An interface for generating HTML Tables with Ruby.
gem install html-table
gem cert --add <(curl -Ls https://raw.githubusercontent.com/djberg96/html-table/main/certs/djberg96_pub.pem)
require 'html/table'
include HTML
# Explicit syntax
table = HTML::Table.new{ |t|
t.border = 1
t.bgcolor = "red"
}
# Implicit syntax
table = HTML::Table.new do
border 1
bgcolor 'red'
end
table.push Table::Row.new{ |r|
r.align = "left"
r.bgcolor = "green"
r.content = ["foo","bar","baz"]
}
row = Table::Row.new{ |r|
r.align = "right"
r.bgcolor = "blue"
r.content = "hello world"
}
table[1] = row
puts table.html
Output:
<table border=1 bgcolor='red'>
<tr align='left' bgcolor='green'> # row 0
<td>foo</td> # column 0
<td>bar</td> # column 1
<td>baz</td> # column 2
</tr>
<tr align='right' bgcolor='blue'> # row 1
<td>hello world</td> # column 0
</tr>
</table>
See the 'examples' directory under 'doc' for more examples.
Table is a subclass of Array, and therefore mixes in Enumerable. The
push
, unshift
and []=
methods have been modified. See below for details.
Table also mixes in AttributeHandler
which provides methods for adding
attributes to each of the tag types. See attributes.rdoc for more details.
A Table consists of Table::Row
, Table::Caption
, Table::ColGroup,
Table::Body
, Table::Foot
, Table::Head
and Table::Row
objects.
Table::Row
objects in turn consist of Table::Row::Data
and Table::Row::Header
objects.
Table::ColGroup
objects consist of Table::ColGroup::Col
objects.
Table::Head
, Table::Body
and Table::Foot
objects consist of Table::Row
objects.
String attributes are quoted. Numeric attributes are not.
Some attributes have type checking. Some check for valid arguments. In the latter case, it is case-insensitive. See the documentation on specific methods for more details.
Using a non-standard extension (e.g. "background") will emit a
NonStandardExtensionWarning
. See the documentation for structured_warnings
for more information on how to control these.
https://djberg96.github.io/html-table/
None that I'm aware of. Please report bugs on the project page at:
http://github.com/djberg96/html-table
None at this time.
Anthony Peacock, for giving me ideas with his HTML::Table
Perl module.
Holden Glova and Culley Harrelson for API suggestions and comments.
Apache-2.0
(C) 2003-2024 Daniel J. Berger All Rights Reserved
This package is provided "as is" and without any express or implied warranties, including, without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose.
Daniel J. Berger
Some people might be a little annoyed with the fact that I use a strongtyping library. I'm not a big fan of strong typing myself. So, why did I do this?
Normally when creating code, you setup your own rules as far as what is allowed as an argument. You publish the API, set up a good set of tests, and don't bother worrying about types because you figure people can read the API and won't go out of their way to break it. You certainly don't worry about it yourself because you're used to dynamic languages and find that you don't need the strong typing training wheels after all, right?
However, HTML tables have a predefined set of rules as far as what content is valid, and where it's placed in order to be HTML compliant. For example, if a caption is included, it should be at the 'top' of your table syntax, you can only have one foot section, and so on. I therefore chose to enforce these conventions and rules in Ruby via a module. I could have lived without it, and instead chose to do a plethora of "kind_of?" checks, but the strongtyping lib is simply more convenient all around.
UPDATE: I originally used Ryan Pavlik's strongtyping library as a dependency. As of version 1.6.0 I now simply include a pure Ruby version with this library. This makes it easier to work with JRuby and eliminates a dependency.