This module adds sequential numbers to lists of lists so you don't have to type all the numbers. Its original use case was for adding line numbers to lists of testcases. For example:
use List::AutoNumbered; # line 1
my $list = List::AutoNumbered->new(__LINE__); # line 2
$list->load("a")-> # line 3
("b") # line 4
("c") # line 5
("d"); # line 6
# Now $list->arr is [ [3,"a"], [4,"b"], [5,"c"], [6,"d"] ]
# and @$list is ( [3,"a"] ... ).
In general, you can pass any number to the constructor. For example:
use List::AutoNumbered;
use Test::More tests => 1;
my $list = List::AutoNumbered->new; # First entry will be number 1
$list->load("a")-> # Yes, trailing arrow
("b") # Magic! Don"t need any more arrows!
("c")
("d");
is_deeply($list->arr, [
[1, "a"], [2, "b"], [3, "c"], [4, "d"]
]); # Yes, it is!
Constructor. Basic usage options:
$list = List::AutoNumbered->new(); # first list item is number 1
$list = List::AutoNumbered->new($num); # first list item is $num+1
$list = List::AutoNumbered->new(-at => $num); # ditto
Each successive element
will have the next number, unless you say otherwise (e.g., using
LSKIP()). Specifically, the first item in the list will be numbered
one higher than the number passed to the List::AutoNumbered
constructor.
Constructor parameters are processed using Getargs::Mixed, so positional and named parameters are both OK.
You can give the constructor a "how" function that will make the list entry for a single load() or add() call:
$list = List::AutoNumbered->new(-how => sub { @_ });
# Jam everything together to make a flat array
$list = List::AutoNumbered->new(41, sub { @_ });
# Positional is OK, too.
The how
function is called as how($num, @data)
. $num
is the
line number for load() calls, or undef
for add() calls.
@data
is whatever data you passed to load()
or add()
. For example,
the default how
function is:
sub how {
shift unless defined $_[0]; # add passes undef as the line number.
[@_] # Wrap everything in an arrayref.
}
See t/05-custom-list-entry.t
for examples of custom how
functions.
Returns the size of the array. Like scalar @arr
.
Returns the index of the last element in the array. Like $#array
.
Returns a reference to the array being built. Please do not modify this array directly until you are done loading it. List::AutoNumbered may not work if you do.
This can also be called by using the List::AutoNumbered object as an array:
my $list = List::AutoNumbered->new...;
foreach my $item (@$list) { ... } # Instead of my $item (@{$list->arr})
Returns the current number stored by the instance. This is the number of the most recently preceding new() or load() call. This is not the number that will be given to the next record, since that depends on whether or not the next record has a skip (LSKIP()).
Push a new record with the next number on the front. Usage:
$instance->load(whatever args you want to push);
Or, if the current record isn't associated with the number immediately after the previous record,
$instance->load(LSKIP $n, args);
where $n
is the number of lines between this load()
call and the last one.
Returns a coderef that you can call to chain loads. For example, this works:
$instance->load(...)->(...)(...)(...) ... ;
# You need an arrow ^^ here, but don't need any after that.
Add to the array being built, without inserting the number on the front. Does increment the number and respect skips, for consistency.
Returns the instance.
A convenience function to create a skipper. Prototyped as ($)
so you can
use it conveniently with load():
$instance->load(LSKIP 1, whatever args...);
If you are using line numbers, the parameter to LSKIP
should be the number
of lines above the current line and below the last new() or
load() call. For example:
my $instance = List::AutoNumbered->new(__LINE__);
# A line
# Another one
$instance->load(LSKIP 2, # two comment lines between new() and here
'some data');
This package represents a skip and is created by LSKIP(). No user-serviceable parts inside.
Creates a new skipper. Parameters are for internal use only and are not part of the public API.
(Default falsy) If truthy, print trace output. Must be accessed directly
unless requested on the use
line. Either of the following works:
use List::AutoNumbered; $List::AutoNumbered::TRACE=1;
use List::AutoNumbered q(*TRACE); $TRACE=1;
Christopher White, <cxwembedded at gmail.com>
Please report any bugs or feature requests through the web interface at https://github.com/cxw42/List-AutoNumbered/issues. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc List::AutoNumbered
You can also look for information at:
-
MetaCPAN
-
Appveyor (CI builds)
Thanks to zdim for discussion and ideas in the Stack Overflow question that was the starting point for this module.
Thanks to Dan Stewart for code contributions.
Copyright 2019--2020 Christopher White.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either: the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; or the Artistic License.
See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.