NAME
HTML::AutoTag - Just another HTML tag generator.
SYNOPSIS
use HTML::AutoTag;
my %attr = ( style => { color => [qw(red green)] } );
my @data = qw( one two three four five six seven eight );
my $auto = HTML::AutoTag->new( indent => ' ' );
print $auto->tag(
tag => 'ol',
attr => {qw( reversed reversed )},
cdata => [
map { tag => 'li', attr => \%attr, cdata => $_ }, @data
]
);
DESCRIPTION
This module will make some HTMLs, yo.
THIS IS AN ALPHA RELEASE - the interface could change at a ++ of $VERSION.
METHODS
new()
Accepts three arguments:
encodes
Encode HTML entities. Defaults to empty string which produces no encoding. Set value to those characters you wish to have encoded. Set value to undef to encode the unsafe characters <, >, and &. = not encoded by default.
indent
Pretty print results. Defaults to undef which produces no indentation. Set value to any number of spaces or tabs and newlines will also be appended.
level
Indentation level to start at. Can be used in conjunction with
indent
to set indentation even deeper to match any existing HTML this code may be injected into.
tag()
Accepts three arguments:
tag
The name of the tag. String.
attr
The attributes and values to write out for the tag. Hash reference.
cdata
The value inbetween the tag. Types allowed are:
scalar - the string to be wrapped in tags
hash ref - another tag with its own cdata and attributes
AoH - multiple tags as hash references.
REQUIRES
-
Used to encode unsafe HTML entities.
-
Used to create rotating attributes.
EXAMPLE
The following will render a table with rotating attributes. Notice the need to supply the same reference for each <tr> attribute:
my %tr_attr = ( class => [qw(odd even)] );
print $auto->tag(
tag => 'table',
attr => { class => 'spreadsheet' },
cdata => [
{
tag => 'tr',
attr => \%tr_attr,
cdata => {
tag => 'td',
attr => { style => { color => [qw(red green)] } },
cdata => [qw(one two three four five six)],
},
},
{
tag => 'tr',
attr => \%tr_attr,
cdata => {
tag => 'td',
attr => { style => { color => [qw(red green)] } },
cdata => [qw(seven eight nine ten eleven twelve)],
},
},
{
tag => 'tr',
attr => \%tr_attr,
cdata => {
tag => 'td',
attr => { style => { color => [qw(red green)] } },
cdata => [qw(thirteen fourteen fifteen sixteen seventeen eighteen)],
},
},
]
);
See tests in t/
from the distribution or github for more examples: https://github.com/jeffa/HTML-AutoTag/tree/master/t
INSPIRATION
Lincoln Stein's CGI has long been able to easily produce completely arbitrary HTML text by turning any non-defined method call into a wrapper.
Gisle Aas's HTML::Tree distribution has a wonderful method (HTML::Element::new_from_lol) which this module draws most of its interface inspiration from. I would like to continue tweaking this code - while the named parameters make for a cleaner implementation they do get in the way of the client.
Finally, this module was the indirect result of efforts to refactor DBIx::XHTML_Table into DBIx::HTML and Spreadsheet::HTML. The need to reimplement what CGI and HTML::Element (and a slew of others out there on the CPAN) do was generated from slow performance time and maintaining the rotating attributes feature (now in Tie::Hash::Attribute).
BUGS AND LIMITATIONS
Please report any bugs or feature requests to either:
Email:
bug-html-autotag at rt.cpan.org
Web: http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=HTML-AutoTag
GITHUB
The Github project is https://github.com/jeffa/HTML-AutoTag
SUPPORT
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc HTML::AutoTag
You can also look for information at:
RT: CPAN's request tracker (report bugs here) http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=HTML-AutoTag
AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation http://annocpan.org/dist/HTML-AutoTag
CPAN Ratings http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/HTML-AutoTag
Search CPAN http://search.cpan.org/dist/HTML-AutoTag/
SEE ALSO
-
HTML::AutoTag takes a liberal approach to HTML creation. It does not validate the names of the tags or the names of attributes. It does not enforce rules for organization of the tags. HTML::Tagset provides "data tables useful in parsing HTML," they can also be useful here in the valid formation of HTML. Me? I use templates, but that doesn't mean the idea is invalid - just narrows the audience.
AUTHOR
Jeff Anderson, <jeffa at cpan.org>
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2015 Jeff Anderson.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the the Artistic License (2.0). You may obtain a copy of the full license at:
http://www.perlfoundation.org/artistic_license_2_0
Any use, modification, and distribution of the Standard or Modified Versions is governed by this Artistic License. By using, modifying or distributing the Package, you accept this license. Do not use, modify, or distribute the Package, if you do not accept this license.
If your Modified Version has been derived from a Modified Version made by someone other than you, you are nevertheless required to ensure that your Modified Version complies with the requirements of this license.
This license does not grant you the right to use any trademark, service mark, tradename, or logo of the Copyright Holder.
This license includes the non-exclusive, worldwide, free-of-charge patent license to make, have made, use, offer to sell, sell, import and otherwise transfer the Package with respect to any patent claims licensable by the Copyright Holder that are necessarily infringed by the Package. If you institute patent litigation (including a cross-claim or counterclaim) against any party alleging that the Package constitutes direct or contributory patent infringement, then this Artistic License to you shall terminate on the date that such litigation is filed.
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