NAME

CGI::Expand - convert flat hash to nested data using TT2's dot convention

SYNOPSIS

    use CGI::Expand ();
    use CGI; # or Apache::Request, etc.

    $args = CGI::Expand->expand_cgi( CGI->new('a.0=3&a.2=4&b.c.0=x') );

Or, as an imported function for convenience:

    use CGI::Expand;
    use CGI; # or Apache::Request, etc.

    $args = expand_cgi( CGI->new('a.0=3&a.2=4&b.c.0=x') );
    # $args = { a => [3,undef,4], b => { c => ['x'] }, }

    # Or to catch exceptions:
    eval {
        $args = expand_cgi( CGI->new('a.0=3&a.2=4&b.c.0=x') );
    } or log_and_exit( $@ );

    #-----
    use CGI::Expand qw(expand_hash);

    $args = expand_hash({'a.0'=>77}); # $args = { a => [ 77 ] }

DESCRIPTION

Converts a CGI query into structured data using a dotted name convention similar to TT2.

expand_cgi works with CGI.pm, Apache::Request or anything with an appropriate "param" method. Or you can use expand_hash directly.

If you prefer to use a different flattening convention then CGI::Expand can be subclassed.

MOTIVATION

The Common Gateway Interface restricts parameters to name=value pairs, but often we'd like to use more structured data. This module uses a name encoding convention to rebuild a hash of hashes, arrays and values. Arrays can either be indexed explicitly or from CGI's multi-valued parameter handling.

The generic nature of this process means that the core components of your system can remain CGI ignorant and operate on structured data. Better for modularity, better for testing.

DOT CONVENTION

The key-value pair "a.b.1=hi" expands to the perl structure:

  { a => { b => [ undef, "hi" ] }

The key ("a.b.1") specifies the location at which the value ("hi") is stored. The key is split on '.' characters, the first segment ("a") is a key in the top level hash, subsequent segments may be keys in sub-hashes or indices in sub-arrays. Integer segments are treated as array indices, others as hash keys.

Array size is limited to 100 by default. The limit can be altered by subclassing or using the deprecated $Max_Array package variable. See below.

The backslash '\' escapes the next character in cgi parameter names allowing '.' , '\' and digits in hash keys. The escaping '\' is removed. Values are not altered.

Key-Value Examples

  # HoHoL
  a.b.1=hi ---> { a => { b => [ undef, "hi" ] }

  # HoLoH
  a.1.b=hi ---> { a => [ undef, { b => "hi" } ] }

  # top level always a hash
  9.0=hi   ---> { "9" => [ "hi" ] }

  # can backslash escape to treat digits hash as keys
  a.\0=hi     ---> { "a" => { 0 => "hi"} }

  # or to put . and \ literals in keys
  a\\b\.c=hi  ---  { 'a\\b\.c' => "hi" }

METHODS / FUNCTIONS

The routines listed below are all methods, but can be imported to be called as functions. In other words, you can call CGI::Expand->expand_hash(...) or you can import expand_hash and then call expand_hash(...) without using method invocation syntax.

expand_cgi is exported by default. expand_hash and collapse_hash are exported upon request.

expand_cgi
    my $deep_hash = expand_cgi ( $CGI_object_or_similar );

Takes a CGI object and returns a hashref for the expanded data structure (or dies, see "EXCEPTIONS").

Wrapper around expand_hash that uses the "param" method of the CGI object to collect the names and values.

Handles multivalued parameters as array refs (although they can't be mixed with indexed arrays and will have an undefined ordering).

    $query = 'a.0=3&a.2=4&b.c.0=x&c.0=2&c.1=3&d=&e=1&e=2';

    $args = expand_cgi( CGI->new($query) );

    # result:
    # $args = {
    #   a => [3,undef,4],
    #   b => { c => ['x'] },
    #   c => ['2','3'],
    #   d => '',
    #   e => ['1','2'], # order depends on CGI/etc
    # };
expand_hash
    my $deep_hash = expand_hash( $flat_hash );

Expands the keys of the parameter hash according to the dot convention (or dies, see "EXCEPTIONS").

    $args = expand_hash({ 'a.b.1' => [1,2] });
    # $args = { a => { b => [undef, [1,2] ] } }
collapse_hash
    my $flat_hash = collapse_hash( $deep_hash );

The inverse of expand_hash. Converts the $deep_hash data structure back into a flat hash.

    $flat = collapse_hash({ a => { b => [undef, [1,2] ] } });
    # $flat = { 'a.b.1.0' => 1, 'a.b.1.1' => 2 }

EXCEPTIONS

WARNING: The users of your site can cause these exceptions so you must decide how they are handled (possibly by letting the process die).

"CGI param array limit exceeded..."

If an array index exceeds the array limit (default: 100) then an exception is thrown.

"CGI param clash for..."

A cgi query like "a=1&a.b=1" would require the value of $args->{a} to be both 1 and { b => 1 }. Such type inconsistencies are reported as exceptions. (See test.pl for for examples)

SUBCLASSING

Subclassing in now the preferred way to change the behaviour and defaults. (Previously package variables were used, see test.pl).

The methods which may be overridden by subclasses are separator, max_array, split_name and join_name.

max_array
    $subclass->max_Array;

The limit for the array size, defaults to 100. The value 0 can be used to disable the use of arrays, everthing is a hash key.

separator
    $subclass->separator;

Returns the separator characters used to split the keys of the flat hash. The default is '.' but multiple characters are allowed. The default join will use the first character.

If there is no separator then '\' escaping does not occur. This is for use with split_name and join_name below.

split_name
    my @segments = $subclass->split_name($name);

The split_name method must break $name in to key segments for the nested data structure. The default version just splits on the separator characters with a bit of fiddling to handle escaping.

join_name
    my $name = $subclass->join_name(@segments);

The inverse of split_name, joins the segments back to the key for the flat hash. The default version uses the first character of the string returned by the separator method.

DEPRECATIONS

$CGI::Expand::Separator and $CGI::Expand::Max_Array are deprecated. They still work for now but emit a warning (supressed with $CGI::Expand::BackCompat = 1)

Using the functions by their fully qualified names ceased to work at around version 1.04. They're now class methods so just replace the last :: with ->.

LIMITATIONS

The top level is always a hash. Consequently, any digit only names will be keys in this hash rather than array indices.

Image inputs with name.x, name.y coordinates are ignored as they will class with the value for name.

TODO

Thing about ways to keep $cgi and the expanded version in sync

Glob style parameters (with SCALAR, ARRAY and HASH slots) would resolve the type clashes, probably no fun to use. Look at using Template::Plugin::StringTree to avoid path clashes

SEE ALSO

  • HTTP::Rollup - Replaces CGI.pm completely, no list ordering.

  • CGI::State - Tied to CGI.pm, unclear error checking

  • Template::Plugin::StringTree

  • Hash::Flatten - Pick your delimiters

  • http://template-toolkit.org/pipermail/templates/2002-January/002368.html

  • There's a tiny and beautiful reduce solution somewhere on perlmonks.

AUTHOR

Brad Bowman <cgi-expand@bereft.net>

Pod corrections: Ricardo Signes

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 2004-2013, Brad Bowman.

LICENSE

CGI::Expand is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either:

a) the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 1, or (at your option) any later version, or

b) the "Artistic License" which comes with Perl.

For more details, see the full text of the licenses at <http://www.perlfoundation.org/artistic_license_1_0>, and <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-1.0.html>.