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NAMEString::Formatter::Cookbook - ways to put String::Formatter to useVERSIONversion 0.102084OVERVIEWString::Formatter is a pretty simple system for building formatting routines, but it can be hard to get started without an idea of the sort of things that are possible.BASIC RECIPESconstants onlyThe simplest stringf interface you can provide is one that just formats constant strings, allowing the user to put them inside other fixed strings with alignment:use String::Formatter stringf => { input_processor => 'forbid_input', codes => { a => 'apples', b => 'bananas', w => 'watermelon', }, }; print stringf('I eat %a and %b but never %w.'); # Output: # I eat apples and bananas but never watermelon. If the user tries to parameterize the string by passing arguments after the format string, an exception will be raised. sprintf-like conversionsAnother common pattern is to create a routine that behaves like Perl's "sprintf", but with a different set of conversion routines. (It will also almost certainly have much simpler semantics than Perl's wildly complex behavior.)use String::Formatter stringf => { codes => { s => sub { $_ }, # string itself l => sub { length }, # length of input string e => sub { /[^\x00-\x7F]/ ? '8bit' : '7bit' }, # ascii-safeness }, }; print stringf( "My name is %s. I am about %l feet tall. I use an %e alphabet.\n", 'Ricardo', 'ffffff', 'abcchdefghijklllmnñopqrrrstuvwxyz', ); # Output: # My name is Ricardo. I am about 6 feet tall. I use an 8bit alphabet. Warning: The behavior of positional string replacement when the conversion codes mix constant strings and code references is currently poorly nailed-down. Do not rely on it yet. named conversionsThis recipe acts a bit like Python's format operator when given a dictionary. Rather than matching format code position with input ordering, inputs can be chosen by name.use String::Formatter stringf => { input_processor => 'require_named_input', string_replacer => 'named_replace', codes => { s => sub { $_ }, # string itself l => sub { length }, # length of input string e => sub { /[^\x00-\x7F]/ ? '8bit' : '7bit' }, # ascii-safeness }, }; print stringf( "My %{which}s name is %{name}s. My name is %{name}l letters long.", { which => 'first', name => 'Marvin', }, ); # Output: # My first name is Marvin. My name is 6 letters long. Because this is a useful recipe, there is a shorthand for it: use String::Formatter named_stringf => { codes => { s => sub { $_ }, # string itself l => sub { length }, # length of input string e => sub { /[^\x00-\x7F]/ ? '8bit' : '7bit' }, # ascii-safeness }, }; method callsSome objects provide methods to stringify them flexibly. For example, many objects that represent timestamps allow you to call "strftime" or something similar. The "method_replace" string replacer comes in handy here:use String::Formatter stringf => { input_processor => 'require_single_input', string_replacer => 'method_replace', codes => { f => 'strftime', c => 'format_cldr', s => sub { "$_[0]" }, }, }; print stringf( "%{%Y-%m-%d}f is also %{yyyy-MM-dd}c. Default string is %s.", DateTime->now, ); # Output: # 2009-11-17 is also 2009-11-17. Default string is 2009-11-17T15:35:11. This recipe is available as the export "method_stringf": use String::Formatter method_stringf => { codes => { f => 'strftime', c => 'format_cldr', s => sub { "$_[0]" }, }, }; You can easily use this to implement an actual stringf-like method: package MyClass; use String::Formatter method_stringf => { -as => '_stringf', codes => { f => 'strftime', c => 'format_cldr', s => sub { "$_[0]" }, }, }; sub format { my ($self, $format) = @_; return _stringf($format, $self); } AUTHORS
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSEThis software is Copyright (c) 2013 by Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>.This is free software, licensed under: The GNU General Public License, Version 2, June 1991
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