Difference between revisions of "CGI::FormMagick::TagMaker"

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=== SYNTAX ===
 
=== SYNTAX ===
<nowiki>Through the magic of autoloading, this class can make any html tag by calling a class method with the same name as the tag you want.  For examples, use "hr()" to make a "<HR>" tag, or "p(’text’)" to make "<P>text</P>".  This also means that if you mis-spell any method name, it will still make a new tag with the mis-spelled name. For autoloaded methods only, the method names are case-insensitive.
+
<nowiki>Through the magic of autoloading, this class can make any html tag by calling a class method with the same name as the tag you want.  For examples, use "hr()" to make a "<HR>" tag, or "p(’text’)" to make "<P>text</P>".  This also means that if you mis-spell any method name, it will still make a new tag with the mis-spelled name. For autoloaded methods only, the method names are case-insensitive.</nowiki><br />
  
If you call a class method whose name ends in either of [’_start’, ’_end’, ’_pair’], this will be interpreted as an instruction to make just part of one tag whose name are the part of the method name preceeding that suffix.  For example, calling "p_start( ’text’ )" results in "<P>text" rather than "<P>text</P>".  Similarly, calling "p_end()" will generate a "</P>" only.  Using the ’_pair’ suffix will force tags to be made as a pair, whether or not they would do so naturally.  For example, calling "br_pair" would produce a "<BR></BR>" rather than the normal "<BR>".  When using either of [’_start’,’_pair’], the arguments you pass the method are exactly the same as the unmodified method would use, and there are no other symantec differences.  However, when using the ’_end’ suffix, any arguments are ignored, as the latter member of a tag pair never carries any attributes anyway.
 
  
If you call a class method whose name ends in "_group", this will be interpreted as an instruction to make a list of tags whose name are the part of the method name preceeding the "_group".  For example, calling "td_group( [’here’,’we’,’are’] )" results in "<TD>here</TD><TD>we</TD><TD>are</TD>" being generated.  The arguments that you call this method are exactly the same as for calling a method to make a single tag of the same name, except that the extra optional parameter "list" can be used to force an ARRAY ref of the new tags to be returned instead of a scalar.  The symantec difference is that any arguments whose values are ARRAY refs are interpreted as a list of values where each one is used in a separate tag; for a single tag, the literal ARRAY ref itself would be used.
+
<nowiki>If you call a class method whose name ends in either of [’_start’, ’_end’, ’_pair’], this will be interpreted as an instruction to make just part of one tag whose name are the part of the method name preceeding that suffix.  For example, calling "p_start( ’text’ )" results in "<P>text" rather than "<P>text</P>".  Similarly, calling "p_end()" will generate a "</P>" only.  Using the ’_pair’ suffix will force tags to be made as a pair, whether or not they would do so naturally.  For example, calling "br_pair" would produce a "<BR></BR>" rather than the normal "<BR>".  When using either of [’_start’,’_pair’], the arguments you pass the method are exactly the same as the unmodified method would use, and there are no other symantec differences.  However, when using the ’_end’ suffix, any arguments are ignored, as the latter member of a tag pair never carries any attributes anyway.
The number of tags produced is equal to the length of the longest ARRAY ref passed as an argument.  For any other arguments who have fewer than this count, their last value is replicated and appended enough times as necessary to make them the same length.  The value of a scalar argument is used for all the tags.  For example, calling "input_group( type => checkbox, name => ’letters’, value => [’a’,’b’,’c’] )" produces ’<INPUT TYPE="checkbox" NAME="letters" VALUE="a"><INPUT TYPE="checkbox" NAME="letters" VALUE="b"><INPUT TYPE="checkbox" NAME="letters" VALUE="c">’.
+
</nowiki><br />
All autoloaded methods require their parameters to be in named format.  These names and values correspond to attribute names and values for the new tags.  Since "no value" attributes are essentially booleans, they can have any true or false value associated with them in the parameter list, which won’t be printed.  If an autoloaded method is passed exactly one parameter, it will be interpreted as the "text" that goes between the tag pair (<TAG>text</TAG>) or after "start tags" (<TAG>text).  The same result can be had explicitely by passing the named parameter "text".  Most static (non-autoloaded) methods require positional parameters, except for start_html(), which can take either format.  The names of any named parameters can optionally start with a "-".
+
 
 +
<nowiki>If you call a class method whose name ends in "_group", this will be interpreted as an instruction to make a list of tags whose name are the part of the method name preceeding the "_group".  For example, calling "td_group( [’here’,’we’,’are’] )" results in "<TD>here</TD><TD>we</TD><TD>are</TD>" being generated.  The arguments that you call this method are exactly the same as for calling a method to make a single tag of the same name, except that the extra optional parameter "list" can be used to force an ARRAY ref of the new tags to be returned instead of a scalar.  The symantec difference is that any arguments whose values are ARRAY refs are interpreted as a list of values where each one is used in a separate tag; for a single tag, the literal ARRAY ref itself would be used.</nowiki><br />
 +
 
 +
<nowiki>The number of tags produced is equal to the length of the longest ARRAY ref passed as an argument.  For any other arguments who have fewer than this count, their last value is replicated and appended enough times as necessary to make them the same length.  The value of a scalar argument is used for all the tags.  For example, calling "input_group( type => checkbox, name => ’letters’, value => [’a’,’b’,’c’] )" produces ’<INPUT TYPE="checkbox" NAME="letters" VALUE="a"><INPUT TYPE="checkbox" NAME="letters" VALUE="b"><INPUT TYPE="checkbox" NAME="letters" VALUE="c">’.</nowiki><br />
 +
 
 +
<nowiki>All autoloaded methods require their parameters to be in named format.  These names and values correspond to attribute names and values for the new tags.  Since "no value" attributes are essentially booleans, they can have any true or false value associated with them in the parameter list, which won’t be printed.  If an autoloaded method is passed exactly one parameter, it will be interpreted as the "text" that goes between the tag pair (<TAG>text</TAG>) or after "start tags" (<TAG>text).  The same result can be had explicitely by passing the named parameter "text".  Most static (non-autoloaded) methods require positional parameters, except for start_html(), which can take either format.  The names of any named parameters can optionally start with a "-".
 
</nowiki>
 
</nowiki>
  
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==== make_html_tag_group( NAME[, PARAMS[, TEXT[, LIST]]] ) ====
 
==== make_html_tag_group( NAME[, PARAMS[, TEXT[, LIST]]] ) ====
  
This method is used internally to do the actual construction of html tag groups.  You can call it directly when you want faster code and/or more control over how tags are made.  The first argument, NAME, is a scalar that defines the actual name of the tag we are making (eg: ’br’); it is case-insensitive.  The optional second argument, PARAMS, is a HASH ref containing attribute names and values for the new tag; the names (keys) are case-insensitive.  Any attribute values which are ARRAY refs are flattened, and the number of tags made is determined by the length of the longest one.  The optional third argument, TEXT, is a HASH ref (or scalar) containing the text that goes between the tag pairs; it is not a tag attribute, but if its an ARRAY ref then its length will influence the number of tags that are made as the length of tag attribute arrays do.  The optional fourth argument, LIST, is a boolean/scalar which indicates whether this method returns the new tags in an ARRAY
+
This method is used internally to do the actual construction of html tag groups.  You can call it directly when you want faster code and/or more control over how tags are made.  The first argument, NAME, is a scalar that defines the actual name of the tag we are making (eg: ’br’); it is case-insensitive.  The optional second argument, PARAMS, is a HASH ref containing attribute names and values for the new tag; the names (keys) are case-insensitive.  Any attribute values which are ARRAY refs are flattened, and the number of tags made is determined by the length of the longest one.  The optional third argument, TEXT, is a HASH ref (or scalar) containing the text that goes between the tag pairs; it is not a tag attribute, but if its an ARRAY ref then its length will influence the number of tags that are made as the length of tag attribute arrays do.  The optional fourth argument, LIST, is a boolean/scalar which indicates whether this method returns the new tags in an ARRAY ref (one tag per element) or as a scalar (tags are concatenated together); a true value forces an ARRAY ref, scalar is the default.  This method knows which HTML tags are normally paired or not, which tag attributes take specified values or not, and acts accordingly.
      ref (one tag per element) or as a scalar (tags are concatenated together); a true value forces an ARRAY ref, scalar is the default.  This method knows which HTML tags are normally paired or not, which tag attributes take specified values or not, and acts accordingly.
+
 
 
=== COMPATABILITY WITH OTHER MODULES ===
 
=== COMPATABILITY WITH OTHER MODULES ===
 
The methods of this class and their parameters are designed to be compatible with any same-named methods in the popular CGI.pm class.  This class will produce identical or browser-compatible HTML from such methods, and this class can accept all the same argument formats.  Exceptions to this include:
 
The methods of this class and their parameters are designed to be compatible with any same-named methods in the popular CGI.pm class.  This class will produce identical or browser-compatible HTML from such methods, and this class can accept all the same argument formats.  Exceptions to this include:
Line 58: Line 62:
 
* None of our methods are exported and must be called using indirect notation, whereas CGI.pm can export any of it’s methods.
 
* None of our methods are exported and must be called using indirect notation, whereas CGI.pm can export any of it’s methods.
  
* start_html() doesn’t support all the same arguments, but those that do have the same names.  However, the effects of the missing arguments can be easily replicated by making the appropriate tags
+
* start_html() doesn’t support all the same arguments, but those that do have the same names.  However, the effects of the missing arguments can be easily replicated by making the appropriate tags explicitly and handing them in via either the "head" or "body" arguments, where appropriate.  The common arguments are [’title’, ’author’, ’meta’, ’style’, ’head’, ’body’], in that order.
          explicitely and handing them in via either the "head" or "body" arguments, where appropriate.  The common arguments are [’title’, ’author’, ’meta’, ’style’, ’head’, ’body’], in that order.
 
  
* Our textarea() method is autoloaded, and doesn’t have the special symantecs that CGI.pm’s textarea() does.  However, any module who subclasses from this one can override textarea() with one that
+
* Our textarea() method is autoloaded, and doesn’t have the special symantecs that CGI.pm’s textarea() does.  However, any module who subclasses from this one can override textarea() with one that matches CGI.pm’s symantecs.  The "HTML::FormMaker" module does this.
          matches CGI.pm’s symantecs.  The "HTML::FormMaker" module does this.
 
  
 
* Autoloaded methods do not use the presence or absense of arguments to decide whether to make the new tag as a pair or as "start only".
 
* Autoloaded methods do not use the presence or absense of arguments to decide whether to make the new tag as a pair or as "start only".
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* Autoloaded methods that make html tags won’t concatenate their arguments into a single argument under any circumstances, but in some cases the "shortcuts" of CGI.pm will do so.
 
* Autoloaded methods that make html tags won’t concatenate their arguments into a single argument under any circumstances, but in some cases the "shortcuts" of CGI.pm will do so.
  
* Currently we don’t html-escape any argument values passed to our tag making functions, whereas CGI.pm sometimes does.  While we expect our caller to do the escaping themselves where necessary,
+
* Currently we don’t html-escape any argument values passed to our tag making functions, whereas CGI.pm sometimes does.  While we expect our caller to do the escaping themselves where necessary, we may do it later in an update.
          we may do it later in an update.
 
  
* We go further to make the generated HTML human-readable by: 1. having each new tag start on a new line; 2. making all tag and attribute names uppercase; 3.  ensuring that about 20 often-used tag
+
* We go further to make the generated HTML human-readable by: 1. having each new tag start on a new line; 2. making all tag and attribute names uppercase; 3.  ensuring that about 20 often-used tag attributes always appear in the same order (eg: ’type’ is before ’name’ is before ’value’), and before any others.
          attributes always appear in the same order (eg: ’type’ is before ’name’ is before ’value’), and before any others.
 
  
 
=== COPYING ===
 
=== COPYING ===

Latest revision as of 19:29, 3 January 2014

NAME

CGI::FormMagick::TagMaker - Generate HTML tags

In a root terminal you can do the command below if you want to display the up-to-date content

perldoc CGI::FormMagick::TagMaker

SYNOPSIS

          use CGI::FormMagick::TagMaker;

          my $html = CGI::FormMagick::TagMaker->new();
          $html->input( type => ’submit’ ),

DESCRIPTION

This Perl 5 object class can be used to generate any HTML tags in a format that is consistent with the W3C HTML 4.0 standard. There are no restrictions on what tags are named, however; you can ask for any new or unsupported tag that comes along from Netscape or Microsoft, and it will be made. Additionally, you can generate lists of said tags with one method call, or just parts of said tags (but not both at once).

In this implementation, "standard format" means that tags are made as pairs (<TAG></TAG>) by default, unless they are known to be "no pair" tags. Tags that I know to be "no pair" are [basefont,img, area, param, br, hr, input, option, tbody, frame, comment, isindex, base, link, meta]. However, you can force any tag to be "pair" or "start only" or "end only" by appropriately modifying your call to the tag making method.

Also, "standard format" means that tag modifiers are formatted as "key=value" by default, unless they are known to be "no value" modifiers. Modifiers that I know to be "no value" are [ismap, noshade, compact, checked, multiple, selected, nowrap, noresize, param]. These are formatted simply as "key" because their very presence indicates positive assertion, while their absense means otherwise. For modifiers with values, the values will always become bounded by quotes, which ensures they work with both string and numerical quantities (eg: key="value").

Note that this class is a subclass of Class::ParamParser, and inherits all of its methods, "params_to_hash()" and "params_to_array()".

SYNTAX

Through the magic of autoloading, this class can make any html tag by calling a class method with the same name as the tag you want. For examples, use "hr()" to make a "<HR>" tag, or "p(’text’)" to make "<P>text</P>". This also means that if you mis-spell any method name, it will still make a new tag with the mis-spelled name. For autoloaded methods only, the method names are case-insensitive.


If you call a class method whose name ends in either of [’_start’, ’_end’, ’_pair’], this will be interpreted as an instruction to make just part of one tag whose name are the part of the method name preceeding that suffix. For example, calling "p_start( ’text’ )" results in "<P>text" rather than "<P>text</P>". Similarly, calling "p_end()" will generate a "</P>" only. Using the ’_pair’ suffix will force tags to be made as a pair, whether or not they would do so naturally. For example, calling "br_pair" would produce a "<BR></BR>" rather than the normal "<BR>". When using either of [’_start’,’_pair’], the arguments you pass the method are exactly the same as the unmodified method would use, and there are no other symantec differences. However, when using the ’_end’ suffix, any arguments are ignored, as the latter member of a tag pair never carries any attributes anyway.

If you call a class method whose name ends in "_group", this will be interpreted as an instruction to make a list of tags whose name are the part of the method name preceeding the "_group". For example, calling "td_group( [’here’,’we’,’are’] )" results in "<TD>here</TD><TD>we</TD><TD>are</TD>" being generated. The arguments that you call this method are exactly the same as for calling a method to make a single tag of the same name, except that the extra optional parameter "list" can be used to force an ARRAY ref of the new tags to be returned instead of a scalar. The symantec difference is that any arguments whose values are ARRAY refs are interpreted as a list of values where each one is used in a separate tag; for a single tag, the literal ARRAY ref itself would be used.

The number of tags produced is equal to the length of the longest ARRAY ref passed as an argument. For any other arguments who have fewer than this count, their last value is replicated and appended enough times as necessary to make them the same length. The value of a scalar argument is used for all the tags. For example, calling "input_group( type => checkbox, name => ’letters’, value => [’a’,’b’,’c’] )" produces ’<INPUT TYPE="checkbox" NAME="letters" VALUE="a"><INPUT TYPE="checkbox" NAME="letters" VALUE="b"><INPUT TYPE="checkbox" NAME="letters" VALUE="c">’.

All autoloaded methods require their parameters to be in named format. These names and values correspond to attribute names and values for the new tags. Since "no value" attributes are essentially booleans, they can have any true or false value associated with them in the parameter list, which won’t be printed. If an autoloaded method is passed exactly one parameter, it will be interpreted as the "text" that goes between the tag pair (<TAG>text</TAG>) or after "start tags" (<TAG>text). The same result can be had explicitely by passing the named parameter "text". Most static (non-autoloaded) methods require positional parameters, except for start_html(), which can take either format. The names of any named parameters can optionally start with a "-".

FUNCTIONS AND METHODS

Note that all the methods defined below are static, so information specific to autoloaded methods won’t likely apply to them. All of these methods take positional arguments unless otherwise specified.

new()

This function creates a new HTML::TagMaker object (or subclass thereof) and returns it.

groups_by_default([ VALUE ])

This method is an accessor for the boolean "automatic grouping" property of this object, which it returns. If VALUE is defined, this property is set to it. In cases where we aren’t told explicitely that autoloaded methods are making a single or multiple tags (using [’_start’, ’_end’, ’_pair’] and ’_group’ respectively), we look to this property to determine what operation we guess. The default is "single". When this property is true, we can make both single and groups of tags by using a suffix-less method name; however, making single tags this way is slower than when this property is false. Also, be aware that when we are making a "group", arguments that are ARRAY refs are always flattened, and when we are making a "single", ARRAY ref arguments are always used literally.

positional_by_default([ VALUE ])

This method is an accessor for the boolean "positional arguments" property of this object, which it returns. If VALUE is defined, this property is set to it. With methods whose parameters could be either named or positional, when we aren’t sure what we are given, do we guess positional? Default is named.

make_html_tag( NAME[, PARAMS[, TEXT[, PART]]] )

This method is used internally to do the actual construction of single html tags. You can call it directly when you want faster code and/or more control over how tags are made. The first argument, NAME, is a scalar that defines the actual name of the tag we are making (eg:’br’); it is case-insensitive. The optional second argument, PARAMS, is a HASH ref containing attribute names and values for the new tag; the names (keys) are case-insensitive. The attribute values are all printed literally, so they should be scalars. The optional third argument, TEXT, is a scalar containing the text that goes between the tag pairs; it is not a tag attribute. The optional fourth argument, PART, is a scalar which indicates we should make just a certain part of the tag; acceptable values are [’pair’, ’start’, ’end’], and it is case-insensitive. This method knows which HTML tags are normally paired or not, which tag attributes take specified values or not, and acts accordingly.

make_html_tag_group( NAME[, PARAMS[, TEXT[, LIST]]] )

This method is used internally to do the actual construction of html tag groups. You can call it directly when you want faster code and/or more control over how tags are made. The first argument, NAME, is a scalar that defines the actual name of the tag we are making (eg: ’br’); it is case-insensitive. The optional second argument, PARAMS, is a HASH ref containing attribute names and values for the new tag; the names (keys) are case-insensitive. Any attribute values which are ARRAY refs are flattened, and the number of tags made is determined by the length of the longest one. The optional third argument, TEXT, is a HASH ref (or scalar) containing the text that goes between the tag pairs; it is not a tag attribute, but if its an ARRAY ref then its length will influence the number of tags that are made as the length of tag attribute arrays do. The optional fourth argument, LIST, is a boolean/scalar which indicates whether this method returns the new tags in an ARRAY ref (one tag per element) or as a scalar (tags are concatenated together); a true value forces an ARRAY ref, scalar is the default. This method knows which HTML tags are normally paired or not, which tag attributes take specified values or not, and acts accordingly.

COMPATABILITY WITH OTHER MODULES

The methods of this class and their parameters are designed to be compatible with any same-named methods in the popular CGI.pm class. This class will produce identical or browser-compatible HTML from such methods, and this class can accept all the same argument formats. Exceptions to this include:

  • None of our methods are exported and must be called using indirect notation, whereas CGI.pm can export any of it’s methods.
  • start_html() doesn’t support all the same arguments, but those that do have the same names. However, the effects of the missing arguments can be easily replicated by making the appropriate tags explicitly and handing them in via either the "head" or "body" arguments, where appropriate. The common arguments are [’title’, ’author’, ’meta’, ’style’, ’head’, ’body’], in that order.
  • Our textarea() method is autoloaded, and doesn’t have the special symantecs that CGI.pm’s textarea() does. However, any module who subclasses from this one can override textarea() with one that matches CGI.pm’s symantecs. The "HTML::FormMaker" module does this.
  • Autoloaded methods do not use the presence or absense of arguments to decide whether to make the new tag as a pair or as "start only".
  • Autoloaded methods that make html tags won’t concatenate their arguments into a single argument under any circumstances, but in some cases the "shortcuts" of CGI.pm will do so.
  • Currently we don’t html-escape any argument values passed to our tag making functions, whereas CGI.pm sometimes does. While we expect our caller to do the escaping themselves where necessary, we may do it later in an update.
  • We go further to make the generated HTML human-readable by: 1. having each new tag start on a new line; 2. making all tag and attribute names uppercase; 3. ensuring that about 20 often-used tag attributes always appear in the same order (eg: ’type’ is before ’name’ is before ’value’), and before any others.

COPYING

Copyright (c) 2000-2001, Kirrily "Skud" Robert <skud@cpan.org>

This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms and Perl itself.

This module is based on Darren Duncan’s HTML::TagMaker, the copyright notice for which appears below:

Copyright (c) 1999-2000, Darren R. Duncan. All rights reserved.

This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. However, I do request that this copyright information remain attached to the file. If you modify this module and redistribute a changed version then please attach a note listing the modifications.

SEE ALSO

CGI::FormMagick