libfort (Library to create FORmatted Tables)
libfort is a simple crossplatform library to create formatted text tables.
Features:
- Easy to integrate (only 2 files)
- Customization of appearance (various border styles and row/column/cell properties for indentation, alignment, padding)
- A number of functions to fill the table (add content by adding separate cells, rows or use
printf
like functions) - Support of multiple lines in cells
- Support of UTF-8 and wide characters
Design goals
- Portability. All main OSes (Linux, Windows, macOS, FreeBSD) and compilers are supported.
- Maintainability and robustness. libfort is written in C because it is much less complicated than C++ and it can be used in both C and C++ projects and even on platforms without C++ compiler.
- Trivial integration. Therefore all source code files are amalgamed in only 2 files.
- Heavy testing. The goal is to cover 100% of the code (it is not reached yet) and to run tests on all major compilers and platforms.
Integration
Add 2 files ( fort.c
and fort.h
from lib directory) to your C or C++ project and include
#include "fort.h"
in your source code where you will use libfort functions.
For C++ projects that use compiler with C++11 support (and later) there are also availabe convenient C++ wrappers around C functions (see fort.hpp
in lib direrctory). In that case instead of fort.h you will need to include
#include "fort.hpp"
Integration with cmake
In case libfort is installed on the host system it should be sufficient to use find_package
:
find_package(libfort)
target_link_libraries(your_target PRIVATE libfort::fort)
In case you downloaded libfort sources and embedded them in your project (e.g. put all sources in directory third-party/libfort
) you can use add_subdirectory
:
# Disable building tests and examples in libfort project
set(FORT_ENABLE_TESTING OFF CACHE INTERNAL "")
add_subdirectory(third-party/libfort)
target_link_libraries(your_target PRIVATE fort)
Documentation
See guide in tutorial of the library and doxygen API documentation.
Getting Started
The common libfort usage pattern (C API):
- create a table (
ft_create_table
); - fill it with data (
ft_write_ln
,fr_ptrintf_ln
,ft_row_write
, ...); - modify basic table appearance (
ft_set_cell_prop
,ft_set_border_style
...) - convert table to string representation (
ft_to_string
); - destroy the table (
ft_destroy_table
)
Here are some examples:
Basic example
/* C API */
#include <stdio.h>
#include "fort.h"
int main(void)
{
ft_table_t *table = ft_create_table();
/* Set "header" type for the first row */
ft_set_cell_prop(table, 0, FT_ANY_COLUMN, FT_CPROP_ROW_TYPE, FT_ROW_HEADER);
ft_write_ln(table, "N", "Driver", "Time", "Avg Speed");
ft_write_ln(table, "1", "Ricciardo", "1:25.945", "222.128");
ft_write_ln(table, "2", "Hamilton", "1:26.373", "221.027");
ft_write_ln(table, "3", "Verstappen", "1:26.469", "220.782");
printf("%s\n", ft_to_string(table));
ft_destroy_table(table);
}
/* C++ API */
#include <iostream>
#include "fort.hpp"
int main(void)
{
fort::char_table table;
table << fort::header
<< "N" << "Driver" << "Time" << "Avg Speed" << fort::endr
<< "1" << "Ricciardo" << "1:25.945" << "47.362" << fort::endr
<< "2" << "Hamilton" << "1:26.373" << "35.02" << fort::endr
<< "3" << "Verstappen" << "1:26.469" << "29.78" << fort::endr;
std::cout << table.to_string() << std::endl;
}
Output:
+---+------------+----------+-----------+
| N | Driver | Time | Avg Speed |
+---+------------+----------+-----------+
| 1 | Ricciardo | 1:25.945 | 47.362 |
| 2 | Hamilton | 1:26.373 | 35.02 |
| 3 | Verstappen | 1:26.469 | 29.78 |
+---+------------+----------+-----------+
Customize table appearance
/* C API */
#include <stdio.h>
#include "fort.h"
int main(void)
{
ft_table_t *table = ft_create_table();
/* Change border style */
ft_set_border_style(table, FT_DOUBLE2_STYLE);
/* Set "header" type for the first row */
ft_set_cell_prop(table, 0, FT_ANY_COLUMN, FT_CPROP_ROW_TYPE, FT_ROW_HEADER);
ft_write_ln(table, "Movie title", "Director", "Year", "Rating");
ft_write_ln(table, "The Shawshank Redemption", "Frank Darabont", "1994", "9.5");
ft_write_ln(table, "The Godfather", "Francis Ford Coppola", "1972", "9.2");
ft_write_ln(table, "2001: A Space Odyssey", "Stanley Kubrick", "1968", "8.5");
/* Set center alignment for the 1st and 3rd columns */
ft_set_cell_prop(table, FT_ANY_ROW, 1, FT_CPROP_TEXT_ALIGN, FT_ALIGNED_CENTER);
ft_set_cell_prop(table, FT_ANY_ROW, 3, FT_CPROP_TEXT_ALIGN, FT_ALIGNED_CENTER);
printf("%s\n", ft_to_string(table));
ft_destroy_table(table);
}
/* C++ API */
#include <iostream>
#include "fort.hpp"
int main(void)
{
fort::char_table table;
/* Change border style */
table.set_border_style(FT_DOUBLE2_STYLE);
table << fort::header
<< "Movie title" << "Director" << "Year" << "Rating" << fort::endr
<< "The Shawshank Redemption" << "Frank Darabont" << "1994" << "9.5" << fort::endr
<< "The Godfather" << "Francis Ford Coppola" << "1972" << "9.2" << fort::endr
<< "2001: A Space Odyssey" << "Stanley Kubrick" << "1968" << "8.5" << fort::endr;
/* Set center alignment for the 1st and 3rd columns */
table.column(1).set_cell_text_align(fort::text_align::center);
table.column(3).set_cell_text_align(fort::text_align::center);
std::cout << table.to_string() << std::endl;
}
Output:
ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ€βββββββββββββββββββββββ€βββββββ€βββββββββ
β Movie title β Director β Year β Rating β
β βββββββββββββββββββββββββββͺβββββββββββββββββββββββͺβββββββͺβββββββββ£
β The Shawshank Redemption β Frank Darabont β 1994 β 9.5 β
ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββΌβββββββββββββββββββββββΌβββββββΌβββββββββ’
β The Godfather β Francis Ford Coppola β 1972 β 9.2 β
ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββΌβββββββββββββββββββββββΌβββββββΌβββββββββ’
β 2001: A Space Odyssey β Stanley Kubrick β 1968 β 8.5 β
ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ§βββββββββββββββββββββββ§βββββββ§βββββββββ
Different ways to fill table with data
/* C API */
#include <stdio.h>
#include "fort.h"
int main(void)
{
ft_table_t *table = ft_create_table();
/* Set "header" type for the first row */
ft_set_cell_prop(table, 0, FT_ANY_COLUMN, FT_CPROP_ROW_TYPE, FT_ROW_HEADER);
ft_write_ln(table, "N", "Planet", "Speed, km/s", "Temperature, K");
/* Fill row with printf like function */
ft_printf_ln(table, "1|%s|%6.3f|%d", "Mercury", 47.362, 340);
/* Fill row explicitly with strings */
ft_write_ln(table, "2", "Venus", "35.02", "737");
/* Fill row with the array of strings */
const char *arr[4] = {"3", "Earth", "29.78", "288"};
ft_row_write_ln(table, 4, arr);
printf("%s\n", ft_to_string(table));
ft_destroy_table(table);
}
/* C++ API */
#include <iostream>
#include "fort.hpp"
int main(void)
{
fort::char_table table;
table << fort::header;
/* Fill each cell with operator[] */
table [0][0] = "N";
table [0][1] = "Planet";
table [0][2] = "Speed, km/s";
table [0][3] = "Temperature, K";
table << fort::endr;
/* Fill with iostream operator<< */
table << 1 << "Mercury" << 47.362 << 340 << fort::endr;
/* Fill row explicitly with strings */
table.write_ln("2", "Venus", "35.02", "737");
/* Fill row with data from the container */
std::vector<std::string> arr = {"3", "Earth", "29.78", "288"};
table.range_write_ln(std::begin(arr), std::end(arr));
std::cout << table.to_string() << std::endl;
}
Output:
+---+---------+-------------+----------------+
| N | Planet | Speed, km/s | Temperature, K |
+---+---------+-------------+----------------+
| 1 | Mercury | 47.362 | 340 |
| 2 | Venus | 35.02 | 737 |
| 3 | Earth | 29.78 | 288 |
+---+---------+-------------+----------------+
Working with multibyte-character-strings
libfort
supports wchar_t
and utf-8 strings. Here are simple examples of working with utf-8 strings:
/* C API */
#include <stdio.h>
#include "fort.h"
int main(void)
{
ft_table_t *table = ft_create_table();
ft_set_border_style(table, FT_NICE_STYLE);
ft_set_cell_prop(table, FT_ANY_ROW, 0, FT_CPROP_TEXT_ALIGN, FT_ALIGNED_CENTER);
ft_set_cell_prop(table, FT_ANY_ROW, 1, FT_CPROP_TEXT_ALIGN, FT_ALIGNED_LEFT);
ft_set_cell_prop(table, 0, FT_ANY_COLUMN, FT_CPROP_ROW_TYPE, FT_ROW_HEADER);
ft_u8write_ln(table, "Π Π°Π½Π³", "ΠΠ°Π·Π²Π°Π½ΠΈΠ΅", "ΠΠΎΠ΄", "Π Π΅ΠΉΡΠΈΠ½Π³");
ft_u8write_ln(table, "1", "ΠΠΎΠ±Π΅Π³ ΠΈΠ· Π¨ΠΎΡΡΠ΅Π½ΠΊΠ°", "1994", "9.5");
ft_u8write_ln(table, "2", "12 ΡΠ°Π·Π³Π½Π΅Π²Π°Π½Π½ΡΡ
ΠΌΡΠΆΡΠΈΠ½", "1957", "8.8");
ft_u8write_ln(table, "3", "ΠΠΎΡΠΌΠΈΡΠ΅ΡΠΊΠ°Ρ ΠΎΠ΄ΠΈΡΡΠ΅Ρ 2001 Π³ΠΎΠ΄Π°", "1968", "8.5");
ft_u8write_ln(table, "4", "ΠΠ΅Π³ΡΡΠΈΠΉ ΠΏΠΎ Π»Π΅Π·Π²ΠΈΡ", "1982", "8.1");
printf("%s\n", (const char *)ft_to_u8string(table));
ft_destroy_table(table);
}
/* C++ API */
#include <iostream>
#include "fort.hpp"
int main(void)
{
fort::utf8_table table;
table.set_border_style(FT_NICE_STYLE);
table.column(0).set_cell_text_align(fort::text_align::center);
table.column(1).set_cell_text_align(fort::text_align::center);
table << fort::header
<< "Π Π°Π½Π³" << "ΠΠ°Π·Π²Π°Π½ΠΈΠ΅" << "ΠΠΎΠ΄" << "Π Π΅ΠΉΡΠΈΠ½Π³" << fort::endr
<< "1" << "ΠΠΎΠ±Π΅Π³ ΠΈΠ· Π¨ΠΎΡΡΠ΅Π½ΠΊΠ°" << "1994" << "9.5"<< fort::endr
<< "2" << "12 ΡΠ°Π·Π³Π½Π΅Π²Π°Π½Π½ΡΡ
ΠΌΡΠΆΡΠΈΠ½" << "1957" << "8.8" << fort::endr
<< "3" << "ΠΠΎΡΠΌΠΈΡΠ΅ΡΠΊΠ°Ρ ΠΎΠ΄ΠΈΡΡΠ΅Ρ 2001 Π³ΠΎΠ΄Π°" << "1968" << "8.5" << fort::endr
<< "4" << "ΠΠ΅Π³ΡΡΠΈΠΉ ΠΏΠΎ Π»Π΅Π·Π²ΠΈΡ" << "1982" << "8.1" << fort::endr;
std::cout << table.to_string() << std::endl;
}
Output:
ββββββββ¦ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ¦βββββββ¦ββββββββββ
β Π Π°Π½Π³ β ΠΠ°Π·Π²Π°Π½ΠΈΠ΅ β ΠΠΎΠ΄ β Π Π΅ΠΉΡΠΈΠ½Π³ β
β βββββββ¬ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ¬βββββββ¬ββββββββββ£
β 1 β ΠΠΎΠ±Π΅Π³ ΠΈΠ· Π¨ΠΎΡΡΠ΅Π½ΠΊΠ° β 1994 β 9.5 β
β 2 β 12 ΡΠ°Π·Π³Π½Π΅Π²Π°Π½Π½ΡΡ
ΠΌΡΠΆΡΠΈΠ½ β 1957 β 8.8 β
β 3 β ΠΠΎΡΠΌΠΈΡΠ΅ΡΠΊΠ°Ρ ΠΎΠ΄ΠΈΡΡΠ΅Ρ 2001 Π³ΠΎΠ΄Π° β 1968 β 8.5 β
β 4 β ΠΠ΅Π³ΡΡΠΈΠΉ ΠΏΠΎ Π»Π΅Π·Π²ΠΈΡ β 1982 β 8.1 β
ββββββββ©ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ©βββββββ©ββββββββββ
Please note:
libfort
internally has a very simple logic to compute visible width of utf-8 strings. It considers that each codepoint will occupy one position on the terminal in case of monowidth font (some east asians wide and fullwidth characters (see http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr11/tr11-33.html) will occupy 2 positions). This logic is very simple and covers wide range of cases. But obviously there a lot of cases when it is not sufficient. In such cases user should use some external libraries and provide an appropriate function tolibfort
viaft_set_u8strwid_func
function.
Supported platforms and compilers
The following compilers are currently used in continuous integration at Travis, AppVeyor and Cirrus:
Compiler | Operating System |
---|---|
GCC 5.5.0 | Ubuntu 16.04.11 |
GCC 4.9.4 | Ubuntu 16.04.11 |
GCC 5.5.0 | Ubuntu 16.04.11 |
GCC 6.5.0 | Ubuntu 16.04.11 |
GCC 7.5.0 | Ubuntu 16.04.11 |
GCC 8.4.0 | Ubuntu 16.04.11 |
GCC 9.3.0 | Ubuntu 16.04.11 |
Clang 5.0.0 | Ubuntu 16.04.11 |
AppleClang 7.3.0 | Darwin Kernel Version 15.6.0 |
AppleClang 8.1.0 | Darwin Kernel Version 16.7.0 |
AppleClang 9.1.0 | Darwin Kernel Version 17.4.0 |
Clang 8.0.1 | FreeBSD 12.1 |
Clang 11.0.1 | FreeBSD 13.0 |
Visual Studio 2017 | Windows Server 2016 |
Please note:
- In case of clang on OS X before using libfort with
wchar_t
with real unicode symbols it may be necessary to setsetlocale(LC_CTYPE, "");
because otherwise standard functionswprintf
, that libfort uses internally, may fail andft_to_string
will return error.
Contributing to libfort
See the contribution guidelines for more information.
License
The class is licensed under the MIT License:
Copyright Β© 2017 - 2020 Seleznev Anton
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the βSoftwareβ), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED βAS ISβ, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.