of the embedded C# expressions can contain an optional, comma-separated value, deemed as <optional-comma-field-width>
in the documentation.
Unfortunately I didn't find what this field is for.
From its name one might think that this value sets the maximal size of the "interpolated" field, but when I try the following expression:
var p = Process.GetCurrentProcess();
Console.WriteLine($"Process name is {p.ProcessName, 5}");
I get the following output:
Process name is LINQPad.UserQuery
It's the minimum width to use for that field, not the maximum. Since your string is longer than the 5 characters you specify for the width, the field is extended to the length of your string. You'll see the difference more dramatically with a longer width:
var p = Process.GetCurrentProcess();
$"Process name is {p.ProcessName, 50}".Dump();
yields:
Process name is LINQPad.UserQuery
A positive field size is right-justified; a negative field size is left-justified.
The documentation is better on the Composite Formatting page of MSDN:
The optional alignment component is a signed integer indicating the preferred formatted field width. If the value of alignment is less than the length of the formatted string, alignment is ignored and the length of the formatted string is used as the field width. The formatted data in the field is right-aligned if alignment is positive and left-aligned if alignment is negative. If padding is necessary, white space is used. The comma is required if alignment is specified.