NAME
Text::EscapeDelimiters - escape delimiter characters within strings
SYNOPSIS
my $obj = new Text::EscapeDelimiters();
#Convert a list of lists into a string using tab and newline as field and record delimiters
#Escape any delimiters occurring in the strings first
my $stringified = join("\n", map {
join("\t", map {$obj->escape($_, ["\t", "\n"])} @$_)
} @records);
#Convert the string back, respecting the escapes
@records = map {
[ map {$obj->unescape($_)} $obj->split($_, "\t") ]
} $obj->split($stringified, "\n");
#Pick off the first 5 records
my $delim_regex = $obj->regex("\n");
my @first_five;
for(1..5) {
$stringified =~ /(.*?)$delim_regex/g;
push @first_five, [ map {$obj->unescape($_)} $obj->split($1, "\t") ];
}
DESCRIPTION
When joining strings with a delimiter (aka separator), you need to worry about escaping occurences of that delimiter in the values you are joining. When splitting on the delimiter, you need to respect the escape sequences so you don't split on escaped delimiters.
This module provides a solution to that problem allowing you to escape values before you join, split the values whilst respecting escaped delimiters, and finally unescape the data.
Escaping is achieved by placing an escape sequence in front of delimiter characters. The default escape sequence is a backslash but you can change this.
- $obj = new Text::EscapeDelimiters(\%options)
-
Valid options are:
- EscapeSequence
-
One or more characters that will be used as an escape sequence in front of delimiter characters. If not supplied, defaults to a backslash. An undef or empty string of this key can be used to specify a null escape sequence.
- $escaped = $obj->escape($string, $delimiters)
-
Escapes one or more delimiter characters in a string ($delimiters can be a scalar or an an arrayref)
- @list = $obj->split($escaped_and_joined, $delimiter)
-
Splits an escaped string on a delimiter (respecting escaped delimiters)
- $regex = $obj->regex($delimiters)
-
Creates a regular expression that will match delimiters (but not escaped delimiters). $delimiters can be a scalar or an an arrayref.
- $string = $obj->unescape($escaped)
-
Inverse of escape()
VERSION
See $Text::EscapeDelimiters::VERSION. Last edit: $Revision: 1.4 $ on $Date: 2005/03/20 23:10:53 $
BUGS
None known. This module has not yet been used heavily in production so it's not impossible a bug may have slipped through the unit tests. Bug reports are welcome, particularly with patches & test cases.
AUTHOR
John Alden <johna@cpan.org>
SEE ALSO
- URI::Escape
-
Escapes/unescapes strings using URI encoding
- Tie::Scalar::Escaped
-
Similar to URI::Escape, but provides a
tie
interface. - String::Escape
-
Routines for backslash escaping strings
- Regex::Common::delimited
-
Provides regexes for extracting values between PAIRED delimiters (e.g. quotes).
- Text::DelimMatch
-
Module for extracting values between PAIRED delimiters (e.g. quotes). Handles escaped delimiter characters etc.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2005 by John Alden
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.