NAME¶
String::Format - sprintf-like string formatting capabilities with arbitrary
format definitions
ABSTRACT¶
String::Format allows for sprintf-style formatting capabilities with arbitrary
format definitions
SYNOPSIS¶
use String::Format;
my %fruit = (
'a' => "apples",
'b' => "bannanas",
'g' => "grapefruits",
'm' => "melons",
'w' => "watermelons",
);
my $format = "I like %a, %b, and %g, but not %m or %w.";
print stringf($format, %fruit);
# prints:
# I like apples, bannanas, and grapefruits, but not melons or watermelons.
DESCRIPTION¶
String::Format lets you define arbitrary printf-like format sequences to be
expanded. This module would be most useful in configuration files and
reporting tools, where the results of a query need to be formatted in a
particular way. It was inspired by mutt's index_format and related directives
(see <
URL:http://www.mutt.org/doc/manual/manual-6.html#index_format>).
FUNCTIONS¶
stringf¶
String::Format exports a single function called stringf. stringf takes two
arguments: a format string (see FORMAT STRINGS, below) and a reference to a
hash of name => value pairs. These name => value pairs are what will be
expanded in the format string.
Format strings must match the following regular expression:
qr/
(% # leading '%'
(-)? # left-align, rather than right
(\d*)? # (optional) minimum field width
(?:\.(\d*))? # (optional) maximum field width
({.*?})? # (optional) stuff inside
(\S) # actual format character
)/x;
If the escape character specified does not exist in %args, then the original
string is used. The alignment, minimum width, and maximum width options
function identically to how they are defined in
sprintf(3) (any
variation is a bug, and should be reported).
Note that Perl's sprintf definition is a little more liberal than the above
regex; the deviations were intentional, and all deal with numeric formatting
(the #, 0, and + leaders were specifically left out).
The value attached to the key can be a scalar value or a subroutine reference;
if it is a subroutine reference, then anything between the '{' and '}' ($5 in
the above regex) will be passed as $_[0] to the subroutine reference. This
allows for entries such as this:
%args = (
d => sub { POSIX::strftime($_[0], localtime) },
);
Which can be invoked with this format string:
"It is %{%M:%S}d right now, on %{%A, %B %e}d."
And result in (for example):
It is 17:45 right now, on Monday, February 4.
Note that since the string is passed unmolested to the subroutine reference, and
strftime would Do The Right Thing with this data, the above format string
could be written as:
"It is %{%M:%S right now, on %A, %B %e}d."
By default, the formats 'n', 't', and '%' are defined to be a newline, tab, and
'%', respectively, if they are not already defined in the hashref of arguments
that gets passed it. So we can add carriage returns simply:
"It is %{%M:%S right now, on %A, %B %e}d.%n"
Because of how the string is parsed, the normal "\n" and
"\t" are turned into two characters each, and are not treated as a
newline and tab. This is a bug.
FACTORY METHOD¶
String::Format also supports a class method, named
stringfactory, which
will return reference to a "primed" subroutine. stringfatory should
be passed a reference to a hash of value; the returned subroutine will use
these values as the %args hash.
my $self = Some::Groovy::Package->new($$, $<, $^T);
my %formats = (
'i' => sub { $self->id },
'd' => sub { $self->date },
's' => sub { $self->subject },
'b' => sub { $self->body },
);
my $index_format = String::Format->stringfactory(\%formats);
print $index_format->($format1);
print $index_format->($format2);
This subroutine reference can be assigned to a local symbol table entry, and
called normally, of course:
*reformat = String::Format->stringfactory(\%formats);
my $reformed = reformat($format_string);
LICENSE¶
"String::Format" is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; version 2.
AUTHOR¶
darren chamberlain <darren@cpan.org>