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perl-Acme-CPANModules-BrowsingTableInteractively rpm build for : OpenSuSE. For other distributions click perl-Acme-CPANModules-BrowsingTableInteractively.

Name : perl-Acme-CPANModules-BrowsingTableInteractively
Version : 0.009 Vendor : obs://build_opensuse_org/devel:languages:perl
Release : lp155.1.1 Date : 2023-07-20 16:08:53
Group : Unspecified Source RPM : perl-Acme-CPANModules-BrowsingTableInteractively-0.009-lp155.1.1.src.rpm
Size : 0.04 MB
Packager : https://www_suse_com/
Summary : List of modules/tools for browsing table data interactively
Description :
This list reviews what tools are available on CPAN and in general to browse
table data interactively.

Let me say first that the best tools are not Perl-based since sadly Perl is
not a favorite choice for writing tools these days. That said, Perl is
still a great glue to help make those tools work together better for you.

1) *Visidata*, https://www.visidata.org

This is currently my favorite. It\'s terminal-based, written in Python, and
has more features than any other tools currently written in Perl, by far.
vd has support for many formats, including CSV, TSV, Excel, JSON, and
SQLite. It makes it particularly easy to create summary for your table like
histogram or sum/average/max/min/etc, or add new columns, or edit some
cells. It also has visualization features like XY-plots.

It has the concept of \"sheets\" like sheets in a spreadsheet workbook so
anytime you filter rows/columns or create summary or do some other
derivation from your data, you create a new sheet which you can edit, save,
and destroy later as needed and go back to your original table. It even
presents settings and metadata as sheets so you can edit them as a normal
sheet.

It has plugins, and I guess it should be simple enough to create a plugin
so you can filter rows or add columns using Perl expression instead of the
default Python, if needed.

My CLI framework Perinci::CmdLine (Perinci::CmdLine::Lite, v1.918+) has
support for Visidata. You can specify command-line option \'--format=vd\' to
browse the output of your CLI program in Visidata.

2) *DataTables*, https://datatables.net

DataTables is a JavaScript (jQuery-based) library to add controls to your
HTML table so you can filter rows incrementally, sort rows, reorder
columns, and so on. It also has plugins to do more customized stuffs. I
still prefer Visidata most of the time because I am comfortable living in
the terminal, but I particularly love the incremental searching feature
that comes built-in with DataTables.

My CLI framework Perinci::CmdLine (Perinci::CmdLine::Lite, v1.918+) also
has support for DataTables. You can specify command-line option
\'--format=html+datatables\' to output your CLI program\'s result as HTML
table (using Text::Table::HTML::DataTables) when possible and then browse
the output in browser.

3) *Tickit::Widget::Table*, Tickit::Widget::Table

This module lets you browse the table in a terminal. Using the Tickit
library, the advantages it\'s supposed to have is mouse support. It\'s still
very basic: you either have to specify each column width manually or the
width of all columns will be the same. There\'s no horizontal scrolling
support or a way to see long text in a column. Not updated since 2016.

4) *Term::TablePrint*, Term::TablePrint

This module lets you browse the table in a terminal. Provides roughly the
same features like Tickit::Widget::Table with an extra one: you can press
Enter on a row to view it as a \"card\" where each column will be displayed
vertically, so you can better see a row that has many columns or columns
with long text.

There is currently no support beyond the most basic stuffs, so no column
hiding, reordering, etc.

5) *less*

Don\'t forget the good ol\' Unix pager. You can render your table data as an
ASCII table (using modules like Text::Table::More, Text::ANSITable, or
Text::Table::Any for more formats to choose from) then pipe the output to
it. At least with _less_ you can scroll horizontally or perform incremental
searching (though not interactive filtering of rows).

6) *SQLite browser*, *SQLiteStudio*, or other SQLite-based front-ends

Another way to browse your table data interactively is to export it to
SQLite database then use one of the many front-ends (desktop GUI,
web-based, TUI, as well as CLI) to browse it. If you have your table data
as a CSV, you can use the csv2sqlite script from App::SQLiteUtils to
convert it to SQLite database.

https://sqlitebrowser.org

http://sqlitestudio.pl

6) *Microsoft Excel*, *LibreOffice*, or other spreadsheet programs

Yet another way to browse your table data interactively is to use a
spreadsheet, which offers a rich way to view and manipulate data. You can
generate a CSV from your table data; all spreadsheets support opening CSV
files.

RPM found in directory: /packages/linux-pbone/ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/repositories/devel:/languages:/perl:/CPAN-A/15.5/noarch

Content of RPM  Provides Requires

Download
ftp.icm.edu.pl  perl-Acme-CPANModules-BrowsingTableInteractively-0.009-lp155.1.1.noarch.rpm
     

Provides :
perl(Acme::CPANModules::BrowsingTableInteractively)
perl-Acme-CPANModules-BrowsingTableInteractively

Requires :
perl(:MODULE_COMPAT_5.26.1)
rpmlib(CompressedFileNames) <= 3.0.4-1
rpmlib(FileDigests) <= 4.6.0-1
rpmlib(PayloadFilesHavePrefix) <= 4.0-1
rpmlib(PayloadIsXz) <= 5.2-1


Content of RPM :
/usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.26.1/Acme
/usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.26.1/Acme/CPANModules
/usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.26.1/Acme/CPANModules/BrowsingTableInteractively.pm
/usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.26.1/x86_64-linux-thread-multi
/usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Acme-CPANModules-BrowsingTableInteractively
/usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Acme-CPANModules-BrowsingTableInteractively/Changes
/usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Acme-CPANModules-BrowsingTableInteractively/README
/usr/share/licenses/perl-Acme-CPANModules-BrowsingTableInteractively
/usr/share/licenses/perl-Acme-CPANModules-BrowsingTableInteractively/LICENSE
/usr/share/man/man3/Acme::CPANModules::BrowsingTableInteractively.3pm.gz

 
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