NAME
Data::Sah::Filter - Filtering for Data::Sah
VERSION
This document describes version 0.023 of Data::Sah::Filter (from Perl distribution Data-Sah-Filter), released on 2024-01-16.
SYNOPSIS
use Data::Sah::Filter qw(gen_filter);
# a utility routine: gen_filter
my $c = gen_filter(
filter_names => ['Str::ltrim', 'Str::rtrim'],
);
my $val = $c->("foo"); # unchanged, "foo"
my $val = $c->(" foo "); # "foo"
DESCRIPTION
This distribution contains a standard set of filter rules for Data::Sah (to be used in prefilters
and postfilters
clauses). It is separated from the Data-Sah
distribution and can be used independently.
A filter rule is put in Data::Sah::Filter::$COMPILER::$CATEGORY:$DESCRIPTION
module, for example: Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::trim for trimming whitespace at the beginning and end of string.
Basically, a filter rule will provide an expression (in expr_filter
) in the target language (e.g. Perl, JavaScript, or others) to convert one data to another. Multiple filter rules can be combined to form the final filtering code. This code can be used by Data::Sah
when generating validator code from Sah schema, or can be used directly. Some projects which use filtering rules directly include: App::orgadb (which lets users specify filters from the command-line).
meta()
The filter rule module must contain meta
subroutine which must return a hashref (DefHash) that has the following keys (*
marks that the key is required):
v* => int (default: 1)
Metadata specification version. From DefHash. Currently at 1.
summary => str
From DefHash.
might_fail => bool
Whether coercion might fail, e.g. because of invalid input. If set to 1,
expr_filter
key that thefilter()
routine returns must be an expression that returns an array (envelope) of(error_msg, data)
instead of just filtered data. Error message should be a string that is set when filtering fails and explains why. Otherwise, if filtering succeeds, the error message string should be set to undefined value.This is used for filtering rules that act as a data checker.
args => hash
List of arguments that this filter accepts, in the form of hash where hash keys are argument names and hash values are argument specifications. Argument specification is a DefHash similar to argument specification for functions in Rinci::function specification.
filter()
The filter rule module must also contain filter
subroutine which must generate the code for filtering. The subroutine must accept a hash of arguments and will be passed these:
data_term => str
args => hash
The arguments for the filter. Hash keys will contain the argument names, while hash values will contain the argument's values.
The filter
subroutine must return a hashref with the following keys (*
indicates required keys):
expr_filter* => str
Expression in the target language to actually convert data.
modules => hash
A list of modules required by the expression, where hash keys are module names and hash values are modules' minimum versions.
Basically, the filter
subroutine must generate a code that accepts a non-undef data and must convert this data to the desired value.
Program/library that uses Data::Sah::Filter can collect rules from the rule modules then compose them into the final code, something like (in pseudo-Perl code):
if (!defined $data) {
return undef;
} else {
$data = expr-filter-from-rule1($data);
$data = expr-filter-from-rule2($data);
...
return $data;
}
Filter modules included in this distribution
- 1. Data::Sah::Filter::js::Str::downcase
- 2. Data::Sah::Filter::js::Str::lc
- 3. Data::Sah::Filter::js::Str::lcfirst
- 4. Data::Sah::Filter::js::Str::lowercase
- 5. Data::Sah::Filter::js::Str::ltrim
- 6. Data::Sah::Filter::js::Str::rtrim
- 7. Data::Sah::Filter::js::Str::trim
- 8. Data::Sah::Filter::js::Str::uc
- 9. Data::Sah::Filter::js::Str::ucfirst
- 10. Data::Sah::Filter::js::Str::upcase
- 11. Data::Sah::Filter::js::Str::uppercase
- 12. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Array::check_uniq
- 13. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Array::check_uniqnum
- 14. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Array::check_uniqstr
- 15. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Array::remove_undef
- 16. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Array::uniq
- 17. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Array::uniqnum
- 18. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Array::uniqstr
- 19. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Float::ceil
- 20. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Float::check_has_fraction
- 21. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Float::check_int
- 22. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Float::floor
- 23. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Float::round
- 24. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::check
- 25. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::check_lowercase
- 26. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::check_oneline
- 27. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::check_uppercase
- 28. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::downcase
- 29. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::ensure_trailing_newline
- 30. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::lc
- 31. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::lcfirst
- 32. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::lowercase
- 33. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::ltrim
- 34. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::oneline
- 35. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::remove_comment
- 36. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::remove_non_latin_alphanum
- 37. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::remove_nondigit
- 38. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::remove_whitespace
- 39. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::replace_map
- 40. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::rtrim
- 41. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::trim
- 42. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::try_center
- 43. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::uc
- 44. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::ucfirst
- 45. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::underscore_non_latin_alphanum
- 46. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::underscore_non_latin_alphanums
- 47. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::upcase
- 48. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::uppercase
- 49. Data::Sah::Filter::perl::Str::wrap
VARIABLES
$Log_Filter_Code => bool (default: from ENV or 0)
If set to true, will log the generated filter code (currently using Log::ger at trace level). To see the log message, e.g. to the screen, you can use something like:
% TRACE=1 perl -MLog::ger::LevelFromEnv -MLog::ger::Output=Screen \
-MData::Sah::Filter=gen_filter -E'my $c = gen_filter(...)'
FUNCTIONS
gen_filter
Usage:
gen_filter(%args) -> any
Generate filter code.
This is mostly for testing. Normally the filter rules will be used from Data::Sah.
This function is not exported by default, but exportable.
Arguments ('*' denotes required arguments):
filter_names* => array[str]
(No description)
return_type => str (default: "val")
(No description)
Return value: (any)
ENVIRONMENT
LOG_SAH_FILTER_CODE => bool
Set default for $Log_Filter_Code
.
HOMEPAGE
Please visit the project's homepage at https://metacpan.org/release/Data-Sah-Filter.
SOURCE
Source repository is at https://github.com/perlancar/perl-Data-Sah-Filter.
SEE ALSO
App::SahUtils, including filter-with-sah to conveniently test filter from the command-line.
Data::Sah::Coerce. Filtering works very similarly to coercion in the Data::Sah framework (see l<Data::Sah::Coerce>) but is simpler and composited differently to form the final filtering code. Mainly, input data will be passed to all filtering expressions.
AUTHOR
perlancar <perlancar@cpan.org>
CONTRIBUTING
To contribute, you can send patches by email/via RT, or send pull requests on GitHub.
Most of the time, you don't need to build the distribution yourself. You can simply modify the code, then test via:
% prove -l
If you want to build the distribution (e.g. to try to install it locally on your system), you can install Dist::Zilla, Dist::Zilla::PluginBundle::Author::PERLANCAR, Pod::Weaver::PluginBundle::Author::PERLANCAR, and sometimes one or two other Dist::Zilla- and/or Pod::Weaver plugins. Any additional steps required beyond that are considered a bug and can be reported to me.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2024, 2023, 2022, 2020 by perlancar <perlancar@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.
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Data-Sah-Filter
When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.