CGI/ProgressBar version 0.01
============================
NAME
CGI::ProgressBar - CGI.pm sub-class with a progress bar object
SYNOPSIS
use strict;
use warnings;
use CGI::ProgressBar qw/:standard/;
$| = 1; # Do not buffer output
print header,
start_html(
-title=>'A Simple Example',
-style=>{
-src => '', # You can override the bar style here
-code => '', # or inline, here.
}
),
h1('A Simple Example'),
p('This example will update a JS/CSS progress bar.'),
progress_bar( -from=>1, -to=>100 );
# We're set to go.
for (1..10){
print update_progress_bar;
# Simulate being busy:
sleep 1;
}
# Now we're done, get rid of the bar:
print hide_progress_bar;
print p('All done.');
print end_html;
exit;
DESCRIPTION
This module provides a progress bar for web browsers, to keep end-users
occupied when otherwise nothing would appear to be happening.
It aims to require that the recipient client have a minimum of
JavaScript 1.0, HTML 4.0, ancd CSS/1, but this has yet to be tested.
All feedback would be most welcome. Address at the end of the POD.
DEPENDENCIES
CGI
EXPORT
progress_bar
update_progress_bar
hide_progress_bar
USE
The module sub-classes CGI.pm, providing three additional methods (or
functions, depending on your taste), each of which are detailed below.
Simply replace your "use CGI qw//;" with "use CGI::ProgressBar qw//;".
Make sure you are aware of your output buffer size: "$|=$smothingsmall".
Treat each new function as any other CGI.pm HTML-producing routine with
the exception that the arguments should be supplied as in OOP form. In
other words, the following are all the same:
my $html = $query->progress_bar;
my $html = progress_bar;
my $html = progress_bar(from=>1, to=>10);
my $html = $query->progress_bar(from=>1, to=>10);
my $html = $query->progress_bar(-to=>10);
This will probably change if someone would like it to.
FUNCTIONS/METHODS
FUNCTION/METHOD progress_bar
Returns mark-up that instantiates a progress bar. Currently that is HTML
and JS, but perhaps the JS ought to go into the head.
The progress bar itself is an object in this class, stored in the
calling ("CGI") object - specifically in the field "progress_bar", which
we create. (TODO: Make this field an array to allow multiple bars per
page.)
from
to Values which the progress bar spans. Defaults: 0, 100.
orientation
If set to "vertical" displays the bar as a strip down the screen;
otherwise, places it across the screen.
blocks
The number of blocks to appear in the progress bar. Default: 10. You
probably want to link this to "from" and "to" or better still, leave
it well alone: it may have been a mistake to even include it.
"steps" is an alias for this attribute.
width
height
The width and height of the progress bar, in pixels. Cannot accept
percentages (yet). Defaults: 400, 20, unless you specify
"orientation" as "vertical", in which case this is reversed.
gap The amount of space between blocks, in pixels. Default: 1.
label
Supply this parameter with a true value to have a numerical display
of progress. Default is not to display it.
layer_id
Most HTML elements on the page have "id" attributes. These can be
accessed through the "layer_id" field, which is a hash with the
follwoing keys relating to the "id" value:
mycss
Custom CSS to be written inline (ugh) after any system CSS.
form
The "form" which contains everything we display.
container
The "div" containing everything we display.
block
This value is used as a prefixed for the "id" of each block of
the bar, with the suffix being a number incremented from 1.
number
The digits being updated as the bar progresses, if the option is
enabled.
FUNCTION/METHOD update_progress_bar
Updates the progress bar.
FUNCTION/METHOD hide_progress_bar
Hides the progress bar.
CSS STYLE CLASS EMPLOYED
You can add CSS to be output into the page body (ugh) in the "mycss"
field. Bear in mind that the width and height settings are
programatically assigned.
pblib_bar
A "DIV" containing the whole progress bar, including any accessories
(such as the label). The only attribute used by this module is "width",
which is set dynamically. The rest is up to you. A good start is:
padding: 2 px;
border: solid black 1px;
text-align: center;
pblib_block_off, pblib_block_on
An individual block within the status bar. The following attributes are
set dynamically: "width", "height", "margin-right".
pblib_number
Formatting for the "label" text (part of which is actually an "input
type='text'" element. "border" and "text-align" are used here, and the
whole appears centred within a "table".
BUGS, CAVEATS, TODO
One bar per page
This may change.
Parameter passing doesn't match CGI.pm
But it will in the next release if you ask me for it.
"colors" not implimented
I'd like to see here something like the "Tk::ProgressBar::colors";
not because I've ever used it, but because it might be cool.
Horizontal orientation only
You can get around this by adjusting the CSS, but you'd rather not.
And even if you did, the use of "-label" might not look very nice
unless you did something quite fancy. So the next version (or so)
will support an "-orientation" option.
Inline CSS and JS
Because it's easiest for me. I suppose some kind of over-loading of
the "CGI::start_html" would be possible, but then I'd have to check
it, and maybe update it, every time CGI.pm was updated, which I
don't fancy.
CGI UPLOAD HOOK
I'm not convinced it works yet, even in CGI.pm verion 3.15.
If anyone knows otherwise, please mail me: I have spent an hour on
the below, and it seems that the hook is called more times than
necessary....
PROCESS
The script has to both upload and process a file.
The hook script is called when the object is constructed, thus
before any headers can be output. There the hook needs to output its
own headers, and we only output headers for the 'select file' page
when the hook has not been called.
The first tiem the hook is called, then, it outputs HTTP headers and
begins the page. This is fine.
The next time it is called, it outputs the JS call to update the
progress bar. This is fine.
The problem is that the hook seems to be called many more times than
necessary.
SOURCE
#!/usr/local/bin/perl
use warnings;
use strict;
use CGI::ProgressBar qw/:standard/;
$| = 1; # Do not buffer output
my $data;
my $hook_called;
my $cgi = CGI->new(\&bar_hook, $data);
if (not $hook_called){
print $cgi->header,
$cgi->start_html( -title=>'A Simple Example', ),
$cgi->h1('Simple Upload-hook Example');
}
print $cgi->start_form( -enctype=>'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'),
$cgi->filefield( 'uploaded_file'),
$cgi->submit,
$cgi->end_form,p;
if ($cgi->param('uploaded_file')){
print 'uploaded_file: '.param('uploaded_file');
}
sub bar_hook {
my ($filename, $buffer, $bytes, $data) = @_;
if (not $hook_called){
print header,
start_html( -title=>'Simple Upload-hook Example', ),
h1('Uploading'),
p(
"Have to read $ENV{CONTENT_LENGTH} in blocks of $bytes, total blocks should be ",
($ENV{CONTENT_LENGTH}/$bytes)
),
progress_bar( -from=>1, -to=>($ENV{CONTENT_LENGTH}/$bytes), -debug=>1 );
$hook_called = 1;
} else {
# Called every $bytes, I would have thought.
# But calls seem to go on much longer than $ENV{CONTENT_LENGTH} led me to believe they ought:
print update_progress_bar;
print "$ENV{CONTENT_LENGTH} ... $total_bytes ... $hook_called ... div="
.($hook_called/$total_bytes)
."
"
}
sleep 1;
$hook_called += $total_bytes;
}
print $cgi->hide_progress_bar;
if ($hook_called){
print p('All done after '.$hook_called.' calls');
}
print $cgi->end_html;
exit;
AUTHOR
Lee Goddard "lgoddard -in- cpan -dat- org", "cpan -ut- leegoddard -dut-
net"
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) Lee Goddard, 2002, 2003, 2005. All Rights Reserved. This
software is made available under the same terms as Perl itself. You may
use and redistribute this software under the same terms as Perl itself.
KEYWORDS
HTML, CGI, progress bar, widget
SEE ALSO
perl. CGI, Tk::ProgressBar,
MODIFICATIONS
25 March 2004: Updated the POD.
16 December 2005: Updated the default styles.