Why not adopt me?
NAME
String::Sections - Extract labeled groups of sub-strings from a string.
VERSION
version 0.3.2
SYNOPSIS
use String::Sections;
my $sections = String::Sections->new();
my $result = $sections->load_list( @lines );
# TODO
# $sections->load_string( $string );
# $sections->load_filehandle( $fh );
#
# $sections->merge( $other_sections_object );
my @section_names = $result->section_names();
if ( $result->has_section( 'section_label' ) ) {
my $string_ref = $result->section( 'section_label' );
...
}
DESCRIPTION
Data Section sports the following default data markup
__[ somename ]__
Data
__[ anothername ]__
More data
This module is designed to behave as a work-alike, except on already extracted string data.
METHODS
new
new( %args )
my $object = String::Sections->new();
my $object = String::Sections->new( attribute_name => 'value' );
load_list ( @strings )
my @strings = <$fh>;
my $result = $string_section->load_list( @strings );
This method handles data as if it had been slopped in unchomped from a filehandle.
Ideally, each entry in @strings will be terminated with $/ , as the collated data from each section is concatenated into a large singular string, e.g.:
$result = $string_section->load_list("__[ Foo ]__\n", "bar\n", "baz\n" );
$section_foo = $result->section('Foo')
# bar
# baz
$result = $s_s->load_list("__[ Foo ]__\n", "bar", "baz" );
$result->section('Foo');
# barbaz
$object->load_list("__[ Foo ]__", "bar", "baz" ) # will not work by default.
This behaviour may change in the future, but this is how it is with the least effort for now.
load_string
TODO
load_filehandle( $fh )
my $result = $object->load_filehandle( $fh )
header_regex
empty_line_regex
document_end_regex
line_escape_regex
default_name
stop_at_end
ignore_empty_prelude
enable_escapes
ATTRIBUTES
header_regex
empty_line_regex
document_end_regex
line_escape_regex
default_name
stop_at_end
ignore_empty_prelude
enable_escapes
PRIVATE METHODS
__add_line
_default_header_regex
_default_empty_line_regex
_default_document_end_regex
_default_line_escape_regex
_default_default_name
_default_stop_at_end
_default_ignore_empty_prelude
_default_enable_escapes
PRIVATE FUNCTIONS
_croak
_regex_type
_string_type
_boolean_type
DEVELOPMENT
This code is still new and under development.
All the below facets are likely to change at some point, but don't largely contribute to the API or usage of this module.
Needs Perl 5.10.1
To make some of the development features easier.
Recommended Use with Data::Handle
This modules primary inspiration is Data::Section, but intending to split and decouple many of the internal parts to add leverage to the various behaviors it contains.
Data::Handle solves part of a problem with Perl by providing a more reliable interface to the __DATA__ section in a file that is not impeded by various things that occur if its attempted to be read more than once.
In future, I plan on this being the syntax for connecting Data::Handle with this module to emulate Data::Section:
my $dh = Data::Handle->new( __PACKAGE__ );
my $ss = String::Sections->new( stop_at_end => 1 );
my $result = $ss->load_filehandle( $dh );
This doesn't implicitly perform any of the inheritance tree magic Data::Section does, but its also planned on making that easy to do when you want it with ->merge( $section )
For now, the recommended code is not so different:
my $dh = Data::Handle->new( __PACKAGE__ );
my $ss = String::Sections->new( stop_at_end => 1 );
my $result = $ss->load_list( <$dh> );
Its just somewhat less efficient.
SIGNIFICANT CHANGES
Since 0.1.x
API
In 0.1.x, API
was
my $section = String::Sections->new();
$section->load_*( $source );
$section->section_names
This was inherently fragile, and allowed weird things to occur when people tried to get data from it without it being populated yet.
So starting with 0.2.0, the API
is
my $section = String::Sections->new();
my $result = $section->load_*( $source );
$result->section_names;
And the main class is a factory for String::Sections::Result
objects.
AUTHOR
Kent Fredric <kentnl@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Kent Fredric <kentnl@cpan.org>.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.