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TabularDisplay(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
TabularDisplay(3) |
Text::TabularDisplay - Display text in formatted table output
use Text::TabularDisplay;
my $table = Text::TabularDisplay->new(@columns);
$table->add(@row)
while (@row = $sth->fetchrow);
print $table->render;
+----+--------------+
| id | name |
+----+--------------+
| 1 | Tom |
| 2 | Dick |
| 3 | Barry |
| | (aka Bazza) |
| 4 | Harry |
+----+--------------+
Text::TabularDisplay simplifies displaying textual data in a table. The output
is identical to the columnar display of query results in the mysql text
monitor. For example, this data:
1, "Tom Jones", "(666) 555-1212"
2, "Barnaby Jones", "(666) 555-1213"
3, "Bridget Jones", "(666) 555-1214"
Used like so:
my $t = Text::TabularDisplay->new(qw(id name phone));
$t->add(1, "Tom Jones", "(666) 555-1212");
$t->add(2, "Barnaby Jones", "(666) 555-1213");
$t->add(3, "Bridget Jones", "(666) 555-1214");
print $t->render;
Produces:
+----+---------------+----------------+
| id | name | phone |
+----+---------------+----------------+
| 1 | Tom Jones | (666) 555-1212 |
| 2 | Barnaby Jones | (666) 555-1213 |
| 3 | Bridget Jones | (666) 555-1214 |
+----+---------------+----------------+
Text::TabularDisplay has four primary methods: new(), columns(),
add(), and render(). new() creates a new
Text::TabularDisplay instance; columns() sets the column headers in the
output table; add() adds data to the instance; and render()
returns a formatted string representation of the instance.
There are also a few auxiliary convenience methods:
clone(), items(), reset(), populate(), and
paginate().
- new
- A Text::TabularDisplay instance can be created with column names passed as
constructor args, so these two calls produce similar objects:
my $t1 = Text::TabularDisplay->new;
$t1->columns(qw< one two >);
my $t2 = Text::TabularDisplay->new(qw< one two >);
Calling new() on a Text::TabularDisplay instance
returns a clone of the object. See "clone" in
Text::TabularDisplay.
- columns
- Gets or sets the column names for an instance. This method is called
automatically by the constructor with any parameters that are passed to
the constructor (if any are passed).
When called in scalar context, columns() returns the
number of columns in the instance, rather than the columns
themselves. In list context, copies of the columns names are returned;
the names of the columns cannot be modified this way.
- add
- Takes a list of items and appends it to the list of items to be displayed.
add() can also take a reference to an array, so that large arrays
don't need to be copied.
As elements are processed, add() maintains the width of
each column so that the resulting table has the correct dimensions.
add() returns $self, so that
calls to add() can be chained:
$t->add(@one)->add(@two)->add(@three);
- render
- render() does most of the actual work. It returns a string
containing the data added via add(), formatted as a table, with a
header containing the column names.
render() does not change the state of the object; it
can be called multiple times, with identical output (including identical
running time: the output of render is not cached).
If there are no columns defined, then the output table does
not contains a row of column names. Compare these two sequences:
my $t = Text::TabularDisplay->new;
$t->add(qw< 1 2 3 4 >);
$t->add(qw< 5 6 7 8 >);
print $t->render;
$t->columns(qw< one two three four >);
print $t->render;
# Example 1 output
+---+---+---+---+
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
+---+---+---+---+
# Example 2 output
+-----+-----+-------+------+
| one | two | three | four |
+-----+-----+-------+------+
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
| 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
+-----+-----+-------+------+
render() takes optional $start
and $end arguments; these indicate the start and
end indexes for the data to be rendered. This can be used for
paging and the like:
$t->add(1, 2, 3)->add(4, 5, 6)->add(7, 8, 9)->add(10, 11, 12);
print $t->render(0, 1), "\n";
print $t->render(2, 3), "\n";
Produces:
+-------+--------+-------+
| First | Second | Third |
+-------+--------+-------+
| 1 | 2 | 3 |
| 4 | 5 | 6 |
+-------+--------+-------+
+-------+--------+-------+
| First | Second | Third |
+-------+--------+-------+
| 7 | 8 | 9 |
| 10 | 11 | 12 |
+-------+--------+-------+
As an aside, note the chaining of calls to add().
The elements in the table are padded such that there is the
same number of items in each row, including the header. Thus:
$t->columns(qw< One Two >);
print $t->render;
+-----+-----+----+
| One | Two | |
+-----+-----+----+
| 1 | 2 | 3 |
| 4 | 5 | 6 |
| 7 | 8 | 9 |
| 10 | 11 | 12 |
+-----+-----+----+
And:
$t->columns(qw< One Two Three Four>);
print $t->render;
+-----+-----+-------+------+
| One | Two | Three | Four |
+-----+-----+-------+------+
| 1 | 2 | 3 | |
| 4 | 5 | 6 | |
| 7 | 8 | 9 | |
| 10 | 11 | 12 | |
+-----+-----+-------+------+
- clone()
- The clone() method returns an identical copy of a
Text::TabularDisplay instance, completely separate from the cloned
instance.
- items()
- The items() method returns the number of elements currently stored
in the data structure:
printf "There are %d elements in \$t.\n", $t->items;
- reset()
- Reset deletes the data from the instance, including columns. If passed
arguments, it passes them to columns(), just like
new().
- populate()
- populate() as a special case of add(); populate()
expects a reference to an array of references to arrays, such as returned
by DBI's selectall_arrayref method:
$sql = "SELECT " . join(", ", @c) . " FROM mytable";
$t->columns(@c);
$t->populate($dbh->selectall_arrayref($sql));
This is for convenience only; the implementation maps this to
multiple calls to add().
Text::TabularDisplay assumes it is handling strings, and does stringy things
with the data, like length() and sprintf(). Non-character data
can be passed in, of course, but will be treated as strings; this may have
ramifications for objects that implement overloading.
The biggest issue, though, is that this module duplicates a some
of the functionality of Data::ShowTable. Of course, Data::ShowTable is a
large, complex monolithic tool that does a lot of things, while
Text::TabularDisplay is small and fast.
darren chamberlain <darren@cpan.org>
The following people have contributed patches, suggestions, tests, feedback, or
good karma:
David N. Blank-Edelman
Eric Cholet
Ken Youens-Clark
Michael Fowler
Paul Cameron
Prakash Kailasa
Slaven Rezic
Harlan Lieberman-Berg
Patrick Kuijvenhoven
Miko O'Sullivan
This documentation describes
"Text::TabularDisplay" version 1.38.
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