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- =head1 NAME
-
- perlform - Perl formats
-
- =head1 DESCRIPTION
-
- Perl has a mechanism to help you generate simple reports and charts. To
- facilitate this, Perl helps you code up your output page close to how it
- will look when it's printed. It can keep track of things like how many
- lines are on a page, what page you're on, when to print page headers,
- etc. Keywords are borrowed from FORTRAN: format() to declare and write()
- to execute; see their entries in L<perlfunc>. Fortunately, the layout is
- much more legible, more like BASIC's PRINT USING statement. Think of it
- as a poor man's nroff(1).
-
- Formats, like packages and subroutines, are declared rather than
- executed, so they may occur at any point in your program. (Usually it's
- best to keep them all together though.) They have their own namespace
- apart from all the other "types" in Perl. This means that if you have a
- function named "Foo", it is not the same thing as having a format named
- "Foo". However, the default name for the format associated with a given
- filehandle is the same as the name of the filehandle. Thus, the default
- format for STDOUT is named "STDOUT", and the default format for filehandle
- TEMP is named "TEMP". They just look the same. They aren't.
-
- Output record formats are declared as follows:
-
- format NAME =
- FORMLIST
- .
-
- If name is omitted, format "STDOUT" is defined. FORMLIST consists of
- a sequence of lines, each of which may be one of three types:
-
- =over 4
-
- =item 1.
-
- A comment, indicated by putting a '#' in the first column.
-
- =item 2.
-
- A "picture" line giving the format for one output line.
-
- =item 3.
-
- An argument line supplying values to plug into the previous picture line.
-
- =back
-
- Picture lines are printed exactly as they look, except for certain fields
- that substitute values into the line. Each field in a picture line starts
- with either "@" (at) or "^" (caret). These lines do not undergo any kind
- of variable interpolation. The at field (not to be confused with the array
- marker @) is the normal kind of field; the other kind, caret fields, are used
- to do rudimentary multi-line text block filling. The length of the field
- is supplied by padding out the field with multiple "E<lt>", "E<gt>", or "|"
- characters to specify, respectively, left justification, right
- justification, or centering. If the variable would exceed the width
- specified, it is truncated.
-
- As an alternate form of right justification, you may also use "#"
- characters (with an optional ".") to specify a numeric field. This way
- you can line up the decimal points. If any value supplied for these
- fields contains a newline, only the text up to the newline is printed.
- Finally, the special field "@*" can be used for printing multi-line,
- nontruncated values; it should appear by itself on a line.
-
- The values are specified on the following line in the same order as
- the picture fields. The expressions providing the values should be
- separated by commas. The expressions are all evaluated in a list context
- before the line is processed, so a single list expression could produce
- multiple list elements. The expressions may be spread out to more than
- one line if enclosed in braces. If so, the opening brace must be the first
- token on the first line. If an expression evaluates to a number with a
- decimal part, and if the corresponding picture specifies that the decimal
- part should appear in the output (that is, any picture except multiple "#"
- characters B<without> an embedded "."), the character used for the decimal
- point is B<always> determined by the current LC_NUMERIC locale. This
- means that, if, for example, the run-time environment happens to specify a
- German locale, "," will be used instead of the default ".". See
- L<perllocale> and L<"WARNINGS"> for more information.
-
- Picture fields that begin with ^ rather than @ are treated specially.
- With a # field, the field is blanked out if the value is undefined. For
- other field types, the caret enables a kind of fill mode. Instead of an
- arbitrary expression, the value supplied must be a scalar variable name
- that contains a text string. Perl puts as much text as it can into the
- field, and then chops off the front of the string so that the next time
- the variable is referenced, more of the text can be printed. (Yes, this
- means that the variable itself is altered during execution of the write()
- call, and is not returned.) Normally you would use a sequence of fields
- in a vertical stack to print out a block of text. You might wish to end
- the final field with the text "...", which will appear in the output if
- the text was too long to appear in its entirety. You can change which
- characters are legal to break on by changing the variable C<$:> (that's
- $FORMAT_LINE_BREAK_CHARACTERS if you're using the English module) to a
- list of the desired characters.
-
- Using caret fields can produce variable length records. If the text
- to be formatted is short, you can suppress blank lines by putting a
- "~" (tilde) character anywhere in the line. The tilde will be translated
- to a space upon output. If you put a second tilde contiguous to the
- first, the line will be repeated until all the fields on the line are
- exhausted. (If you use a field of the at variety, the expression you
- supply had better not give the same value every time forever!)
-
- Top-of-form processing is by default handled by a format with the
- same name as the current filehandle with "_TOP" concatenated to it.
- It's triggered at the top of each page. See L<perlfunc/write>.
-
- Examples:
-
- # a report on the /etc/passwd file
- format STDOUT_TOP =
- Passwd File
- Name Login Office Uid Gid Home
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
- .
- format STDOUT =
- @<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< @||||||| @<<<<<<@>>>> @>>>> @<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- $name, $login, $office,$uid,$gid, $home
- .
-
-
- # a report from a bug report form
- format STDOUT_TOP =
- Bug Reports
- @<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< @||| @>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
- $system, $%, $date
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
- .
- format STDOUT =
- Subject: @<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- $subject
- Index: @<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- $index, $description
- Priority: @<<<<<<<<<< Date: @<<<<<<< ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- $priority, $date, $description
- From: @<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- $from, $description
- Assigned to: @<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- $programmer, $description
- ~ ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- $description
- ~ ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- $description
- ~ ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- $description
- ~ ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- $description
- ~ ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<...
- $description
- .
-
- It is possible to intermix print()s with write()s on the same output
- channel, but you'll have to handle C<$-> (C<$FORMAT_LINES_LEFT>)
- yourself.
-
- =head2 Format Variables
-
- The current format name is stored in the variable C<$~> (C<$FORMAT_NAME>),
- and the current top of form format name is in C<$^> (C<$FORMAT_TOP_NAME>).
- The current output page number is stored in C<$%> (C<$FORMAT_PAGE_NUMBER>),
- and the number of lines on the page is in C<$=> (C<$FORMAT_LINES_PER_PAGE>).
- Whether to autoflush output on this handle is stored in C<$|>
- (C<$OUTPUT_AUTOFLUSH>). The string output before each top of page (except
- the first) is stored in C<$^L> (C<$FORMAT_FORMFEED>). These variables are
- set on a per-filehandle basis, so you'll need to select() into a different
- one to affect them:
-
- select((select(OUTF),
- $~ = "My_Other_Format",
- $^ = "My_Top_Format"
- )[0]);
-
- Pretty ugly, eh? It's a common idiom though, so don't be too surprised
- when you see it. You can at least use a temporary variable to hold
- the previous filehandle: (this is a much better approach in general,
- because not only does legibility improve, you now have intermediary
- stage in the expression to single-step the debugger through):
-
- $ofh = select(OUTF);
- $~ = "My_Other_Format";
- $^ = "My_Top_Format";
- select($ofh);
-
- If you use the English module, you can even read the variable names:
-
- use English;
- $ofh = select(OUTF);
- $FORMAT_NAME = "My_Other_Format";
- $FORMAT_TOP_NAME = "My_Top_Format";
- select($ofh);
-
- But you still have those funny select()s. So just use the FileHandle
- module. Now, you can access these special variables using lowercase
- method names instead:
-
- use FileHandle;
- format_name OUTF "My_Other_Format";
- format_top_name OUTF "My_Top_Format";
-
- Much better!
-
- =head1 NOTES
-
- Because the values line may contain arbitrary expressions (for at fields,
- not caret fields), you can farm out more sophisticated processing
- to other functions, like sprintf() or one of your own. For example:
-
- format Ident =
- @<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- &commify($n)
- .
-
- To get a real at or caret into the field, do this:
-
- format Ident =
- I have an @ here.
- "@"
- .
-
- To center a whole line of text, do something like this:
-
- format Ident =
- @|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
- "Some text line"
- .
-
- There is no builtin way to say "float this to the right hand side
- of the page, however wide it is." You have to specify where it goes.
- The truly desperate can generate their own format on the fly, based
- on the current number of columns, and then eval() it:
-
- $format = "format STDOUT = \n"
- . '^' . '<' x $cols . "\n"
- . '$entry' . "\n"
- . "\t^" . "<" x ($cols-8) . "~~\n"
- . '$entry' . "\n"
- . ".\n";
- print $format if $Debugging;
- eval $format;
- die $@ if $@;
-
- Which would generate a format looking something like this:
-
- format STDOUT =
- ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
- $entry
- ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<~~
- $entry
- .
-
- Here's a little program that's somewhat like fmt(1):
-
- format =
- ^<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<< ~~
- $_
-
- .
-
- $/ = '';
- while (<>) {
- s/\s*\n\s*/ /g;
- write;
- }
-
- =head2 Footers
-
- While $FORMAT_TOP_NAME contains the name of the current header format,
- there is no corresponding mechanism to automatically do the same thing
- for a footer. Not knowing how big a format is going to be until you
- evaluate it is one of the major problems. It's on the TODO list.
-
- Here's one strategy: If you have a fixed-size footer, you can get footers
- by checking $FORMAT_LINES_LEFT before each write() and print the footer
- yourself if necessary.
-
- Here's another strategy: Open a pipe to yourself, using C<open(MYSELF, "|-")>
- (see L<perlfunc/open()>) and always write() to MYSELF instead of STDOUT.
- Have your child process massage its STDIN to rearrange headers and footers
- however you like. Not very convenient, but doable.
-
- =head2 Accessing Formatting Internals
-
- For low-level access to the formatting mechanism. you may use formline()
- and access C<$^A> (the $ACCUMULATOR variable) directly.
-
- For example:
-
- $str = formline <<'END', 1,2,3;
- @<<< @||| @>>>
- END
-
- print "Wow, I just stored `$^A' in the accumulator!\n";
-
- Or to make an swrite() subroutine, which is to write() what sprintf()
- is to printf(), do this:
-
- use Carp;
- sub swrite {
- croak "usage: swrite PICTURE ARGS" unless @_;
- my $format = shift;
- $^A = "";
- formline($format,@_);
- return $^A;
- }
-
- $string = swrite(<<'END', 1, 2, 3);
- Check me out
- @<<< @||| @>>>
- END
- print $string;
-
- =head1 WARNINGS
-
- The lone dot that ends a format can also prematurely end a mail
- message passing through a misconfigured Internet mailer (and based on
- experience, such misconfiguration is the rule, not the exception). So
- when sending format code through mail, you should indent it so that
- the format-ending dot is not on the left margin; this will prevent
- SMTP cutoff.
-
- Lexical variables (declared with "my") are not visible within a
- format unless the format is declared within the scope of the lexical
- variable. (They weren't visible at all before version 5.001.)
-
- Formats are the only part of Perl that unconditionally use information
- from a program's locale; if a program's environment specifies an
- LC_NUMERIC locale, it is always used to specify the decimal point
- character in formatted output. Perl ignores all other aspects of locale
- handling unless the C<use locale> pragma is in effect. Formatted output
- cannot be controlled by C<use locale> because the pragma is tied to the
- block structure of the program, and, for historical reasons, formats
- exist outside that block structure. See L<perllocale> for further
- discussion of locale handling.
-