NAME
Text::Snippet - TextMate-like snippet functionality
VERSION
version 0.04
SYNOPSIS
This module provides TextMate-like snippet functionality via an editor-agnostic API. The snippet syntax is modeled after the snippets provided by TextMate.
use Text::Snippet;
my $snippet = Text::Snippet->parse($snippet_content);
my @tabstops = $snippet->tab_stops;
foreach my $t (@tabstops) {
my $replacement = get_user_input(); # get user input somehow
$t->replace($replacement) if ($user_input);
}
print $snippet; # stringify and write to STDOUT
# alternate "cursor" interface
my $cursor = $snippet->cursor;
while ( my $direction = get_user_tab_direction() ) { # forward or backward
my $t;
if ( $direction == 1 ) { # tab
$t = $cursor->next;
} elsif ( $direction == -1 ) { # shift-tab
$t = $cursor->prev;
} else {
last; # bail
}
next if ( !$t );
# get (zero-based) cursor position relative to the beginning of the snippet
my($line, $column) = $cursor->current_position;
my $replacement = get_user_input();
$t->replace($replacement);
}
print $snippet; # stringify snippet and write to STDOUT
SUPPORTED SNIPPET SYNTAX
Plain text
The simplest snippet is just plain text with no tab stops and is returned verbatim to the caller.
Simple tab stops
Tab stops are indications for where the cursor should be placed after the user inserts a snippet. Simple tab stops are simply a dollar sign followed by a digit. The special
$0
tab stop is terminal and is where the cursor will end up when the user has progressed through all other tab stops defined by the snippet. If no$0
tab stop is indicated, one is added by default right after the final character of the snippet. A simple "if" snippet (two explicit tab stops plus an implicit terminal after the closing brace of theif
block):if ($1) { $2 }
Tab stops with defaults
Sometimes a snippet may provide a default value to the user to make the snippet easier to flesh out. These types of tab stops look like so:
while( my(\$${1:key}, \$${2:value}) = each(%${3:hash}) { $0 }
While navigating through the tab stops, the first three positions will provide default values ("key", "value" and "hash" respectively). The terminal tab stop will leave the cursor in the body of the
while
block.Tab stops with mirroring
Sometimes you may want the value the user entered in one tab stop to be copied to another. This (in TextMate lingo) is called mirroring. This is very simple to do, just use the same index on more than one tab stop and the content entered in the first will automatically be used in the others. A rather contrived example:
foreach my \$${1:item} (@${2:array}) { print "$${1}\n"; }
All occurences of the first tab stop (the loop variable and in the
print
statement) will have the same value (defaulting to "item").Transforming tab stops
The most advanced type of tab stop allows you to modify the entered value on the fly using a regular expression. For instance, if you like to use
getFoo
andsetFoo
accessors with Moose, you might use the following snippet:has ${1:propertyName} => ( is => '${2:rw}', isa => '${3:Str}', reader => 'get${1/./\u$0/}), writer => 'set${1/./\u$0}), );
If the user leaves all the defaults, the output of this snippet would be:
has propertyName => ( is => 'rw', isa => 'Str', reader => 'getPropertyName', writer => 'setPropertyName' );
Another example would be a helper snippet for creating simple HTML tags:
<${1:a}>${2}</${1/\s.*//}>
The transformer on the mirrored tab stop essentially will truncate anything starting with the first whitespace character entered by the user. If the user enters
a href="http://search.cpan.org"
as the first replacement value, the mirrored tab stop will have a replacement of justa
.
CLASS METHODS
parse
This is the main entry point into this module's functionality. It takes a single argument, the content of the snippet that conforms to the syntax described above.
INSTANCE METHODS
to_string
Obviously, gets the full content of the snippet as it currently exists. This object is overloaded as well so simply printing the object or including it inside double quotes will have the same effect.
chunks
Returns an ArrayRef that makes up the entire content of the snippet. Depending on the source of the snippet, some of these items may be literal scalars (representing static content) and others may be Text::Snippet::TabStop objects that represent the user-enterable portions of the snippet.
src
This returns the original source as it was passed to "parse"
tab_stops
This returns an ArrayRef of Text::Snippet::TabStop objects that represent the user-enterable portions of the snippet. These are ordered by the tab stop's index with the zero-th index coming last.
cursor
This method creates a Text::Snippet::TabStop::Cursor object for you which allows the caller to traverse a series of tab stops in a convenient fashion.
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-text-snippet at rt.cpan.org
, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Text-Snippet. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.
SUPPORT
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc Text::Snippet
You can also look for information at:
RT: CPAN's request tracker
AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
CPAN Ratings
Search CPAN
AUTHOR
Brian Phillips <bphillips@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2010 by Brian Phillips.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.