NAME
Data::Report - Framework for flexible reporting
SYNOPSIS
use Data::Report;
# Create a new reporter.
my $rep = Data::Report::->create(type => "text"); # or "html", or "csv", ...
# Define the layout.
$rep->set_layout
([ { name => "acct", title => "Acct", width => 6 },
{ name => "desc", title => "Description", width => 40, align => "<" },
{ name => "deb", title => "Debet", width => 10, align => ">" },
{ name => "crd", title => "Credit", width => 10, align => ">" },
]);
# Start the reporter.
$rep->start;
# Add data, row by row.
$rep->add({ acct => 1234, desc => "Received", deb => "242.33" });
$rep->add({ acct => 5678, desc => "Paid", crd => "699.45" });
$rep->add({ acct => 1259, desc => "Taxes", deb => "12.00", crd => "244.00" });
$rep->add({ desc => "TOTAL", deb => "254.33", crd => "943.45" });
# Finish the reporter.
$rep->finish;
DESCRIPTION
Data::Report is a flexible, plugin-driven reporting framework. It makes it easy to define reports that can be produced in text, HTML and CSV. Textual ornaments like extra empty lines, dashed lines, and cell lines can be added in a way similar to HTML style sheets.
The Data::Report framework consists of three parts:
- The plugins
-
Plugins implement a specific type of report. Standard plugins provided are
Data::Report::Plugin::Text
for textual reports,Data::Report::Plugin::Html
for HTML reports, andData::Report::Plugin::Csv
for CSV (comma-separated) files.Users can, and are encouraged, to develop their own plugins to handle different styles and types of reports.
- The base class
-
The base class
Data::Report::Base
implements the functionality common to all reporters, plus a number of utility functions the plugins can use. - The factory
-
The actual
Data::Report
module is a factory that creates a reporter for a given report type by selecting the appropriate plugin and returning an instance thereof.
BASIC METHODS
Note that except for the create
method, all other methods are actually handled by the plugins and their base class.
create
Reporter objects are created using the class method create
. This method takes a hash (or hashref) of arguments to initialise the reporter object.
The actual reporter object is implemented by one of the plugin modules, selected by the type
argument. Standard plugins are provided for text
, HTML
and CSV
report types. The default type is text
.
When looking for a plugin to support report type foo
, the create
method will first try to load a module My::Package::Foo
where My::Package
is the invocant class. If this module cannot be loaded, it will fall back to Data::Report::Plugin::Foo
. Note that, unless subclassed, the current class will be Data::Report
.
All other initialisation arguments correspond to attribute setting methods provided by the plugins. For example, the hypothetical call
my $rpt = Data::Report->create(foo => 1, bar => "Hello!");
is identical to:
my $rpt = Data::Report->create;
$rpt->set_foo(1);
$rpt->set_bar("Hello!");
You can choose any combination at your convenience.
start
This method indicates that all setup has been completed, and starts the reporter. Note that no output is generated until the add
method is called.
start
takes no arguments.
Although this method could be eliminated by automatically starting the reporter upon the first call to add
, it turns out that an aplicit start
makes the API much cleaner and makes it easier to catch mistakes.
add
This method adds a new entry to the report. It takes one single argument, a hash ref of column names and the corresponding values. Missing columns are left blank.
In addition to the column names and values, you can add the special key _style
to designate a particular style for this entry. What that means depends on the plugin that implements this reporter. For example, the standard HTML reporter plugin prefixes the given style with r_
to form the class name for the row. The style name should be a simple name, containing letters, digits and underscores, starting with a letter.
Example
$rpt->add({ date => "2006-04-31",
amount => 1000,
descr => "First payment",
_style => "plain" });
finish
This method indicates that report generation is complete. After this, you can call start
again to initiate a new report.
finish
takes no arguments.
close
This is a convenience method. If the output stream was set up by the reporter itself (see set_output
, below), the stream will be closed. Otherwise, this method will be a no-op.
close
takes no arguments.
ATTRIBUTE HANDLING METHODS
get_type
The reporter type.
set_layout
This is the most important attribute, since it effectively defines the report layout.
This method takes one argument, an array reference. Each element of the array is a hash reference that corresponds to one column in the report. The order of elements definines the order of the columns in the report, but see set_fields
below.
The following keys are possible in the hash reference:
name
-
The name of this column. The name should be a simple name, containing letters, digits and underscores, starting with a letter.
The standard HTML reporter plugin uses the column name to form a class name for each cell by prefixing with
c_
. Likewise, the classes for the table headings will be formed by prefixing the column names withh_
. See "ADVANCED EXAMPLES", below. title
-
The title of this column. This title is placed in the column heading.
width
-
The width of this column. Relevant for textual reporters only.
By default, if a value does not fit in the given width, it will be spread over multiple rows in a pseudo-elegant way. See also the
truncate
key, below. align
-
The alignment of this column. This can be either
<
for left-aligned columns, or>
to indicate a right-aligned column. truncate
-
If true, the values in this column will be truncated to fit the width of the column. Relevant for textual reporters only.
set_style
This method can be used to set an arbitrary style (a string) whose meaning depends on the implementing plugin. For example, a HTML plugin could use this as the name of the style sheet to use.
The name should be a simple name, containing letters, digits and underscores, starting with a letter.
get_style
Returns the style, or default
if none.
set_output
Designates the destination for the report. The argument can be
- a SCALAR reference
-
All output will be appended to the designated scalar.
- an ARRAY reference
-
All output lines will be pushed onto the array.
- a SCALAR
-
A file will be created with the given name, and all output will be written to this file. To close the file, use the
close
method described above. - anything else
-
Anything else will be considered to be a file handle, and treated as such.
set_stylist
The stylist is a powerful method to control the appearance of the report at the row and cell level. The basic idea is taken from HTML style sheets. By using a stylist, it is possible to add extra spaces and lines to rows and cells in a declarative way.
When used, the stylist should be a reference to a possibly anonymous subroutine with three arguments: the reporter object, the style of a row (as specified with _style
in the add
method), and the name of a column as defined in the layout. For table headings, the row name _head
is used.
The stylist routine will be repeatedly called by the reporter to obtain formatting properties for rows and cells. It should return either nothing, or a hash reference with properties.
When called with only the row
argument, it should return the properties for this row.
When called with row equal to "*" and a column name, it should return the properties for the given column.
When called with a row and a column name, it should return the properties for the given row/column (cell).
All appropriate properties are merged to form the final set of properties to apply.
The following row properties are recognised. Between parentheses the backends that support them.
skip_before
-
(Text) Produce an empty line before printing the current row.
skip_after
-
(Text) Produce an empty line after printing the current row, but only if other data follows.
line_before
-
(Text) Draw a line of dashes before printing the current row.
line_after
-
(Text) Draw a line of dashes after printing the current row.
cancel_skip
-
(Text) Cancel the effect of a pending
skip_after
ignore
-
(All) Ignore this row. Useful for CSV backends where only the raw data matters, and not the totals and such.
The following cell properties are recognised. Between parentheses the backends that support them.
indent
-
(Text) Indent the contents of this cell with the given amount.
wrap_indent
-
(Text) Indent wrapped contents of this cell with the given amount.
truncate
-
(Text) If true, truncate the contents of this cell to fit the column width.
line_before
-
(Text) Draw a line in the cell before printing the current row. The value of this property indicates the symbol to use to draw the line. If it is
1
, dashes are used. line_after
-
(Text) Draw a line in the cell after printing the current row. The value of this property indicates the symbol to use to draw the line. If it is
1
, dashes are used. raw_html
-
(Html) Do not escape special HTML characters, allowing pre-prepared HTML code to be placed in the output. Use with care.
ignore
-
(All) Ignore this column. Note that to prevent surprising results, the column must be ignored in all applicable styles, including the special style
"_head"
that controls the heading. class
-
(Html) Class name to be used for this cell. Default class name is "h_CNAME" for table headings and "c_CNAME" for table rows, where CNAME is the name of the column.
Example:
$rep->set_stylist(sub {
my ($rep, $row, $col) = @_;
unless ( $col ) {
return { line_after => 1 } if $row eq "total";
return;
}
return { line_after => 1 } if $col eq "amount";
return;
});
Each reporter provides a standard (dummy) stylist called _std_stylist
. Overriding this method is equivalent to using set_stylist
.
get_stylist
Returns the current stylist, if any.
set_topheading
Headings consist of two parts, the top heading, and the standard heading. Bij default, the top heading is empty, and the standard heading has the names of the columns with a separator line (depnendent on the plugin used).
This method can be used to designate a subroutine that will provide the top heading of the report.
Example:
$rpt->set_topheading(sub {
my $self = shift;
$self->_print("Title line 1\n");
$self->_print("Title line 2\n");
$self->_print("\n");
});
Note the use of the reporter provided _print
method to produce output.
When subclassing a reporter, a method _top_heading
can be defined to provide the top heading. This is equivalent to an explicit call to set_topheading
, but doesn't need to be repeatedly and explicitly executed for each new reporter.
get_topheading
Returns the current top heading routine, if any.
set_heading
This method can be used to designate a subroutine that provides the standard heading of the report.
In normal cases using this method is not necessary, since setting the top heading will be sufficient.
Each reporter plugin provides a standard heading, implemented in a method called _std_header
. This is the default value for the heading
attribute. A user-defined heading can use
$self->SUPER::_std_header;
to still get the original standard heading produced.
Example:
$rpt->set_heading(sub {
my $self = shift;
$self->_print("Title line 1\n");
$self->_print("Title line 2\n");
$self->_print("\n");
$self->SUPER::_std_heading;
$self->_print("\n");
});
Note the use of the reporter provided _print
method to produce output.
When subclassing a reporter, the method _std_heading
can be overridden to provide a customized top heading. This is equivalent to an explicit call to set_topheading
, but doesn't need to be repeatedly and explicitly executed for each new reporter.
get_heading
Returns the current standard heading routine, if any.
set_fields
This method can be used to define what columns (fields) should be included in the report and the order they should appear. It takes an array reference with the names of the desired columns.
Example:
$rpt->set_fields([qw(descr amount date)]);
get_fields
Returns the current set of selected columns.
set_width
This method defines the width for one or more columns. It takes a hash reference with column names and widths. The width may be an absolute number, a relative number (to increase/decrease the width, or a percentage.
Example:
$rpt->set_width({ amount => 10, desc => '80%' });
get_widths
Returns a hash with all column names and widths.
ADVANCED EXAMPLES
This example subclasses Data::Report with an associated plugin for type text
. Note the use of overriding _top_heading
and _std_stylist
to provide special defaults for this reporter.
package POC::Report;
use base qw(Data::Report);
package POC::Report::Text;
use base qw(Data::Report::Plugin::Text);
sub _top_heading {
my $self = shift;
$self->_print("Title line 1\n");
$self->_print("Title line 2\n");
$self->_print("\n");
}
sub _std_stylist {
my ($rep, $row, $col) = @_;
if ( $col ) {
return { line_after => "=" }
if $row eq "special" && $col =~ /^(deb|crd)$/;
}
else {
return { line_after => 1 } if $row eq "total";
}
return;
}
It can be used as follows:
my $rep = POC::Report::->create(type => "text");
$rep->set_layout
([ { name => "acct", title => "Acct", width => 6 },
{ name => "desc", title => "Report", width => 40, align => "<" },
{ name => "deb", title => "Debet", width => 10, align => "<" },
{ name => "crd", title => "Credit", width => 10, align => ">" },
]);
$rep->start;
$rep->add({ acct => "one", desc => "two", deb => "three", crd => "four", _style => "normal" });
$rep->add({ acct => "one", desc => "two", deb => "three", crd => "four", _style => "normal" });
$rep->add({ acct => "one", desc => "two", deb => "three", crd => "four", _style => "special"});
$rep->add({ acct => "one", desc => "two", deb => "three", crd => "four", _style => "total" });
$rep->finish;
The output will look like:
Title line 1
Title line 2
Acct Report Debet Credit
------------------------------------------------------------------------
one two three four
one two three four
one two three four
========== ==========
one two three four
------------------------------------------------------------------------
This is a similar example for a HTML reporter:
package POC::Report;
use base qw(Data::Report);
package POC::Report::Html;
use base qw(Data::Report::Plugin::Html);
sub start {
my $self = shift;
$self->{_title1} = shift;
$self->{_title2} = shift;
$self->{_title3} = shift;
$self->SUPER::start;
}
sub _top_heading {
my $self = shift;
$self->_print("<html>\n",
"<head>\n",
"<title>", $self->_html($self->{_title1}), "</title>\n",
'<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/', $self->get_style, '.css">', "\n",
"</head>\n",
"<body>\n",
"<p class=\"title\">", $self->_html($self->{_title1}), "</p>\n",
"<p class=\"subtitle\">", $self->_html($self->{_title2}), "<br>\n",
$self->_html($self->{_title3}), "</p>\n");
}
sub finish {
my $self = shift;
$self->SUPER::finish;
$self->_print("</body>\n</html>\n");
}
Note that it defines an alternative start
method, that is used to pass in additional parameters for title fields.
The method _html
is a convenience method provided by the framework. It returns its argument with sensitive characters escaped by HTML entities.
It can be used as follows:
package main;
my $rep = POC::Report::->create(type => "html");
$rep->set_layout
([ { name => "acct", title => "Acct", width => 6 },
{ name => "desc", title => "Report", width => 40, align => "<" },
{ name => "deb", title => "Debet", width => 10, align => "<" },
{ name => "crd", title => "Credit", width => 10, align => ">" },
]);
$rep->start(qw(Title_One Title_Two Title_Three_Left&Right));
$rep->add({ acct => "one", desc => "two", deb => "three", crd => "four", _style => "normal" });
$rep->add({ acct => "one", desc => "two", deb => "three", crd => "four", _style => "normal" });
$rep->add({ acct => "one", desc => "two", deb => "three", crd => "four", _style => "normal" });
$rep->add({ acct => "one", desc => "two", deb => "three", crd => "four", _style => "total" });
$rep->finish;
The output will look like this:
<html>
<head>
<title>Title_One</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/default.css">
</head>
<body>
<p class="title">Title_One</p>
<p class="subtitle">Title_Two<br>
Title_Three_Left&Right</p>
<table class="main">
<tr class="head">
<th align="left" class="h_acct">Acct</th>
<th align="left" class="h_desc">Report</th>
<th align="right" class="h_deb">Debet</th>
<th align="right" class="h_crd">Credit</th>
</tr>
<tr class="r_normal">
<td align="left" class="c_acct">one</td>
<td align="left" class="c_desc">two</td>
<td align="right" class="c_deb">three</td>
<td align="right" class="c_crd">four</td>
</tr>
<tr class="r_normal">
<td align="left" class="c_acct">one</td>
<td align="left" class="c_desc">two</td>
<td align="right" class="c_deb">three</td>
<td align="right" class="c_crd">four</td>
</tr>
<tr class="r_normal">
<td align="left" class="c_acct">one</td>
<td align="left" class="c_desc">two</td>
<td align="right" class="c_deb">three</td>
<td align="right" class="c_crd">four</td>
</tr>
<tr class="r_total">
<td align="left" class="c_acct">one</td>
<td align="left" class="c_desc">two</td>
<td align="right" class="c_deb">three</td>
<td align="right" class="c_crd">four</td>
</tr>
</table>
</body>
</html>
See also the examples in t/09poc*.t
.
AUTHOR
Johan Vromans, <jvromans at squirrel.nl>
BUGS
Disclaimer: This module is derived from actual working code, that I turned into a generic CPAN module. During the process, some features may have become unstable, but that will be cured in time. Also, it is possible that revisions of the API will be necessary when new functionality is added.
Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-data-report at rt.cpan.org
, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Data-Report. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.
SUPPORT
Development of this module takes place on GitHub: https://github.com/sciurius/perl-Data-Report.
After installing, you can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc Data::Report
Please report any bugs or feature requests using the issue tracker on GitHub.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2006,2008,2020 Squirrel Consultancy, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.