Class: Prawn::Table

Inherits:
Object
  • Object
show all
Defined in:
lib/prawn/table.rb,
lib/prawn/table/cell.rb,
lib/prawn/table/accessors.rb,
lib/prawn/table/cell/text.rb,
lib/prawn/table/cell/in_table.rb,
lib/prawn/table/cell/subtable.rb

Overview

Next-generation table drawing for Prawn.

Data

Data, for a Prawn table, is a two-dimensional array of objects that can be converted to cells (“cellable” objects). Cellable objects can be:

String

Produces a text cell. This is the most common usage.

Prawn::Table::Cell

If you have already built a Cell or have a custom subclass of Cell you want to use in a table, you can pass through Cell objects.

Prawn::Table

Creates a subtable (a table within a cell). You can use Prawn::Document#make_table to create a table for use as a subtable without immediately drawing it. See examples/table/bill.rb for a somewhat complex use of subtables.

Array

Creates a simple subtable. Create a Table object using make_table (see above) if you need more control over the subtable’s styling.

Options

Prawn/Layout provides many options to control style and layout of your table. These options are implemented with a uniform interface: the :foo option always sets the foo= accessor. See the accessor and method documentation for full details on the options you can pass. Some highlights:

cell_style

A hash of style options to style all cells. See the documentation on Prawn::Table::Cell for all cell style options.

header

If set to true, the first row will be repeated on every page. The header must be included as the first row of your data. Row numbering (for styling and other row-specific options) always indexes based on your data array. Whether or not you have a header, row(n) always refers to the nth element (starting from 0) of the data array.

column_widths

Sets widths for individual columns. Manually setting widths can give better results than letting Prawn guess at them, as Prawn’s algorithm for defaulting widths is currently pretty boneheaded. If you experience problems like weird column widths or CannotFit errors, try manually setting widths on more columns.

Initializer Block

If a block is passed to methods that initialize a table (Prawn::Table.new, Prawn::Document#table, Prawn::Document#make_table), it will be called after cell setup but before layout. This is a very flexible way to specify styling and layout constraints. This code sets up a table where the second through the fourth rows (1-3, indexed from 0) are each one inch (72 pt) wide:

pdf.table(data) do |table|
  table.rows(1..3).width = 72
end

As with Prawn::Document#initialize, if the block has no arguments, it will be evaluated in the context of the object itself. The above code could be rewritten as:

pdf.table(data) do
  rows(1..3).width = 72
end

Defined Under Namespace

Classes: Cell, CellProxy

Instance Attribute Summary collapse

Instance Method Summary collapse

Constructor Details

#initialize(data, document, options = {}, &block) ⇒ Table

Set up a table on the given document. Arguments:

data

A two-dimensional array of cell-like objects. See the “Data” section above for the types of objects that can be put in a table.

document

The Prawn::Document instance on which to draw the table.

options

A hash of attributes and values for the table. See the “Options” block above for details on available options.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 120

def initialize(data, document, options={}, &block)
  @pdf = document
  @cells = make_cells(data)
  @header = false
  options.each { |k, v| send("#{k}=", v) }

  if block
    block.arity < 1 ? instance_eval(&block) : block[self]
  end

  set_column_widths
  set_row_heights
  position_cells
end

Instance Attribute Details

#column_lengthObject (readonly)

Number of columns in the table.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 141

def column_length
  @column_length
end

#header=(value) ⇒ Object (writeonly)

If true, designates the first row as a header row to be repeated on every page. Does not change row numbering – row numbers always index into the data array provided, with no modification.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 187

def header=(value)
  @header = value
end

#row_colors=(value) ⇒ Object (writeonly)

Accepts an Array of alternating row colors to stripe the table.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 191

def row_colors=(value)
  @row_colors = value
end

#row_lengthObject (readonly)

Number of rows in the table.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 137

def row_length
  @row_length
end

#widthObject

Returns the width of the table in PDF points.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 149

def width
  @width ||= [natural_width, @pdf.bounds.width].min
end

Instance Method Details

#cell_style=(style_hash) ⇒ Object

Sets styles for all cells.

pdf.table(data, :cell_style => { :borders => [:left, :right] })


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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 197

def cell_style=(style_hash)
  cells.style(style_hash)
end

#cellsObject

Returns a CellProxy that can be used to select and style cells. See the CellProxy documentation for things you can do with cells.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table/accessors.rb', line 16

def cells
  @cell_proxy ||= CellProxy.new(@cells)
end

#column_widthsObject

Calculate and return the constrained column widths, taking into account each cell’s min_width, max_width, and any user-specified constraints on the table or column size.

Because the natural widths can be silly, this does not always work so well at guessing a good size for columns that have vastly different content. If you see weird problems like CannotFit errors or shockingly bad column sizes, you should specify more column widths manually.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 274

def column_widths
  @column_widths ||= begin
    if width < cells.min_width
      raise Errors::CannotFit,
        "Table's width was set too small to contain its contents"
    end

    if width > cells.max_width
      raise Errors::CannotFit,
        "Table's width was set larger than its contents' maximum width"
    end

    if width < natural_width
      # Shrink the table to fit the requested width.
      f = (width - cells.min_width).to_f / (natural_width - cells.min_width)

      (0...column_length).map do |c|
        min, nat = column(c).min_width, column(c).width
        (f * (nat - min)) + min
      end
    elsif width > natural_width
      # Expand the table to fit the requested width.
      f = (width - cells.width).to_f / (cells.max_width - cells.width)

      (0...column_length).map do |c|
        nat, max = column(c).width, column(c).max_width
        (f * (max - nat)) + nat
      end
    else
      natural_column_widths
    end
  end
end

#column_widths=(widths) ⇒ Object

Sets column widths for the table. The argument can be one of the following types:

Array

[w0, w1, w2, ...] (specify a width for each column)

Hash

{0 => w0, 1 => w1, ...} (keys are column names, values are widths)

Numeric

72 (sets width for all columns)



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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 164

def column_widths=(widths)
  case widths
  when Array
    widths.each_with_index { |w, i| column(i).width = w }
  when Hash
    widths.each { |i, w| column(i).width = w }
  when Numeric
    columns.width = widths
  else
    raise ArgumentError, "cannot interpret column widths"
  end
end

#columns(col_spec) ⇒ Object Also known as: column

Selects the given columns (0-based) for styling. Returns a CellProxy – see the documentation on CellProxy for things you can do with cells.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table/accessors.rb', line 31

def columns(col_spec)
  cells.columns(col_spec)
end

#drawObject

Draws the table onto the document at the document’s current y-position.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 222

def draw
  # The cell y-positions are based on an infinitely long canvas. The offset
  # keeps track of how much we have to add to the original, theoretical
  # y-position to get to the actual position on the current page.
  offset = @pdf.y

  # Reference bounds are the non-stretchy bounds used to decide when to
  # flow to a new column / page.
  ref_bounds = @pdf.bounds.stretchy? ? @pdf.margin_box : @pdf.bounds

  last_y = @pdf.y
  @cells.each do |cell|
    if cell.height > (cell.y + offset) - ref_bounds.absolute_bottom
      # start a new page or column
      @pdf.bounds.move_past_bottom
      draw_header
      offset = @pdf.y - cell.y
    end
 
    # Don't modify cell.x / cell.y here, as we want to reuse the original
    # values when re-inking the table. #draw should be able to be called
    # multiple times.
    x, y = cell.x, cell.y
    y += offset 

    # Translate coordinates to the bounds we are in, since drawing is 
    # relative to the cursor, not ref_bounds.
    x += @pdf.bounds.left_side - @pdf.bounds.absolute_left
    y -= @pdf.bounds.absolute_bottom

    # Set background color, if any.
    if @row_colors && (!@header || cell.row > 0)
      index = @header ? (cell.row - 1) : cell.row
      cell.background_color = @row_colors[index % @row_colors.length]
    end

    cell.draw([x, y])
    last_y = y
  end

  @pdf.move_cursor_to(last_y - @cells.last.height)
end

#heightObject

Returns the height of the table in PDF points.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 179

def height
  cells.height
end

#row_heightsObject

Returns an array with the height of each row.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 310

def row_heights
  @natural_row_heights ||= (0...row_length).map{ |r| row(r).height }
end

#rows(row_spec) ⇒ Object Also known as: row

Selects the given rows (0-based) for styling. Returns a CellProxy – see the documentation on CellProxy for things you can do with cells.



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# File 'lib/prawn/table/accessors.rb', line 23

def rows(row_spec)
  cells.rows(row_spec)
end

#style(stylable, style_hash = {}, &block) ⇒ Object

Allows generic stylable content. This is an alternate syntax that some prefer to the attribute-based syntax. This code using style:

pdf.table(data) do
  style(row(0), :background_color => 'ff00ff')
  style(column(0)) { |c| c.border_width += 1 }
end

is equivalent to:

pdf.table(data) do
  row(0).style :background_color => 'ff00ff'
  column(0).style { |c| c.border_width += 1 }
end


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# File 'lib/prawn/table.rb', line 216

def style(stylable, style_hash={}, &block)
  stylable.style(style_hash, &block)
end