table of contents
Devel::PartialDump(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Devel::PartialDump(3pm) |
NAME¶
Devel::PartialDump - Partial dumping of data structures, optimized for argument printing.VERSION¶
version 0.18SYNOPSIS¶
use Devel::PartialDump; sub foo { print "foo called with args: " . Devel::PartialDump->new->dump(@_); } use Devel::PartialDump qw(warn); # warn is overloaded to create a concise dump instead of stringifying $some_bad_data warn "this made a boo boo: ", $some_bad_data
DESCRIPTION¶
This module is a data dumper optimized for logging of arbitrary parameters.It attempts to truncate overly verbose data, in a way that is hopefully more useful for diagnostics warnings than
warn Dumper(@stuff);
Unlike other data dumping modules there are no attempts at correctness or cross referencing, this is only meant to provide a slightly deeper look into the data in question.
There is a default recursion limit, and a default truncation of long lists, and the dump is formatted on one line (new lines in strings are escaped), to aid in readability.
You can enable it temporarily by importing functions like "warn", "croak" etc to get more informative errors during development, or even use it as:
BEGIN { local $@; eval "use Devel::PartialDump qw(...)" }
to get DWIM formatting only if it's installed, without introducing a dependency.
SAMPLE OUTPUT¶
- "foo"
-
"foo"
- "foo" => "bar"
-
foo: "bar"
- "foo => "bar", gorch => [ 1, "bah" ]"
-
foo: "bar", gorch: [ 1, "bah" ]
- "[ { foo => ["bar"] } ]"
-
[ { foo: ARRAY(0x9b265d0) } ]
- "[ 1 .. 10 ]"
-
[ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, ... ]
- "foo\nbar"
-
"foo\nbar"
- ""foo" . chr(1)"
-
"foo\x{1}"
ATTRIBUTES¶
- max_length
- The maximum character length of the dump.
Anything bigger than this will be truncated.
Not defined by default.
- max_elements
- The maximum number of elements (array elements or pairs in a hash) to
print.
Defaults to 6.
- max_depth
- The maximum level of recursion.
Defaults to 2.
- stringify
- Whether or not to let objects stringify themselves, instead of using
"StrVal" in overload to avoid side effects.
Defaults to false (no overloading).
- pairs
- Whether or not to autodetect named args as pairs in the main "dump" function. If this attribute is true, and the top level value list is even sized, and every odd element is not a reference, then it will dumped as pairs instead of a list.
EXPORTS¶
All exports are optional, nothing is exported by default.This module uses Sub::Exporter, so exports can be renamed, curried, etc.
- warn
- show
- show_scalar
- croak
- carp
- confess
- cluck
- dump
- See the various methods for behavior documentation.
These methods will use $Devel::PartialDump::default_dumper as the invocant if the first argument is not blessed and "isa" Devel::PartialDump, so they can be used as functions too.
Particularly "warn" can be used as a drop in replacement for the built in warn:
warn "blah blah: ", $some_data;
by importing
use Devel::PartialDump qw(warn);
$some_data will be have some of it's data dumped.
- $default_dumper
- The default dumper object to use for export style calls.
Can be assigned to to alter behavior globally.
This is generally useful when using the "warn" export as a drop in replacement for "CORE::warn".
METHODS¶
- warn @blah
- A wrapper for "dump" that prints strings plainly.
- show @blah
- show_scalar $x
- Like "warn", but instead of returning
the value from "warn" it returns its
arguments, so it can be used in the middle of an expression.
Note that
my $x = show foo();
will actually evaluate "foo" in list context, so if you only want to dump a single element and retain scalar context use
my $x = show_scalar foo();
which has a prototype of "$" (as opposed to taking a list).
This is similar to the venerable Ingy's fabulous and amazing XXX module.
- carp
- croak
- confess
- cluck
- Drop in replacements for Carp exports, that format their arguments like "warn".
- dump @stuff
- Returns a one line, human readable, concise dump of
@stuff.
If called in void context, will "warn" with the dump.
Truncates the dump according to "max_length" if specified.
- dump_as_list $depth, @stuff
- dump_as_pairs $depth, @stuff
- Dump @stuff using the various formatting
functions.
Dump as pairs returns comma delimited pairs with "=>" between the key and the value.
Dump as list returns a comma delimited dump of the values.
- format $depth, $value
- format_key $depth, $key
- format_object $depth, $object
- format_ref $depth, $Ref
- format_array $depth, $array_ref
- format_hash $depth, $hash_ref
- format_undef $depth, undef
- format_string $depth, $string
- format_number $depth, $number
- quote $string
- The various formatting methods.
You can override these to provide a custom format.
"format_array" and "format_hash" recurse with "$depth + 1" into "dump_as_list" and "dump_as_pairs" respectively.
"format_ref" delegates to "format_array" and "format_hash" and does the "max_depth" tracking. It will simply stringify the ref if the recursion limit has been reached.
AUTHOR¶
יובל קוג'מן (Yuval Kogman) <nothingmuch@woobling.org>CONTRIBUTORS¶
- Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>
- Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>
- Steven Lee <stevenwh.lee@gmail.com>
- Jesse Luehrs <doy@tozt.net>
- David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>
- Leo Lapworth <web@web-teams-computer.local>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
This software is copyright (c) 2008 by יובל קוג'מן (Yuval Kogman).This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
2016-02-21 | perl v5.22.1 |