NAME¶
SQL::Abstract::Tree - Represent SQL as an AST
SYNOPSIS¶
my $sqla_tree = SQL::Abstract::Tree->new({ profile => 'console' });
print $sqla_tree->format('SELECT * FROM foo WHERE foo.a > 2');
# SELECT *
# FROM foo
# WHERE foo.a > 2
METHODS¶
new¶
my $sqla_tree = SQL::Abstract::Tree->new({ profile => 'console' });
$args = {
profile => 'console', # predefined profile to use (default: 'none')
fill_in_placeholders => 1, # true for placeholder population
placeholder_surround => # The strings that will be wrapped around
[GREEN, RESET], # populated placeholders if the above is set
indent_string => ' ', # the string used when indenting
indent_amount => 2, # how many of above string to use for a single
# indent level
newline => "\n", # string for newline
colormap => {
select => [RED, RESET], # a pair of strings defining what to surround
# the keyword with for colorization
# ...
},
indentmap => {
select => 0, # A zero means that the keyword will start on
# a new line
from => 1, # Any other positive integer means that after
on => 2, # said newline it will get that many indents
# ...
},
}
Returns a new SQL::Abstract::Tree object. All arguments are optional.
profiles
There are four predefined profiles, "none", "console",
"console_monochrome", and "html". Typically a user will
probably just use "console" or "console_monochrome", but
if something about a profile bothers you, merely use the profile and override
the parts that you don't like.
$sqlat->format('SELECT * FROM bar WHERE x = ?', [1])
Takes $sql and "\@bindargs".
Returns a formatting string based on the string passed in
parse¶
$sqlat->parse('SELECT * FROM bar WHERE x = ?')
Returns a "tree" representing passed in SQL. Please do not depend on
the structure of the returned tree. It may be stable at some point, but not
yet.
unparse¶
$sqlat->unparse($tree_structure, \@bindargs)
Transform "tree" into SQL, applying various transforms on the way.
$sqlat->format_keyword('SELECT')
Currently this just takes a keyword and puts the "colormap" stuff
around it. Later on it may do more and allow for coderef based transforms.
pad_keyword¶
my ($before, $after) = @{$sqlat->pad_keyword('SELECT')};
Returns whitespace to be inserted around a keyword.
fill_in_placeholder¶
my $value = $sqlat->fill_in_placeholder(\@bindargs)
Removes last arg from passed arrayref and returns it, surrounded with the values
in placeholder_surround, and then surrounded with single quotes.
indent¶
Returns as many indent strings as indent amounts times the first argument.
ACCESSORS¶
colormap¶
See "new"
fill_in_placeholders¶
See "new"
indent_amount¶
See "new"
indent_string¶
See "new"
indentmap¶
See "new"
newline¶
See "new"
placeholder_surround¶
See "new"