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String::Tagged(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation String::Tagged(3)

"String::Tagged" - string buffers with value tags on extents

 use String::Tagged;

 my $st = String::Tagged->new( "An important message" );

 $st->apply_tag( 3, 9, bold => 1 );

 $st->iter_substr_nooverlap(
    sub {
       my ( $substring, %tags ) = @_;

       print $tags{bold} ? "<b>$substring</b>"
                         : $substring;
    }
 );

This module implements an object class, instances of which store a (mutable) string buffer that supports tags. A tag is a name/value pair that applies to some non-empty extent of the underlying string.

The types of tag names ought to be strings, or at least values that are well-behaved as strings, as the names will often be used as the keys in hashes or applied to the "eq" operator.

The types of tag values are not restricted - any scalar will do. This could be a simple integer or string, ARRAY or HASH reference, or even a CODE reference containing an event handler of some kind.

Tags may be arbitrarily overlapped. Any given offset within the string has in effect, a set of uniquely named tags. Tags of different names are independent. For tags of the same name, only the latest, shortest tag takes effect.

For example, consider a string with three tags represented here:

 Here is my string with tags
 [-------------------------]  foo => 1
         [-------]            foo => 2
      [---]                   bar => 3

Every character in this string has a tag named "foo". The value of this tag is 2 for the words "my" and "string" and the space inbetween, and 1 elsewhere. Additionally, the words "is" and "my" and the space between them also have the tag "bar" with a value 3.

Since "String::Tagged" does not understand the significance of the tag values it therefore cannot detect if two neighbouring tags really contain the same semantic idea. Consider the following string:

 A string with words
 [-------]            type => "message"
          [--------]  type => "message"

This string contains two tags. "String::Tagged" will treat this as two different tag values as far as "iter_tags_nooverlap" is concerned, even though "get_tag_at" yields the same value for the "type" tag at any position in the string. The "merge_tags" method may be used to merge tag extents of tags that should be considered as equal.

I spent a lot of time considering the name for this module. It seems that a number of people across a number of languages all created similar functionality, though named very differently. For the benefit of keyword-based search tools and similar, here's a list of some other names this sort of object might be known by:
  • Extents
  • Overlays
  • Attribute or attributed strings
  • Markup
  • Out-of-band data

   $st = String::Tagged->new( $str )

Returns a new instance of a "String::Tagged" object. It will contain no tags. If the optional $str argument is supplied, the string buffer will be initialised from this value.

If $str is a "String::Tagged" object then it will be cloned, as if calling the "clone" method on it.

   $st = String::Tagged->new_tagged( $str, %tags )

Shortcut for creating a new "String::Tagged" object with the given tags applied to the entire length. The tags will not be anchored at either end.

   $new = String::Tagged->clone( $orig, %opts )

Returns a new instance of "String::Tagged" made by cloning the original, subject to the options provided. The returned instance will be in the requested class, which need not match the class of the original.

The following options are recognised:

only_tags => ARRAY
If present, gives an ARRAY reference containing tag names. Only those tags named here will be copied; others will be ignored.
except_tags => ARRAY
If present, gives an ARRAY reference containing tag names. All tags will be copied except those named here.
convert_tags => HASH
If present, gives a HASH reference containing tag conversion functions. For any tags in the original to be copied whose names appear in the hash, the name and value are passed into the corresponding function, which should return an even-sized key/value list giving a tag, or a list of tags, to apply to the new clone.

 my @new_tags = $convert_tags->{$orig_name}->( $orig_name, $orig_value )
 # Where @new_tags is ( $new_name, $new_value, $new_name_2, $new_value_2, ... )
    

As a further convenience, if the value for a given tag name is a plain string instead of a code reference, it gives the new name for the tag, and will be applied with its existing value.

If "only_tags" is being used too, then the source names of any tags to be converted must also be listed there, or they will not be copied.

   $new = $orig->clone( %args )

Called as an instance (rather than a class) method, the newly-cloned instance is returned in the same class as the original.

   $str = String::Tagged->from_sprintf( $format, @args )

Since version 0.15.

Returns a new instance of a "String::Tagged" object, initialised by formatting the supplied arguments using the supplied format.

The $format string is similar to that supported by the core "sprintf" operator, though a few features such as out-of-order argument indexing and vector formatting are missing. This format string may be a plain perl string, or an instance of "String::Tagged". In the latter case, any tags within it are preserved in the result.

In the case of a %s conversion, the value of the argument consumed may itself be a "String::Tagged" instance. In this case it will be appended to the returned object, preserving any tags within it.

All other conversions are handled individually by the core "sprintf" operator and appended to the result.

   $str = String::Tagged->join( $sep, @parts )

Since version 0.17.

Returns a new instance of a "String::Tagged" object, formed by concatenating each of the component piece together, joined with the separator string.

The result will be much like the core "join" function, except that it will preserve tags in the resulting string.

   $str = $st->str

   $str = "$st"

Returns the plain string contained within the object.

This method is also called for stringification; so the "String::Tagged" object can be used in a plain string interpolation such as

 my $message = String::Tagged->new( "Hello world" );
 print "My message is $message\n";

   $len = $st->length

   $len = length( $st )

Returns the length of the plain string. Because stringification works on this object class, the normal core "length" function works correctly on it.

   $str = $st->substr( $start, $len )

Returns a "String::Tagged" instance representing a section from within the given string, containing all the same tags at the same conceptual positions.

   $str = $st->plain_substr( $start, $len )

Returns as a plain perl string, the substring at the given position. This will be the same string data as returned by "substr", only as a plain string without the tags

   $st->apply_tag( $start, $len, $name, $value )

Apply the named tag value to the given extent. The tag will start on the character at the $start index, and continue for the next $len characters.

If $start is given as -1, the tag will be considered to start "before" the actual string. If $len is given as -1, the tag will be considered to end "after" end of the actual string. These special limits are used by "set_substr" when deciding whether to move a tag boundary. The start of any tag that starts "before" the string is never moved, even if more text is inserted at the beginning. Similarly, a tag which ends "after" the end of the string, will continue to the end even if more text is appended.

This method returns the $st object.

   $st->apply_tag( $e, $name, $value )

Alternatively, an existing extent object can be passed as the first argument instead of two integers. The new tag will apply at the given extent.

   $st->unapply_tag( $start, $len, $name )

Unapply the named tag value from the given extent. If the tag extends beyond this extent, then any partial fragment of the tag will be left in the string.

This method returns the $st object.

   $st->unapply_tag( $e, $name )

Alternatively, an existing extent object can be passed as the first argument instead of two integers.

   $st->delete_tag( $start, $len, $name )

Delete the named tag within the given extent. Entire tags are removed, even if they extend beyond this extent.

This method returns the $st object.

   $st->delete_tag( $e, $name )

Alternatively, an existing extent object can be passed as the first argument instead of two integers.

   $st->merge_tags( $eqsub )

Merge neighbouring or overlapping tags of the same name and equal values.

For each pair of tags of the same name that apply on neighbouring or overlapping extents, the $eqsub callback is called, as

  $equal = $eqsub->( $name, $value_a, $value_b )

If this function returns true then the tags are merged.

The equallity test function is free to perform any comparison of the values that may be relevant to the application; for example it may deeply compare referred structures and check for equivalence in some application-defined manner. In this case, the first tag of a pair is retained, the second is deleted. This may be relevant if the tag value is a reference to some object.

   $st->iter_extents( $callback, %opts )

Iterate the tags stored in the string. For each tag, the CODE reference in $callback is invoked once, being passed an extent object that represents the extent of the tag.

 $callback->( $extent, $tagname, $tagvalue )

Options passed in %opts may include:

start => INT
Start at the given position; defaults to 0.
end => INT
End after the given position; defaults to end of string. This option overrides "len".
len => INT
End after the given length beyond the start position; defaults to end of string. This option only applies if "end" is not given.
only => ARRAY
Select only the tags named in the given ARRAY reference.
except => ARRAY
Select all the tags except those named in the given ARRAY reference.

   $st->iter_tags( $callback, %opts )

Iterate the tags stored in the string. For each tag, the CODE reference in $callback is invoked once, being passed the start point and length of the tag.

 $callback->( $start, $length, $tagname, $tagvalue )

Options passed in %opts are the same as for "iter_extents".

   $st->iter_extents_nooverlap( $callback, %opts )

Iterate non-overlapping extents of tags stored in the string. The CODE reference in $callback is invoked for each extent in the string where no tags change. The entire set of tags active in that extent is given to the callback. Because the extent covers possibly-multiple tags, it will not define the "anchor_before" and "anchor_after" flags.

 $callback->( $extent, %tags )

The callback will be invoked over the entire length of the string, including any extents with no tags applied.

Options may be passed in %opts to control the range of the string iterated over, in the same way as the "iter_extents" method.

If the "only" or "except" filters are applied, then only the tags that survive filtering will be present in the %tags hash. Tags that are excluded by the filtering will not be present, nor will their bounds be used to split the string into extents.

   $st->iter_tags_nooverlap( $callback, %opts )

Iterate extents of the string using "iter_extents_nooverlap", but passing the start and length of each extent to the callback instead of the extent object.

 $callback->( $start, $length, %tags )

Options may be passed in %opts to control the range of the string iterated over, in the same way as the "iter_extents" method.

   $st->iter_substr_nooverlap( $callback, %opts )

Iterate extents of the string using "iter_extents_nooverlap", but passing the substring of data instead of the extent object.

 $callback->( $substr, %tags )

Options may be passed in %opts to control the range of the string iterated over, in the same way as the "iter_extents" method.

   @names = $st->tagnames

Returns the set of tag names used in the string, in no particular order.

   $tags = $st->get_tags_at( $pos )

Returns a HASH reference of all the tag values active at the given position.

   $value = $st->get_tag_at( $pos, $name )

Returns the value of the named tag at the given position, or "undef" if the tag is not applied there.

   $extent = $st->get_tag_extent( $pos, $name )

If the named tag applies to the given position, returns the extent of the tag at that position. If it does not, "undef" is returned. If an extent is returned it will define the "anchor_before" and "anchor_after" flags if appropriate.

   $extent = $st->get_tag_missing_extent( $pos, $name )

If the named tag does not apply at the given position, returns the extent of the string around that position that does not have the tag. If it does exist, "undef" is returned. If an extent is returned it will not define the "anchor_before" and "anchor_after" flags, as these do not make sense for the range in which a tag is absent.

   $st->set_substr( $start, $len, $newstr )

Modifies a extent of the underlying plain string to that given. The extents of tags in the string are adjusted to cope with the modified region, and the adjustment in length.

Tags entirely before the replaced extent remain unchanged.

Tags entirely within the replaced extent are deleted.

Tags entirely after the replaced extent are moved by appropriate amount to ensure they still apply to the same characters as before.

Tags that start before and end after the extent remain, and have their lengths suitably adjusted.

Tags that span just the start or end of the extent, but not both, are truncated, so as to remove the part of the tag applied on the modified extent but preserving that applied outside.

If $newstr is a "String::Tagged" object, then its tags will be applied to $st as appropriate. Edge-anchored tags in $newstr will not be extended through $st, though they will apply as edge-anchored if they now sit at the edge of the new string.

   $st->insert( $start, $newstr )

Insert the given string at the given position. A shortcut around "set_substr".

If $newstr is a "String::Tagged" object, then its tags will be applied to $st as appropriate. If $start is 0, any before-anchored tags in will become before-anchored in $st.

   $st->append( $newstr )

   $st .= $newstr

Append to the underlying plain string. A shortcut around "set_substr".

If $newstr is a "String::Tagged" object, then its tags will be applied to $st as appropriate. Any after-anchored tags in will become after-anchored in $st.

   $st->append_tagged( $newstr, %tags )

Append to the underlying plain string, and apply the given tags to the newly-inserted extent.

Returns $st itself so that the method may be easily chained.

   $ret = $st->concat( $other )

   $ret = $st . $other

Returns a new "String::Tagged" containing the two strings concatenated together, preserving any tags present. This method overloads normal string concatenation operator, so expressions involving "String::Tagged" values retain their tags.

This method or operator tries to respect subclassing; preferring to return a new object of a subclass if either argument or operand is a subclass of "String::Tagged". If they are both subclasses, it will prefer the type of the invocant or first operand.

   @subs = $st->matches( $regexp )

Returns a list of substrings (as "String::Tagged" instances) for every non-overlapping match of the given $regexp.

This could be used, for example, to build a formatted string from a formatted template containing variable expansions:

 my $template = ...
 my %vars = ...

 my $ret = String::Tagged->new;
 foreach my $m ( $template->matches( qr/\$\w+|[^$]+/ ) ) {
    if( $m =~ m/^\$(\w+)$/ ) {
       $ret->append_tagged( $vars{$1}, %{ $m->get_tags_at( 0 ) } );
    }
    else {
       $ret->append( $m );
    }
 }

This iterates segments of the template containing variables expansions starting with a "$" symbol, and replaces them with values from the %vars hash, careful to preserve all the formatting tags from the original template string.

   @parts = $st->split( $regexp, $limit )

Returns a list of substrings by applying the regexp to the string content; similar to the core perl "split" function. If $limit is supplied, the method will stop at that number of elements, returning the entire remainder of the input string as the final element. If the $regexp contains a capture group then the content of the first one will be added to the return list as well.

   $ret = $st->sprintf( @args )

Since version 0.15.

Returns a new string by using the given instance as the format string for a "from_sprintf" constructor call. The returned instance will be of the same class as the invocant.

   $ret = $st->debug_sprintf

Returns a representation of the string data and all the tags, suitable for debug printing or other similar use. This is a format such as is given in the DESCRIPTION section above.

The output will consist of a number of lines, the first containing the plain underlying string, then one line per tag. The line shows the extent of the tag given by "[---]" markers, or a "|" in the special case of a tag covering only a single character. Special markings of "<" and ">" indicate tags which are "before" or "after" anchored.

For example:

  Hello, world
  [---]         word       => 1
 <[----------]> everywhere => 1
        |       space      => 1

These objects represent a range of characters within the containing "String::Tagged" object. The range they represent is fixed at the time of creation. If the containing string is modified by a call to "set_substr" then the effect on the extent object is not defined. These objects should be considered as relatively short-lived - used briefly for the purpose of querying the result of an operation, then discarded soon after.

Returns the containing "String::Tagged" object.

Returns the start index of the extent. This is the index of the first character within the extent.

Returns the end index of the extent. This is the index of the first character beyond the end of the extent.

True if this extent begins "before" the start of the string. Only certain methods return extents with this flag defined.

True if this extent ends "after" the end of the string. Only certain methods return extents with this flag defined.

Returns the number of characters within the extent.

Returns the substring contained by the extent.

Returns the substring of the underlying plain string buffer contained by the extent.

  • There are likely variations on the rules for "set_substr" that could equally apply to some uses of tagged strings. Consider whether the behaviour of modification is chosen per-method, per-tag, or per-string.
  • Consider how to implement a clone from one tag format to another which wants to merge multiple different source tags together into a single new one.

Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>
2022-04-07 perl v5.32.1

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