NAME
List::Breakdown - Build list sublists matching conditions
VERSION
Version 0.13
DESCRIPTION
This module "breaks down" a list--filtering elements from a list into a specified bucket layout. It may be useful in situations where you have a big list of things to generate reports on, or to otherwise filter into several sublists.
It differs from the excellent List::Categorize
in the use of subroutine references for each category and in not requiring only one final category for any given item; an item can end up in the result set for more than one filter.
You could maybe think of this as a multi-grep
that returns named results.
SYNOPSIS
my @words = qw(foo bar baz quux wibble florb);
my $cats = {
all => sub { 1 },
has_b => sub { m/ b /msx },
has_w => sub { m/ w /msx },
length => {
3 => sub { length == 3 },
4 => sub { length == 4 },
long => sub { length > 4 },
},
has_ba => qr/ba/msx,
};
my %filtered = breakdown $cats, @words;
This puts the following structure in %filtered
:
(
all => ['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'quux', 'wibble', 'florb'],
has_b => ['bar', 'baz', 'wibble', 'florb'],
has_w => ['wibble'],
length => {
3 => ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'],
4 => ['quux'],
long => ['wibble', 'florb'],
},
has_ba => ['bar', 'baz'],
)
SUBROUTINES/METHODS
breakdown(\%spec, @items)
Given a hash reference structure and a list of items, apply each of the subroutines or regular expressions given as values of the hash reference, returning a new hash in the same structure with the tests replaced with the items for which the subroutine returns true, in the same way as grep
, or (as a shortcut) for which the regular expression matched.
EXAMPLES
Suppose you have a list of strings from a very legacy system that you need to regularly check for problematic characters, alerting you to problems with an imperfect Perl parser:
my @records = (
"NEW CUSTOMER John O''Connor\r 2017-01-01",
"RETURNING CUSTOMER\tXah Zhang 2016-01-01",
"CHECK ACCOUNT Pierre d'Alun 2016-12-01",
"RETURNING CUSTOMER Aaron Carter 2016-05-01"
);
You could have a bucket structure like this, which catches certain error types you've seen before for review:
my %buckets = (
bad_whitespace => qr/ [\r\t] /msx,
apostrophes => qr/ ' /msx,
double_apostrophes => qr/ '' /msx,
not_ascii => qr/ [^[:ascii:]] /msx
);
Notice that you don't have to wrap a quoted regular expression to match in a `sub` subroutine reference, as a convenience shortcut.
Applying the bucket structure like so:
my %results = breakdown \%buckets, @records;
The result set would look like this:
my %expected = (
bad_whitespace => [
"NEW CUSTOMER John O''Connor\r 2017-01-01",
"RETURNING CUSTOMER\tXah Lee 2016-01-01"
],
apostrophes => [
"NEW CUSTOMER John O''Connor\r 2017-01-01",
'CHECK ACCOUNT Pierre d\'Alun 2016-12-01'
],
double_apostrophes => [
"NEW CUSTOMER John O''Connor\r 2017-01-01"
],
not_ascii => [
]
);
Notice that some of the lines appear in more than one list, and that the not_ascii
bucket is empty because none of the items matched it.
Monitoring system check results
Suppose you ran a list of checks with your monitoring system, and you have a list of hashrefs describing each check and its outcome:
my @checks = (
{
hostname => 'webserver1',
status => 'OK',
},
{
hostname => 'webserver2',
status => 'CRITICAL',
},
{
hostname => 'webserver3',
status => 'WARNING',
},
{
hostname => 'webserver4',
status => 'OK',
}
);
You would like to break the list down by status. Using List::Breakdown
, you would lay out your buckets like so:
my %buckets = (
ok => sub { $_->{status} eq 'OK' },
problem => {
warning => sub { $_->{status} eq 'WARNING' },
critical => sub { $_->{status} eq 'CRITICAL' },
unknown => sub { $_->{status} eq 'UNKNOWN' },
},
);
And apply them like so:
my %results = breakdown \%buckets, @checks;
You can then apply %buckets
to any other list you may need to check in the same way to get the same structure.
For our sample data above, this would yield the following structure in %results
:
(
ok => [
{
hostname => 'webserver1',
status => 'OK'
},
{
hostname => 'webserver4',
status => 'OK'
}
],
problem => {
warning => [
{
hostname => 'webserver3',
status => 'WARNING'
}
],
critical => [
{
hostname => 'webserver2',
status => 'CRITICAL'
}
],
unknown => []
}
)
Note the extra level of hash referencing beneath the problem
key.
AUTHOR
Tom Ryder <tom@sanctum.geek.nz>
DIAGNOSTICS
- HASH reference expected for first argument
-
The first argument that breakdown() saw wasn't the hash reference it expects. That's the only format a spec is allowed to have.
- Reference expected for '%s'
-
The value for the named key in the spec was not a reference, and one was expected.
- Unhandled ref type %s for '%s'
-
The value for the named key in the spec is of a type that makes no sense to this module. Legal reference types are
HASH
,CODE
, andRegexp
.
DEPENDENCIES
Perl 5.6 and the core modules Carp
and Exporter
.
CONFIGURATION AND ENVIRONMENT
None required.
INCOMPATIBILITIES
None known.
BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
Definitely. This is a very early release. Please report any bugs or feature requests to tom@sanctum.geek.nz
.
SUPPORT
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc
command.
perldoc List::Breakdown
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2017 Tom Ryder
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License (2.0). You may obtain a copy of the full license at:
<http://www.perlfoundation.org/artistic_license_2_0>
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