Data::Phrasebook::Loader::Text - Absract your phrases with plain text files.
use Data::Phrasebook; my $q = Data::Phrasebook->new( class => 'Fnerk', loader => 'Text', file => 'phrases.txt', ); # use default delimiters (:variable) my $phrase = $q->fetch($keyword,{variable => 'substitute'}); # use Template Toolkit style delimiters $q->delimiters( qr{ \[% \s* (\w+) \s* %\] }x ); my $phrase = $q->fetch($keyword,{variable => 'substitute'});
This loader plugin implements phrasebook patterns using plain text files.
Phrases can be contained within one or more dictionaries, with each phrase accessible via a unique key. Phrases may contain placeholders, please see Data::Phrasebook for an explanation of how to use these. Groups of phrases are kept in a dictionary. In this implementation a single file is one complete dictionary.
An example plain text file:
foo=Welcome to :my world. It is a nice :place.
Within the phrase text placeholders can be used, which are then replaced with the appropriate values once the get() method is called. The default style of placeholders can be altered using the delimiters() method.
Data::Phrasebook::Loader::Text inherits from the base class Data::Phrasebook::Loader::Base. See that module for other available methods and documentation.
Given a file, load it. file must contain a valid phrase map.
file
my $file = 'english.txt'; $loader->load( $file );
This method is used internally by Data::Phrasebook::Generic's data method, to initialise the data store.
data
To utilise the dictionary framework for a Plain Text phrasebook, the idea is to use a directory of files, where the directory is passed via the file argument and the dictionary, the specific name of the file, is passed via the dictionary argument.
dictionary
my $file = '/tmp/phrasebooks'; my $dictionary = 'english.txt'; $loader->load( $file, $dictionary );
Returns the phrase stored in the phrasebook, for a given keyword.
my $value = $loader->get( $key );
Having instantiated the Data::Phrasebook object class, and using the file attribute as a directory path, the object can return a list of the current dictionaries available as:
Data::Phrasebook
my $pb = Data::Phrasebook->new( loader => 'Text', file => '/tmp/phrasebooks', ); my @dicts = $pb->dicts;
or
my @dicts = $pb->dicts( $path );
Having instantiated the Data::Phrasebook object class, using the file and dict attributes as required, the object can return a list of the current keywords available as:
dict
my $pb = Data::Phrasebook->new( loader => 'Text', file => '/tmp/phrasebooks', dict => 'TEST', ); my @keywords = $pb->keywords;
my @keywords = $pb->keywords( $path, $dict );
Note that $path can either be the directory path, where $dict must be the specific file name of the dictionary, or the full path of the dictionary file.
In the second instance, the function will not load a dictionary, but can be used to interrogate the contents of a known dictionary.
Data::Phrasebook.
Please see the README file.
Barbie, <barbie@cpan.org> for Miss Barbell Productions <http://www.missbarbell.co.uk>.
Copyright (C) 2004-2013 Barbie for Miss Barbell Productions. This distribution is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the Artistic License v2.
To install Data::Phrasebook, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Data::Phrasebook
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Data::Phrasebook
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.