Pager(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Pager(3pm)
NAME
HTML::Pager - Perl module to handle CGI HTML paging of arbitary data
SYNOPSIS
use HTML::Pager;
use CGI;
# get CGI query object
my $query = CGI->new();
# create a callback subroutine to generate the data to be paged
my $get_data_sub = sub {
my ($offset, $rows) = @_;
my @return_array;
for (my $x = 0; $x < $rows; $x++) {
push(@return_array, [ time() ]);
}
return \@return_array;
}
# create a Pager object
my $pager = HTML::Pager->new(
# required parameters
query => $query,
get_data_callback => $get_data_sub,
rows => 100,
page_size => 10,
# some optional parameters
persist_vars => ['myformvar1',
'myformvar2',
'myformvar3'],
cell_space_color => '#000000',
cell_background_color => '#ffffff',
nav_background_color => '#dddddd',
javascript_presubmit => 'last_minute_javascript()',
debug => 1,
);
# make it go - send the results to the browser.
print $pager->output;
DESCRIPTION
This module handles the paging of data coming from an arbitrary source and being displayed
using HTML::Template and CGI.pm. It provides an interface to pages of data similar to
many well-known sites, like altavista.digital.com or www.google.com.
This module uses HTML::Template to do all its HTML generation. While it is possible to
use this module without directly using HTML::Template, it's not very useful. Modification
of the look-and-feel as well as the functionality of the resulting HTML should all be done
through HTML::Template objects. Take a look at HTML::Template for more info.
METHODS
"new()"
The new() method creates a new Pager object and prepares the data for "output()".
"new()" requires several options, see above for syntax:
o query - this is the CGI.pm query object for this run. Pager will remove it's state-
maintaining parameters from the query. They all begin with PAGER_, so just be careful
not to use that prefix.
o rows - this is the total number of rows in your dataset. This is needed to provide
the next-button, prev-button and page-jump functionality.
o page_size - the number of rows to display at one time.
o get_data_callback - this is a callback that you provide to get the pages of data. It
is passed two arguements - the offset and the number of rows in the page. You return
an array ref containing array refs of row data. For you DBI-heads, this is very
similar to selectall_arrayref() - so similar that for very simple cases you can just
pass the result through. Example - this is a sub that returns data from an in-memory
array of hash refs.
my @data = (
{ name => sam, age => 10 },
{ name => saa, age => 11 },
{ name => sad, age => 12 },
{ name => sac, age => 13 },
{ name => sab, age => 14 },
# ...
);
my $get_data_sub = sub {
my ($offset, $rows) = @_;
my @return_array;
for (my $x = 0; $x < $rows; $x++) {
push(@return_array, [ $data[$offset + $x]{name},
$data[$offset + $x]{age}
]
);
}
return \@return_array;
}
my $pager = HTML::Pager->new(query => $query,
get_data_callback => $get_data_sub,
rows => 100,
page_size => 10
);
You can also specify arguements to be passed to your callback function. To do this,
call new like:
HTML::Pager->new(query => $query,
get_data_callback => [$get_data_sub, $arg, $arg],
rows => 100,
page_size => 10
);
If you want to use named, rather than numeric TMPL_VARs in your Pager template you can
return a ref to an array of hashes rather than arrays. This array of hashes will be
passed directly to HTML::Template to fill in the loop data for your paging area.
"new()" supports several optional arguements:
o debug - if set to 1, debugging information is warn()'d during the program run.
Defaults to 0.
o template - this is an HTML::Template object to use instead of the auto-generated
HTML::Template used in Pager output. It must define the following TMPL_LOOPs and
TMPL_VARs. Here's what the default template looks like, to give you an idea of how to
change it to suite your purposes:
<TMPL_VAR NAME="PAGER_JAVASCRIPT">
<FORM>
<TABLE BORDER=0 BGCOLOR=#000000 WIDTH=100%>
<TR><TD><TABLE BORDER=0 WIDTH=100%>
<TMPL_LOOP NAME="PAGER_DATA_LIST">
<TR>
<TD BGCOLOR=#ffffff><TMPL_VAR NAME="PAGER_DATA_COL_0"></TD>
<TD BGCOLOR=#ffffff><TMPL_VAR NAME="PAGER_DATA_COL_1"></TD>
<TD BGCOLOR=#ffffff><TMPL_VAR NAME="PAGER_DATA_COL_2"></TD>
<!--- depends on number of rows in data - so should your replacement! -->
</TR>
</TMPL_LOOP>
<TR><TD BGCOLOR=#DDDDDD COLSPAN=3 ALIGN=CENTER>
<TMPL_VAR NAME="PAGER_PREV">
<TMPL_VAR NAME="PAGER_JUMP">
<TMPL_VAR NAME="PAGER_NEXT">
</TD></TR>
</TABLE>
</TABLE>
<TMPL_VAR NAME="PAGER_HIDDEN">
</FORM>
Make sure you include all the TMPL_LOOPs and TMPL_VARs included above. If you get
HTML::Template errors about trying to set bad param 'PAGER_BLAH', that probably means
you didn't put the 'PAGER_BLAH' variable in your template. You can put extra state-
maintaining <INPUT> fields in the paging form - in fact, I think that this is probably
required for most real-world uses.
Optionally you can use named parameters inside PAGER_DATA_LIST, and return an array of
hashes to fill them in from get_data_callback. If you did that your template might
look like:
...
<TMPL_LOOP NAME="PAGER_DATA_LIST">
<TR>
<TD BGCOLOR=#ffffff><TMPL_VAR NAME="NUMBER"></TD>
<TD BGCOLOR=#ffffff><TMPL_VAR NAME="FIRST_NAME"></TD>
<TD BGCOLOR=#ffffff><TMPL_VAR NAME="LAST_NAME"></TD>
</TR>
</TMPL_LOOP>
...
o persist_vars - Pass a ref to an array of the names of the CGI form parameters you want
to store into this fuction, and they will be included in the hidden form data of the
pager form.
This method allows you to have hidden form variables which persist from page to page.
This is useful when connecting your pager to some other function (such as a search
form) which needs to keep some data around for later use.
The old $pager->persist_vars() syntax still works but is deprecated.
o column_names - should be set to an array ref containing the names of the columns -
this will be used to create column headers. Without this arguement, the columns will
have no headers. This option is only useful in very simple cases where all the data
is actually in use as columns. Example:
my $pager = HTML::Pager->new( column_names => [ 'one', 'two' ]);
o cell_space_color - this specifies the color of the lines separating the cells. If the
default template is mostly OK, except for the color scheme, this will provide a middle
ground between the necessity of creating your own Pager template and suffering with
bad colors. Example:
my $pager = HTML::Pager->new( cell_space_color => '#222244' );
o cell_background_color - this specifies the background color of each data cell. If the
default template is mostly OK, except for the color scheme, this will provide a middle
ground between the necessity of creating your own Pager template and suffering with
bad colors. Example:
my $pager = HTML::Pager->new( cell_background_color => '#000000' );
o nav_background_color - this specifies the background color of the bottom navigation
bar. If the default template is mostly OK, except for the color scheme, this will
provide a middle ground between the necessity of creating your own Pager template and
suffering with bad colors. Example:
my $pager = HTML::Pager->new( nav_background_color => '#222244' );
o javascript_presubmit - this optional parameter allows you to specify a Javascript
function which will be called when a user clicks on one of the Pager navigation
buttons, prior to submitting the form. Only if this function returns 'true' will the
form be submitted.
The Pager navigation calls its 'PAGER_set_offset_and_submit()' javascript function
when a user clicks the "Next", "Previous" or other page buttons. This normally
precludes calling your own javascript submit functions to perform some task.
Through this hook, you can perform client-side functions, such as form validation,
which can modify the form or actually prevent the user from going to the next page.
This is particularly useful for enabling some kind of work-flow involving form
validation.
Constructor Example:
my $pager = HTML::Pager->new(
javascript_presubmit => 'last_minute_javascript()'
);
HTML Example:
<script language=Javascript>
function last_minute_javascript() {
return confirm("Are you sure you want to leave this page?");
}
</script>
"output()"
This method returns the HTML <FORM> and <TABLE> to create the paging list-view. If you
used the template option to new() this will output the entire template.
MAINTAINING PAGING STATE
Sometimes you'll want to be able to allow the user to leave your paging list and be able
to come back to where they were without requiring that they use the Back button. To do
this all you have to do is arrange to save the state of the PAGER_offset parameter, and
pass it back to the paging-list CGI.
CREDITS
This module was created for Vanguard Media and I'd like to thank my boss, Jesse Erlbaum,
for allowing me to release it to the public. He also added the persist_vars
functionality, the background colors option and the javascript_presubmit option.
AUTHOR
Sam Tregar, sam AT tregar.com
LICENSE
HTML::Template : A Perl module to handle CGI HTML paging of arbitary data Copyright (C)
1999 Sam Tregar (sam AT tregar.com)
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of
the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY;
without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program;
if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston,
MA 02111-1307 USA
SEE ALSO
HTML::Template, CGI
POD ERRORS
Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained below:
Around line 152:
=back doesn't take any parameters, but you said =back 4
Around line 305:
=back doesn't take any parameters, but you said =back 4
perl v5.10.0 2000-04-14 Pager(3pm)
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