NAME
Data::Unixish::sprintf - Apply sprintf() on input
VERSION
version 1.28
SYNOPSIS
In Perl:
use Data::Unixish::sprintf;
my $in = [0, 1, [2], {}, "", undef];
my $out = [];
Data::Unixish::sprintf::sprintf(in=>$in, out=>$out, format=>"%.1f");
# $out = ["0.0", "1.0", "2.0", {}, "", undef];
In command line:
% echo -e "0\n1\n\nx\n" | dux sprintf -f "%.1f" --skip-non-number --format=text-simple
0.0
1.0
x
AUTHOR
Steven Haryanto <stevenharyanto@gmail.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Steven Haryanto.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
DESCRIPTION
FUNCTIONS
None are exported by default, but they are exportable.
sprintf(%args) -> [status, msg, result, meta]
Apply sprintf() on input.
Array will also be processed (all the elements are fed to sprintf(), the result is a single string), unless skip_array
is set to true.
Non-numbers can be skipped if you use skip_non_number
.
Undef, hashes, and other non-scalars are ignored.
Arguments ('*' denotes required arguments):
format* => str
in => any
out => any
skip_array => bool (default: 0)
skip_non_number => bool (default: 0)
Return value:
Returns an enveloped result (an array). First element (status) is an integer containing HTTP status code (200 means OK, 4xx caller error, 5xx function error). Second element (msg) is a string containing error message, or 'OK' if status is 200. Third element (result) is optional, the actual result. Fourth element (meta) is called result metadata and is optional, a hash that contains extra information.