NAME
    Data::Dumper::Compact - Vertically compact width-limited data formatter

SYNOPSIS
    Basic usage as a function:

      use Data::Dumper::Compact 'ddc';
  
      warn ddc($some_data_structure);
  
      warn ddc($some_data_structure, \%options);

    Slightly more clever usage as a function:

      use Data::Dumper::Compact ddc => \%default_options;
  
      warn ddc($some_data_structure);
  
      warn ddc($some_data_structure, \%extra_options);

    OO usage:

      use Data::Dumper::Compact;
  
      warn Data::Dumper::Compact->dump($data, \%options);
  
      my $ddc = Data::Dumper::Compact->new(\%options);
  
      warn $ddc->dump($data);
  
      warn $ddc->dump($data, \%extra_options);

DESCRIPTION
    Data::Dumper::Compact, henceforth referred to as DDC, was born because I
    was annoyed at valuable wasted whitespace paging through both
    Data::Dumper and Data::Dump based logs - Data::Dump attempts to format
    horizontally first, but then if it fails, immediately switches to
    formatting fully vertically, rather than trying to e.g. format a six
    element arrayref three per line.

    So here's a few of the specifics (noting that all examples unless
    otherwise specified are dumped with default options):

  Arrays and Strings
    Given arrays consisting of reasonably long strings, DDC does its best to
    produce a sane representation within its "max_width":

      [
        1, 2, [
          'longstringislonglongstringislonglongstringislong',
          'longstringislonglongstringislong', 'longstringislong',
          'longstringislonglongstringislonglongstringislong', 'longstringislong',
          'longstringislonglongstringislong', 'longstringislong',
          'longstringislonglongstringislong',
          'longstringislonglongstringislonglongstringislong',
          'longstringislonglongstringislong', 'longstringislonglongstringislong',
          'longstringislonglongstringislonglongstringislong', 'longstringislong',
          'longstringislong', 'longstringislonglongstringislonglongstringislong',
          'longstringislong', 'longstringislong', 'longstringislong',
          'longstringislonglongstringislong',
          'longstringislonglongstringislonglongstringislong', 'a', 'b', 'c',
          'longstringislonglongstringislonglongstringislonglongstringislong',
          'longstringislonglongstringislonglongstringislonglongstringislong',
          'longstringislonglongstringislonglongstringislonglongstringislong',
        ], 3,
      ]

  Keys and Hashrefs
    When faced with a "-foo" style value, it gets a "=>" even in an array,
    and hash values that we can are single-line formatted:

      [
        'aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa', [
          'bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb',
          'cccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccccc',
        ],
        -blah => { baz => 'quux', foo => 'bar' },
      ]

  The String Thing
    Strings are single quoted when DDC is absolutely sure that's safe, and
    double quoted otherwise:

      [ { -foo => {
            bar =>
              'aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa',
            baz => "bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb\nbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb",
      } } ]

  Lonely hash key
    When a single hash key can't be formatted in a oneline form within the
    length, DDC will try spilling it to its own line:

      {
        -xxxxxxxxxxxxx => 'aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa'
      }

    If even that isn't enough, it formats it below and indented:

      { -xxxxxxxxxxxxx =>
          'aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa'
      }

  Strings and the dot operator
    If a string simply won't fit, DDC splits it and indents it using ".":

      [ 'xyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyx'
        .'yxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxy'
        .'xyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyx'
        .'yxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxyxy'
      ]

  Unknown unknowns
    Anything DDC doesn't understand is passed through its "dumper" option,
    though since Data::Dumper (at the time of writing) forgets to pass
    through its indentation level to B::Concise, we slightly tweak that
    behaviour on the way in for the default "dumper". But the end result
    looks like:

      { foo => { bar => sub {
            use warnings;
            use strict 'refs';
            my($x, $y) = @_;
            return $x * $y;
      } } }

  Bless you
    When encountering an object, if it's a blessed array or hashref, DDC
    will attempt to format that too:

      [ bless( {
          x => 3,
          y => [ 'foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'quux', 'fleem', 'blather', 'obrien' ],
          z => 'lololololololololololololololol',
      }, "OhGods::Lol" ) ]

  All together now
    The full set of behaviours allows compact (and, we hope, readable)
    versions of complex data structures. To provide one of the examples that
    expired this module - here is the formatting under standard options for
    a moderately complex SQL::Abstract update statement:

      {
        _ => [
          'tree_table', -join => {
            as => 'tree',
            on => { 'tree.id' => 'tree_with_path.id' },
            to => { -select => {
                from => 'tree_with_path',
                select => '*',
                with_recursive => [
                  [ 'tree_with_path', 'id', 'parent_id', 'path' ], { -select => {
                      _ => [
                        'id', 'parent_id', { -as =>
                            [
                              { -cast => { -as => [ 'id', 'char', 255 ] } },
                              'path',
                            ]
                        },
                      ],
                      from => 'tree_table',
                      union_all => { -select => {
                          _ => [
                            't.id', 't.parent_id', { -as => [
                                { -concat => [ 'r.path', \"'/'", 't.id' ] },
                                'path',
                            ] },
                          ],
                          from => [
                            'tree_table', -as => 't', -join => {
                              as => 'r',
                              on => { 't.parent_id' => 'r.id' },
                              to => 'tree_with_path',
                            },
                          ],
                      } },
                      where => { parent_id => undef },
                  } },
                ],
            } },
          },
        ],
        set => { path => { -ident => [ 'tree', 'path' ] } },
      }

    And the version (generated by setting "max_width" to 40) that runs out
    of space and thereby forces the "spill vertically" logic to kick in
    while still attemping to be at least somewhat compact:

      {
        _ => [
          'tree_table',
          '-join',
          {
            as => 'tree',
            on => {
              'tree.id' => 'tree_with_path.id',
            },
            to => {
              -select => {
                from => 'tree_with_path',
                select => '*',
                with_recursive => [
                  [
                    'tree_with_path',
                    'id',
                    'parent_id',
                    'path',
                  ],
                  {
                    -select => {
                      _ => [
                        'id',
                        'parent_id',
                        {
                          -as => [
                            {
                              -cast => {
                                -as => [
                                  'id',
                                  'char',
                                  255,
                                ],
                              },
                            },
                            'path',
                          ],
                        },
                      ],
                      from => 'tree_table',
                      union_all => {
                        -select => {
                          _ => [
                            't.id',
                            't.parent_id',
                            {
                              -as => [
                                {
                                  -concat => [
                                    'r.path',
                                    \"'/'",
                                    't.id',
                                  ],
                                },
                                'path',
                              ],
                            },
                          ],
                          from => [
                            'tree_table',
                            '-as',
                            't',
                            '-join',
                            {
                              as => 'r',
                              on => {
                                't.parent_id' => 'r.id',
                              },
                              to => 'tree_with_path',
                            },
                          ],
                        },
                      },
                      where => {
                        parent_id => undef,
                      },
                    },
                  },
                ],
              },
            },
          },
        ],
        set => {
          path => {
            -ident => [
              'tree',
              'path',
            ],
          },
        },
      }

  Summary
    Hopefully it's clear what the goal is, and what we've done to achieve
    it.

    While the system is already somewhat configurable, further options are
    almost certainly implementable, although if you really want such an
    option then we expect you to turn up with documentation and test cases
    for it so we just have to write the code.

OPTIONS
  max_width
    Represents the width that DDC will attempt to keep as the maximum (if
    something overflows it in spite of our best efforts, DDC will fall back
    to a more vertically sprawling format to at least overflow as little as
    feasible).

    Default: 78

  indent_by
    The string to indent by. To set e.g. 4 space indent, pass "' 'x4".

    Default: ' ' (two spaces).

  indent_width
    How many characters one indent should be considered to be. Generally you
    only need to manually set this if your "indent_by" is "\t".

    Default: "length($self->indent_by)"

  transforms
    Set of transforms to apply on every "dump" operation. See "transform"
    for more information.

    Default: "[]"

  dumper
    The dumper function to be used for dumping things DDC doesn't
    understand, such as coderefs, regexprefs, etc.

    Defaults to the same options as Data::Dumper::Concise (which is, itself,
    only a Data::Dumper configuration albeit it comes with Devel::Dwarn
    which is rather more interesting) - although on top of that we add a
    little bit of extra cleverness to make B::Deparse use the correct
    indentation, since for some reason Data::Dumper doesn't (at the time of
    writing) do that.

    If you supply it yourself, it needs to be a single argument coderef -
    you could for example use "\&Data::Dumper::Dumper" though that would
    almost certainly be pointless.

EXPORTS
  ddc
      use Data::Dumper::Compact 'ddc';
      use Data::Dumper::Compact 'ddc' => \%options;

    If the first argument to "use"/"import()" is 'ddc', a subroutine "ddc()"
    is installed in the calling package which behaves like calling "dump".

    If the second argument is a hashref, it becomes the options passed to
    "new".

    This feature is effectively sugar over "dump_cb", in that:

      Data::Dumper::Compact->import(ddc => \%options)

    is equivalent to:

      *ddc = Data::Dumper::Compact->new(\%options)->dump_cb;

METHODS
  new
      my $ddc = Data::Dumper::Compact->new;
      my $ddc = Data::Dumper::Compact->new(%options);
      my $ddc = Data::Dumper::Compact->new(\%options);

    Constructor. Takes a hash or hashref of "OPTIONS"

  dump
      my $formatted = Data::Dumper::Compact->dump($data, \%options?);
  
      my $formatted = $ddc->dump($data, \%merge_options?);

    This is the method you're going to want to call most of the time, and
    ties together the rest of the functionality into a single
    data-structure-to-string bundle. With just a data argument, it's
    equivalent to:

      $ddc->format( $ddc->transform( $ddc->transforms, $ddc->expand($data) );

    In class method form, options provided are passed to "new"; in instance
    method form, options if provided are merged into $ddc just for this
    invocation.

  dump_cb
      my $cb = $ddc->dump_cb;

    Returns a subroutine reference that's a curried call to "dump":

      $cb->($data, \%extra_options); # equivalent to $ddc->dump(...)

    Mostly useful for if you want to create a custom "ddc()" like thing:

      use Data::Dumper::Compact;
      BEGIN { *Dumper = Data::Dumper::Compact->new->dump_cb }

  expand
      my $exp = $ddc->expand($data);

    Expands a data structure to DDC tagged data. The result is, recursively,

      [ $type, $payload ]

    where if $type is one of "string", "key", or "thing", the payload is a
    simple string ("thing" meaning something unknown and therefore delegated
    to "dumper"). If the type is an array:

      [ array => \@values ]

    and if the type is a hash:

      [ hash => [ \@keys, \%value_map ] ]

    where the keys provide an order for formatting, and the value map is a
    hashref of keys to expanded values.

    A plain string becomes a "string", unless it fits the "-foo" style
    pattern that autoquotes, in which case it becomes a "key".

  add_transform
      $ddc->add_transform(sub { ... });
      $ddc->add_transform({ hash => sub { ... }, _ => sub { ... });

    Appends a transform to "$ddc->transforms", see "transform" for
    behaviour.

    Returns $ddc to enable chaining.

  transform
      my $tf_exp = $ddc->transform($tfspec, $exp);

    Takes a transform specification and expanded tagged data and returns the
    transformed expanded expression. A transform spec is an arrayref
    containing transforms, where each transform is applied in order, so the
    last transform added via "add_transform" will be the last one to
    transform the data (each transform will consist of a datastructure
    representing which parts of the $exp tree it should be called for, plus
    subroutines representing the relevant transforms).

    Transform subroutines are called as a method on the $ddc with the
    arguments of "$type, $payload, $path" where $path is an arrayref of the
    keys/values of the containing hashes and arrays, aggregated as DDC
    descends through the $exp tree.

    Each transform is expected to return either nothing, to indicate it
    doesn't wish to modify the result, or a replacement expanded data
    structure. The simplest form of transform is a subref, which gets called
    for everything.

    So, to add ' IN MICE' to every string that's part of an array under a
    hash key called study_results, i.e.:

      my $data = { study_results => [
          'Sense Of Touch Is Formed In the Brain Before Birth'.
          "We can't currently cure MS but a single cell could change that",
      ] };
  
      my $tf_exp = $ddc->transform([ sub {
        my ($self, $type, $payload, $path) = @_;
        return unless $type eq 'string' and ($path->[-2]||'') eq 'study_results';
        return [ $type, $payload.' IN MICE' ];
      } ], $ddc->expand($data));

    will return:

      [ hash => [
        [ 'study_results' ],
        { study_results => [ array => [
          [ string => 'Sense Of Touch Is Formed In the Brain Before Birth IN MICE' ],
          [ string => "We can't currently cure MS but a single cell could change that IN MICE", ],
        ] ] }
      ] ]

    If a hashref is found, then the values are expected to be transforms,
    and DDC will use "$hashref->{$type}||$hashref->{_}" as the transform, or
    skip if neither is present. So the previous example could be written as:

      $ddc->transform([ { string => sub {
        my ($self, $type, $payload, $path) = @_;
        return unless ($path->[-2]||'') eq 'study_results';
        return [ $type, $payload.' IN MICE' ];
      } } ], $ddc->expand($data));

    If the value of the spec entry itself *or* the relevant hash value is an
    arrayref, it is assumed to contain a spec for trailing path entries,
    with the last element being the transform subroutine. A path entry match
    can be an exact scalar (tested via "eq" since it works fine for both
    strings and integer array indices), regexp, "undef" to indicate "any
    value is fine here", or a subroutine which will be called with the path
    entry as both $_[0] and $_. So the example we've been using could also
    be written as:

      $ddc->transform([ { string => [
        'study_results', undef,
        sub { [ string => $_[2].' IN MICE' ] }
      ] } ], $ddc->expand($data));

    or

      $ddc->transform([ { string => [
        qr/^study_results$/, sub { 1 },
        sub { [ string => $_[2].' IN MICE' ] }
      ] } ], $ddc->expand($data));

    Note that while the $tfspec is not passed to transform subroutines, for
    the duration of the "transform" call the "transforms" option is
    localised to the provided routine, so

      sub {
        my ($self, $type, $payload, $path) = @_;
        my $tfspec = $self->transforms;
        ...
      }

    will return the top level $tfspec passed to the transform call.

    Thanks to <http://twitter.com/justsaysinmice> for the inspiration.

  format
      my $formatted = $ddc->format($exp);

    Takes expanded tagged data and renders it to a formatted string,
    suitable for printing or warning or etc.

    Accepts the following type tags: "array", "list", "hash", "key",
    "string", "thing". Arrays and hashes are formatted as compactly as
    possible within the constraint of "max_width", but if overflow occurs
    then DDC falls back to spilling everything vertically, so newlines are
    used for most spacing and therefore it doesn't exceed the max width any
    more than strictly necessary.

    Strings are formatted as single quote if obvious, and double quote if
    not.

    Keys are treated as strings when present as hash values, but when an
    element of array values, are formatted ask "the_key =>" where possible.

    Lists are formatted as single line "qw()" expressions if possible, or "(
    ... )" if not.

    Arrays and hashes are formatted in the manner to which one would hope
    readers are accustomed, except more compact.

ALGORITHM
    The following is a description of the current algorithm of DDC. We
    reserve the right to change it for the better.

    If you didn't already read the overview examples in "WHY" do that first.

    Vertical mode means DDC has given up on fitting within the desired width
    and is now just trying to not use *too* much vertical space.

    Oneline mode is DDC testing to see if a single line rendering of
    something will fit within the available space. Things will often be
    rendered more than once since DDC is optimising for compact readable
    output rather than raw straight line performance.

  Top level formatting
    If something is formatted and the remaining width is zero or negative,
    DDC accepts default on "max_width" and bails out to a fully vertical
    approach so it overflows the desired width no more than necessary.

  Array formatting
    If already in vertical mode, formats one array element per line,
    appended with ",":

      [
        1,
        2,
        3
      ]

    If in possible oneline mode, formats all but the last element according
    to the "Array element" rules, the last element according to normal
    formatting, and joins them with ' ' in the hopes this is narrow enough.
    Return this if oneline is forced or it fits:

      [ 1, 2, 3 ]

    If there's only a single internal member, tries to use the "Single entry
    formatting" strategy to cuddle it.

      [ [
        <something inside>
      ] ]

    Otherwise, attempts to bundle things as best possible: Each element is
    formatted according to the "Array element" rules, and multiple results
    are concatenated together onto a single line where that still remains
    within the available width.

      [
        'foo', 'bar', 'baz',
        'red', 'white', 'blue',
      ]

  Array element
    Elements are normally formatted as "$formatted.','" except if an element
    is of type "key" in which cases it becomes "$key =>".

      "whatever the smeg",
      smeg_off =>

  List formatting
    The type "list" is synthetic and only introduced by transforms.

    It is formatted identically to an arrayref except with "( )" instead of
    "[ ]", with the exception that if it consists of only plain strings and
    will fit onto a single line, it formats as a "qw(x y x)" style list.

      qw(foo bar baz)
      (
        'foo',
        'bar',
        'baz',
      )

  Single entry formatting
    Where possible, a single entry will be cuddled such that the opening
    delimiters are both on the first line, and the closing delimeters both
    on the final line, to reduce the vertical space consumption of nested
    single entry array and/or hashrefs.

      to => { -select => {
          ...
      } }

      [ 'SRV:8FB66F32' ], [ [
          '/opt/voice-srvc-native/bin/async-srvc-att-gateway-poller', 33,
          'NERV::Voice::SRV::Native::AsyncSRVATTGatewayPoller::main',
      ] ],

  Hash formatting
    If already in vertical mode, key/value pairs are formatted separated by
    newlines, with no attention paid to key length.

      {
        foo => ...,
        bar => ...,
      }

    If potentially in oneline mode, key/value pairs are formatted separated
    by ', ' and the value is returned if forced or if remaining width allows
    the oneline rendering.

      { foo => ..., bar => ... }

    Otherwise, all key/value pairs are formatted as "key => value" where
    possible, but if the first line of the value is too long, the value is
    moved to the next line and indented.

      key => 'shortvalue'
      key =>
        'overlylongvalue'

    If there's only a single such key/value pair, tries to use the "Single
    entry formatting" strategy to cuddle it.

      { zathrus => {
          listened_to => 0,
      } }

    Otherwise returns key/value pairs indented and separated by newlines

      {
        foo => ...,
        bar => ...,
      }

  String formatting
    Uses single quotes if sure that's safe, double quotes otherwise.

      'foo bar baz quux'
      "could have been '' but nicer to not screw up\n the indents with a newline"

    Attempts to format a string within the available width, using multiple
    lines and the "." concatenation operator if necessary,.

      'this would be an'
      .'annoyingly long'
      .'string'

    The target width is set to 20 in vertical mode to try and not be too
    ugly.

  Object formatting
    Objects are tested to see if their underlying reference is an array or
    hash. If so, it's formatted with 'bless( ' prepended and ', $class)'
    appended. This so far appears to interact nicely with everything else.

AUTHOR
    mst - Matt S Trout (cpan:MSTROUT) <mst@shadowcat.co.uk>

CONTRIBUTORS
    None so far.

COPYRIGHT
    Copyright (c) 2019 the Data::Dumper::Compact "AUTHOR" and "CONTRIBUTORS"
    as listed above.

LICENSE
    This library is free software and may be distributed under the same
    terms as perl itself. See <https://dev.perl.org/licenses/>.