package printbox

  1. Overview
  2. Docs
Allows to print nested boxes, lists, arrays, tables in several formats

Install

Dune Dependency

Authors

Maintainers

Sources

printbox-0.7.tbz
sha256=59271f9720bfe25e8bf884b38f1ba7fe161292faf6f895c89f71b615e5671737
sha512=77af5c0479a62f7e3df96267d0f5dc1315bdafcdaa2ded7bb2cbe4cab415c6310add696a45f8ae505f1ed51d509d4dd4d74000b5eae1f518c638afdaec95774d

README.md.html

PrintBox

Allows to print nested boxes, lists, arrays, tables in several formats, including:

  • text (assuming monospace font)

  • HTML (using tyxml )

  • LaTeX (not implemented yet)

Documentation

See https://c-cube.github.io/printbox/

License

BSD-2-clauses

Build

Ideally, use opam with OCaml >= 4.08:

$ opam install printbox printbox-text

Manually:

$ make install

A few examples

importing the module
# #require "printbox";;
# #require "printbox-text";;

# module B = PrintBox;;
module B = PrintBox
simple box
# let box = B.(hlist [ text "hello"; text "world"; ]);;
val box : B.t = <abstr>

# PrintBox_text.output stdout box;;
hello│world
- : unit = ()
less simple boxes
# let box =
  B.(hlist
  [ text "I love\nto\npress\nenter";
    grid_text [| [|"a"; "bbb"|];
    [|"c"; "hello world"|] |]
  ])
  |> B.frame;;
val box : B.t = <abstr>

# PrintBox_text.output stdout box;;
┌──────┬─┬───────────┐
│I love│a│bbb        │
│to    ├─┼───────────┤
│press │c│hello world│
│enter │ │           │
└──────┴─┴───────────┘
- : unit = ()
printing a table
# let square n =
  (* function to make a square *)
  Array.init n
    (fun i -> Array.init n (fun j -> B.sprintf "(%d,%d)" i j))
  |> B.grid ;;
val square : int -> B.t = <fun>

# let sq = square 5;;
val sq : B.t = <abstr>
# PrintBox_text.output stdout sq;;
(0,0)│(0,1)│(0,2)│(0,3)│(0,4)
─────┼─────┼─────┼─────┼─────
(1,0)│(1,1)│(1,2)│(1,3)│(1,4)
─────┼─────┼─────┼─────┼─────
(2,0)│(2,1)│(2,2)│(2,3)│(2,4)
─────┼─────┼─────┼─────┼─────
(3,0)│(3,1)│(3,2)│(3,3)│(3,4)
─────┼─────┼─────┼─────┼─────
(4,0)│(4,1)│(4,2)│(4,3)│(4,4)
- : unit = ()
frame

Why not put a frame around this? That's easy.

# let sq2 = square 3 |> B.frame ;;
val sq2 : B.t = <abstr>

# PrintBox_text.output stdout sq2;;
┌─────┬─────┬─────┐
│(0,0)│(0,1)│(0,2)│
├─────┼─────┼─────┤
│(1,0)│(1,1)│(1,2)│
├─────┼─────┼─────┤
│(2,0)│(2,1)│(2,2)│
└─────┴─────┴─────┘
- : unit = ()
tree

We can also create trees and display them using indentation:

# let tree =
  B.tree (B.text "root")
    [ B.tree (B.text "a") [B.text "a1\na1"; B.text "a2\na2\na2"];
      B.tree (B.text "b") [B.text "b1\nb1"; B.text "b2"; B.text "b3"];
    ];;
val tree : B.t = <abstr>

# PrintBox_text.output stdout tree;;
root
├─a
│ ├─a1
│ │ a1
│ └─a2
│   a2
│   a2
└─b
  ├─b1
  │ b1
  ├─b2
  └─b3
- : unit = ()
Installing the pretty-printer in the toplevel

PrintBox_text contains a Format-compatible pretty-printer that can be used as a default printer for boxes.

# #install_printer PrintBox_text.pp;;
# PrintBox.(frame @@ frame @@ init_grid ~line:3 ~col:2 (fun ~line:i ~col:j -> sprintf "%d.%d" i j));;
- : B.t =
┌─────────┐
│┌───┬───┐│
││0.0│0.1││
│├───┼───┤│
││1.0│1.1││
│├───┼───┤│
││2.0│2.1││
│└───┴───┘│
└─────────┘
# #remove_printer PrintBox_text.pp;;

Note that this pretty-printer plays nicely with Format boxes:

# let b = PrintBox.(frame @@ hlist [text "a\nb"; text "c"]);;
val b : B.t = <abstr>
# Format.printf "some text %a around@." PrintBox_text.pp b;;
some text ┌─┬─┐
          │a│c│
          │b│ │
          └─┴─┘ around
- : unit = ()

Also works with basic styling on text now:

# let b2 = PrintBox.(
    let style = Style.(fg_color Red) in
  frame @@ hlist [text_with_style style "a\nb"; text "c"]);;
val b2 : B.t = <abstr>
# Format.printf "some text %a around@." (PrintBox_text.pp_with ~style:true) b2;;
some text ┌─┬─┐
          │a│c│
          │b│ │
          └─┴─┘ around
- : unit = ()
# let b3 = PrintBox.(
    let style = Style.(fg_color Red) in
    frame @@ grid_l [
      [text_with_style style "a\nb";
       line_with_style Style.(set_bold true @@ bg_color Green) "OH!"];
      [text "c"; text "ballot"];
    ])
val b3 : PrintBox.t = <abstr>
utop [1]: print_endline @@ PrintBox_text.to_string b3;;

gives .

Handling unicode

Unicode (utf8) text is handled.

# let b =
  PrintBox.(frame @@
    hlist [
      vlist[text "oï ωεird nums:\nπ/2\nτ/4";
        tree (text "0")[text "1"; tree (text "ω") [text "ω²"]]];
      frame @@ vlist [text "sum=Σ_i a·xᵢ²\n—————\n1+1"; text "Ōₒ\nÀ"]]);;
val b : B.t = <abstr>

# print_endline @@ PrintBox_text.to_string b;;
┌──────────────┬───────────────┐
│oï ωεird nums:│┌─────────────┐│
│π/2           ││sum=Σ_i a·xᵢ²││
│τ/4           ││—————        ││
├──────────────┤│1+1          ││
│0             │├─────────────┤│
│├─1           ││Ōₒ           ││
│└─ω           ││À            ││
│  └─ω²        │└─────────────┘│
└──────────────┴───────────────┘
- : unit = ()
HTML output (with tyxml)

Assuming you have loaded printbox-html somehow:

let out = open_out "/tmp/foo.html";;
output_string out (PrintBox_html.to_string_doc (square 5));;

which prints some HTML in the file foo.html. Note that trees are printed in HTML using nested lists, and that PrintBox_html.to_string_doc will insert some javascript to make sub-lists fold/unfold on click (this is useful to display very large trees compactly and exploring them incrementally). But there is also an alternative solution where trees are printed in HTML using the <details> element. To activate it, use the tree_summary config:

# #require "printbox-html";;
# print_endline PrintBox_html.(to_string
  ~config:Config.(tree_summary true default)
    B.(tree (text "0")[text "1"; tree (text "ω") [text "ω²"]]));;
<div><details><summary><span class="">0</span></summary><ul><li><span class="">1</span></li><li><details><summary><span class="">ω</span></summary><ul><li><span class="">ω²</span></li></ul></details></li></ul></details></div>

- : unit = ()
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