freebsd-nq/contrib/libxo
Phil Shafer 5c5819b2b6 Import libxo-1.4.0:
- Two changes to encoder options:
        encoder options may use plus or colon, but only one
        encoder names can be specified as "@name"
        This results in the syntax:

        df --libxo @csv:no-header:leafs=name.available-blocks /

    - If xo_set_program is called before xo_parse_args, honor the requested value
    - add xo_errorn* function; repair newline-adding-on-xo_error bug
    - test programs now use fixed name, since linux libtool prefixs "lt-"
    - Fix "horse butt" comment in source code
    - update test cases

PR:		242686
2020-01-25 21:16:45 +00:00
..
doc Import libxo-1.4.0: 2020-01-25 21:16:45 +00:00
encoder Import libxo-1.4.0: 2020-01-25 21:16:45 +00:00
libxo Import libxo-1.4.0: 2020-01-25 21:16:45 +00:00
packaging
tests Import libxo-1.4.0: 2020-01-25 21:16:45 +00:00
xo Import libxo-1.3.0: 2019-11-07 03:57:04 +00:00
xohtml Update from libxo-0.8.1 to 0.8.4: 2017-08-03 15:47:42 +00:00
xolint Import libxo-1.3.0: 2019-11-07 03:57:04 +00:00
xopo Update from libxo-0.8.1 to 0.8.4: 2017-08-03 15:47:42 +00:00
.gitignore
.svnignore
.travis.yml
configure.ac Import libxo-1.4.0: 2020-01-25 21:16:45 +00:00
Copyright
INSTALL.md
libxo-config.in
LICENSE
Makefile.am Import libxo-1.3.0: 2019-11-07 03:57:04 +00:00
README.md Import libxo-1.3.0: 2019-11-07 03:57:04 +00:00
warnings.mk

libxo

libxo - A Library for Generating Text, XML, JSON, and HTML Output

The libxo library allows an application to generate text, XML, JSON, and HTML output using a common set of function calls. The application decides at run time which output style should be produced. The application calls a function "xo_emit" to product output that is described in a format string. A "field descriptor" tells libxo what the field is and what it means.

Imagine a simplified wc that emits its output fields in a single xo_emit call:

    xo_emit(" {:lines/%7ju/%ju} {:words/%7ju/%ju} "
            "{:characters/%7ju/%ju}{d:filename/%s}\n",
            linect, wordct, charct, file);

Output can then be generated in various style, using the "--libxo" option:

    % wc /etc/motd
          25     165    1140 /etc/motd
    % wc --libxo xml,pretty,warn /etc/motd
    <wc>
      <file>
        <filename>/etc/motd</filename>
        <lines>25</lines>
        <words>165</words>
        <characters>1140</characters>
      </file>
    </wc>
    % wc --libxo json,pretty,warn /etc/motd
    {
      "wc": {
        "file": [
          {
            "filename": "/etc/motd",
            "lines": 25,
            "words": 165,
            "characters": 1140
          }
        ]
      }
    }
    % wc --libxo html,pretty,warn /etc/motd
    <div class="line">
      <div class="text"> </div>
      <div class="data" data-tag="lines">     25</div>
      <div class="text"> </div>
      <div class="data" data-tag="words">    165</div>
      <div class="text"> </div>
      <div class="data" data-tag="characters">   1140</div>
      <div class="text"> </div>
      <div class="data" data-tag="filename">/etc/motd</div>
    </div>

View the beautiful documentation at:

http://juniper.github.io/libxo/libxo-manual.html

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