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NAME

Padre::Delta - A very simple diff object that can be applied to editors fast

SYNOPSIS

    my $editor = Padre::Current->editor;
    my $from   = $editor->GetText;
    my $to     = transform_function($from);
    Padre::Delta->from_scalars( \$from => \$to )->to_editor($editor);

DESCRIPTION

As a refactoring IDE many different modules and tools may wish to calculate changes to a document in the background and then apply the changes in the foreground.

Padre::Delta objects provide a mechanism for defining change to an editor, with the representation stored in a way that is extremely well aligned with the Padre::Wx::Editor and Wx::Scintilla APIs.

By doing as much preliminary calculations as possible in the background and passing a Padre::Delta object back to the parent, the amount of time spent blocking in the foreground is kept to an absolute minimum.

METHODS

    # Alter a document by line range, in loose form
    my $delta1 = Padre::Delta->new(
        'line',
        [ 1, 1, 'Content'   ], # Insert a single line
        [ 4, 3, ''          ], # Remove a single line
        [ 6, 9, 'Alternate' ], # Replace three lines with one
    )->tidy;
    
    # Alter a document by character range in tight form
    my $delta2 = Padre::Delta->new(
        'position',
        [ 35, 37, 'fghjkl' ], # Replace two characters with six
        [ 23, 27, ''       ], # Remove four characters
        [ 12, 12, 'abcd'   ], # Insert four characters
    );

The new constructor takes a replacement mode and a list of targets and returns the delta object, which can then be applied to a SCALAR reference of Padre::Wx::Editor object.

The first parameter should be the replacement mode. This will be either 'line' for line range deltas as per the diff program, or 'position' for character position range deltas which operate at a lower level and directly on top of the position system of Wx::Scintilla.

After the replacement mode, the constructor is provided with an arbitrarily sized list of replacement targets.

Each replacement target should be an ARRAY reference containing three elements which will be the start of the range to be removed, the end of the range to be removed, and the text to replace the range with.

The start of the range must always be a lower value than the end of the range. While providing a high to low range may incidentall work on some operating systems, on others it can cause Wx::Scintilla to segfault.

Each replacement target will both remove existing content and replace it with new content. To achieve a simple insert, both range positions should be set to the same value at the position you wish to insert at. To achieve a simple deletion the replacement string should be set to the null string.

The ordering of the replacement target is critically important. When the changes applied they will always be made naively and in the same order as supplied to the constructor.

Because a change early in the document will alter the positions of all content after it, you should be very careful to ensure that your change makes sense if applied in the supplied order.

If the positions of your replacement targets are not inherently precalculated to adjust for content changes, you should supply your changes from the bottom of the document upwards.

Returns the new Padre::Delta object.

mode

The mode accessor indicates if the replacement will be done using line numbers or character positions.

Returns 'line' or 'position'.

null

The null method returns true if the delta contains zero changes to the document and thus has no effect, or false if the delta contains any changes to the document.

The ability to create null deltas allows refactoring to indicate a successful transform resulting in no changes to the current document, as opposed to some other response indicating a failure to apply the transform or similar response.

from_diff

    my $delta = Padre::Delta->from_diff(
        Algorithm::Diff::diff( \@from => \@to )
    );

The from_diff method takes a list of hunk structures as returned by the Algorithm::Diff function diff and creates a new delta that will apply that diff to a document.

Returns a new Padre::Delta object.

from_scalars

    my $delta = Padre::Delta->from_scalars( \$from => \$to );

The from_scalars method takes a pair of documents "from" and "to" and creates a Padre::Delta object that when applied to document "from" will convert it into document "to".

The documents are provided as SCALAR references to avoid the need for superfluous copies of what may be relatively large strings.

Returns a new Padre::Delta object.

tidy

    Padre::Delta->new( line => @lines )->tidy->to_editor($editor);

The tidy method is provided as a convenience for situations where the quality of the replacement targets passed to the constructor is imperfect.

To ensure that changes are applied quickly and editor objects are locked for the shortest time possible, the replacement targets in the delta are considered to have an inherent order and are always applied naively.

For situations where the replacement targets do not have an inherent order, applying them in the order provided will result in a corrupted transform.

Calling tidy on a delta object will correct ranges that are not provided in low to high order and sort them so changes are applied from the bottom of the document upwards to avoid document corruption.

Returns the same Padre::Delta object as a convenience so that the tidy method can be used in changed calls as demonstrated above.

to_editor

    my $changes = $delta->to_editor($editor);

The to_editor method applies the changes in a delta object to a Padre::Wx::Editor instance.

The changes are applied in the most simple and direct manner possible, wrapped in a single Undo action for easy of reversion, and in an update locker for speed.

Return the number of changes made to the text contained in the editor, which may be zero in the case of a null delta.

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE

Copyright 2008-2013 The Padre development team as listed in Padre.pm.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.