NAME

String::Truncate - a module for when strings are too long to be displayed in...

VERSION

version 1.100603

SYNOPSIS

This module handles the simple but common problem of long strings and finite terminal width. It can convert:

"this is your brain" -> "this is your ..."
                     or "...is your brain"
                     or "this is... brain"
                     or "... is your b..."

It's simple:

use String::Truncate qw(elide);

my $brain = "this is your brain";

elide($brain, 16); # first option
elide($brain, 16, { truncate => 'left' });   # second option
elide($brain, 16, { truncate => 'middle' }); # third option
elide($brain, 16, { truncate => 'ends' });   # fourth option

String::Trunc::trunc($brain, 16); # => "this is your bra"

PERL VERSION

This library should run on perls released even a long time ago. It should work on any version of perl released in the last five years.

Although it may work on older versions of perl, no guarantee is made that the minimum required version will not be increased. The version may be increased for any reason, and there is no promise that patches will be accepted to lower the minimum required perl.

FUNCTIONS

elide

elide($string, $length, \%arg)

This function returns the string, if it is less than or equal to $length characters long. If it is longer, it truncates the string and marks the elision.

Valid arguments are:

truncate - elide at left, right, middle, or ends? (default: right)
marker   - how to mark the elision (default: ...)
at_space - if true, strings will be broken at whitespace if possible

trunc

trunc($string, $length, \%arg)

This acts just like elide, but assumes an empty marker, so it actually truncates the string normally.

IMPORTING

String::Truncate exports both elide and trunc, and also supports the Exporter-style ":all" tag.

use String::Truncate ();        # export nothing
use String::Truncate qw(elide); # export just elide()
use String::Truncate qw(:all);  # export both elide() and trunc()
use String::Truncate qw(-all);  # export both elide() and trunc()

When exporting, you may also supply default values:

use String::Truncate -all => defaults => { length => 10, marker => '--' };

# or

use String::Truncate -all => { length => 10, marker => '--' };

These values affect only the imported version of the functions. You may pass arguments as usual to override them, and you may call the subroutine by its fully-qualified name to get the standard behavior.

BUILDING CODEREFS

The imported builds and installs lexical closures (code references) that merge in given values to the defaults. You can build your own closures without importing them into your namespace. To do this, use the elide_with_defaults and trunc_with_defaults routines.

elide_with_defaults

my $elider = String::Truncate::elide_with_defaults(\%arg);

This routine, never exported, builds a coderef which behaves like elide, but uses default values when needed. All the valid arguments to elide are valid here, as well as length.

trunc_with_defaults

This routine behaves exactly like elide_with_defaults, with one obvious exception: it returns code that works like trunc rather than elide. If a marker argument is passed, it is ignored.

SEE ALSO

Text::Truncate does a very similar thing. So does Text::Elide.

BUGS

Please report any bugs or feature requests through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=String-Truncate. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Ian Langworth gave me some good advice about naming things. (Also some bad jokes. Nobody wants String::ETOOLONG, Ian.) Hans Dieter Pearcey suggested allowing defaults just in time for a long bus ride, and I was rescued from boredom by that suggestion

AUTHOR

Ricardo Signes <cpan@semiotic.systems>

CONTRIBUTORS

  • David Steinbrunner <dsteinbrunner@pobox.com>

  • Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@codesimply.com>

  • Ricardo Signes <rjbs@semiotic.systems>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2022 by Ricardo Signes.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.