NAME
Template::Reverse - A template generator getting different parts between pair of text
VERSION
version 0.100
SYNOPSIS
use Template::Reverse;
my $rev = Template::Reverse->new();
my $parts = $rev->detect($arr_ref1, $arr_ref2); # returns [ [[PRE],[POST]], ... ]
use Template::Reverse::Converter::TT2;
my @templates = Template::Reverse::TT2Converter::Convert($parts); # named 'value1','value2',...
more
# try this!!
use Template::Reverse;
use Template::Reverse::Converter::TT2;
use Data::Dumper;
my $rev = Template::Reverse->new;
# generating patterns automatically!!
my $str1 = [qw(I am perl and smart)];
my $str2 = [qw(I am khs and a perlmania)];
my $parts = $rev->detect($str1, $str2);
my $tt2 = Template::Reverse::Converter::TT2->new;
my $temps = $tt2->Convert($parts); # equals ['I am [% value %] and','and [% value %]']
my $str3 = "I am king of the world and a richest man";
# extract!!
use Template::Extract;
my $ext = Template::Extract->new;
my $value = $ext->extract($temps->[0], $str3);
print Dumper($value); # output : {'value'=>'king of the world'}
my $value = $ext->extract($temps->[1], $str3);
print Dumper($value); # output : {'value'=>'a richest man'}
DESCRIPTION
Template::Reverse detects different parts between pair of similar text as merged texts from same template. And it can makes an output marked differences, encodes to TT2 format for being use by Template::Extract module.
FUNCTIONS
new(OPTION_HASH_REF)
sidelen=>$max_length_of_each_side
sidelen is a short of "side character's each max length". the default value is 10. Setting 0 means full-length.
If you set it as 3, you get max 3 length pre-text and post-text array each part.
This is needed for more faster performance.
detect($text1, $text2)
Get changable part list from two texts. It returns like below
$rev->detect([qw(A b C)], [qw(A d C)]);
#
# [ [ ['A'],['C'] ] ]
# : :...: :...: :
# : pre post :
# :.............:
# part 1
#
$rev->detect([qw(A b C d E)],[qw(A f C g E)]);
#
# [ [ ['A'], ['C'] ], [ ['C'], ['E'] ] ]
# : :...: :...: : : :...: :...: :
# : pre post : : pre post :
# :..............: :..............:
# part 1 part 2
#
$rev->detect([qw(A1 A2 B C1 C2 D E1 E2)],[qw(A1 A2 D C1 C2 F E1 E2)]);
#
# [ [ ['A1','A2'],['C2','C2'] ], [ ['C1','C2'], ['E2','E2'] ] ]
#
my $str1 = "I am perl and smart";
my $str2 = "I am KHS and a perlmania";
my $parts = $rev->detect($str1, $str2);
#
# [ [ ['I','am'], ['and'] ] , [ ['and'],[] ] ]
# : :........: :.....: : : :
# : pre post : : :
# :.....................: :............:
# part 1 part 2
#
Returned arrayRef is list of changable parts.
1. At first, $text1 and $text2 is normalized by Spacers.
2. 'pre texts' and 'post texts' are splited by Splitter. In this case, by Whitespace.
3. You can get a changing value, just finding 'pre' and 'post' in a normalized text.
SEE ALSO
SOURCE
https://github.com/sng2c/Template-Reverse
THANKS TO
-
This module is dedicated to AMORETTE. He was interested in this module and was cheering me up.
AUTHOR
HyeonSeung Kim <sng2nara@hanmail.net>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by HyeonSeung Kim.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
4 POD Errors
The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:
- Around line 210:
'=item' outside of any '=over'
- Around line 214:
You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'
- Around line 220:
'=item' outside of any '=over'
- Around line 225:
You forgot a '=back' before '=head1'