Text::Tradition::Parser::Tabular
+=head1 SYNOPSIS
+
+ use Text::Tradition;
+
+ my $t_from_file = Text::Tradition->new(
+ 'name' => 'my text',
+ 'input' => 'Tabular',
+ 'file' => '/path/to/collation.csv',
+ 'sep_char' => ','
+ );
+
+ my $t_from_string = Text::Tradition->new(
+ 'name' => 'my text',
+ 'input' => 'Tabular',
+ 'string' => $tab_separated_collation,
+ 'sep_char' => "\t",
+ );
+
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Parser module for Text::Tradition to read an alignment table format, such as CSV.
=over
-=item B<parse>
+=item B<parse>( $tradition, $option_hash )
+
+Takes an initialized tradition and a set of options; creates the
+appropriate nodes and edges on the graph, as well as the appropriate
+witness objects. The $option_hash must contain either a 'file' or a
+'string' argument with the table to be parsed; it may also contain a
+'sep_char' argument to specify how the fields are separated.
+
+The table should have witnesses arranged in columns, with the witness sigla
+in the first row. Empty cells are interpreted as omissions (and thus
+stemmatologically relevant.) Longer lacunae in the text, to be disregarded
+in cladistic analysis, may be represented by filling the appropriate cells
+with the tag '#LACUNA#'.
+
+If a witness name ends in the collation's ac_label, it will be treated as
+an 'ante-correction' version of the 'main' witness whose sigil it shares.
+
+=begin testing
-parse( $graph, $graphml_string );
+use Text::Tradition;
+binmode STDOUT, ":utf8";
+binmode STDERR, ":utf8";
+eval { no warnings; binmode $DB::OUT, ":utf8"; };
-Takes an initialized Text::Tradition::Graph object and a string
-containing the GraphML; creates the appropriate nodes and edges on the
-graph.
+my $csv = 't/data/florilegium.csv';
+my $t = Text::Tradition->new(
+ 'name' => 'inline',
+ 'input' => 'Tabular',
+ 'file' => $csv,
+ 'sep_char' => ',',
+ );
+
+is( ref( $t ), 'Text::Tradition', "Parsed florilegium CSV file" );
+
+### TODO Check these figures
+if( $t ) {
+ is( scalar $t->collation->readings, 313, "Collation has all readings" );
+ is( scalar $t->collation->paths, 2877, "Collation has all paths" );
+ is( scalar $t->witnesses, 13, "Collation has all witnesses" );
+}
+
+=end testing
=cut
sub parse {
- my( $tradition, $tab_str ) = @_;
- # TODO Allow setting of sep_char
+ my( $tradition, $opts ) = @_;
my $c = $tradition->collation; # shorthand
- my $csv = Text::CSV_XS->new( { binary => 1 } ); # binary for UTF-8
- my @lines = split( "\n", $tab_str );
- # Conveniently, we are basically receiving exactly the sort of alignment table
- # we might want to produce later. May as well save it.
+ my $csv = Text::CSV_XS->new( {
+ binary => 1, # binary for UTF-8
+ sep_char => exists $opts->{'sep_char'} ? $opts->{'sep_char'} : "\t" }
+ );
+
my $alignment_table;
- foreach my $l ( @lines ) {
- my $status = $csv->parse( $l );
- if( $status ) {
- push( @$alignment_table, [ $csv->fields ] );
- } else {
- warn "Could not parse line $l: " . $csv->error_input;
+ if( exists $opts->{'string' } ) {
+ my @lines = split( "\n", $opts->{'string'} );
+ foreach my $l ( @lines ) {
+ my $status = $csv->parse( $l );
+ if( $status ) {
+ push( @$alignment_table, [ $csv->fields ] );
+ } else {
+ warn "Could not parse line $l: " . $csv->error_input;
+ }
+ }
+ } elsif( exists $opts->{'file'} ) {
+ open( my $fh, $opts->{'file'} ) or die "Could not open input file " . $opts->{'file'};
+ while( my $row = $csv->getline( $fh ) ) {
+ push( @$alignment_table, $row );
}
+ close $fh;
+ } else {
+ warn "Could not find string or file option to parse";
+ return;
}
-
+
# Set up the witnesses we find in the first line
my @witnesses;
+ my %ac_wits; # Track these for later removal
foreach my $sigil ( @{$alignment_table->[0]} ) {
my $wit = $tradition->add_witness( 'sigil' => $sigil );
$wit->path( [ $c->start ] );
push( @witnesses, $wit );
+ my $aclabel = $c->ac_label;
+ if( $sigil =~ /^(.*)\Q$aclabel\E$/ ) {
+ $ac_wits{$1} = $wit;
+ }
}
# Now for the next rows, make nodes as necessary, assign their ranks, and
# add them to the witness paths.
- $DB::single = 1;
foreach my $idx ( 1 .. $#{$alignment_table} ) {
my $row = $alignment_table->[$idx];
my $nodes = make_nodes( $c, $row, $idx );
}
}
- # Push the end node onto all paths.
+
+ # Collapse our lacunae into a single node and
+ # push the end node onto all paths.
$c->end->rank( scalar @$alignment_table );
foreach my $wit ( @witnesses ) {
- push( @{$wit->path}, $c->end );
+ my $p = $wit->path;
+ my $last_rdg = shift @$p;
+ my $new_p = [ $last_rdg ];
+ foreach my $rdg ( @$p ) {
+ if( $rdg->text eq '#LACUNA#' ) {
+ # If we are in a lacuna already, drop this node.
+ # Otherwise make a lacuna node and drop this node.
+ unless( $last_rdg->is_lacuna ) {
+ my $l = $c->add_lacuna( $rdg->name );
+ $l->rank( $rdg->rank );
+ push( @$new_p, $l );
+ $last_rdg = $l;
+ }
+ $c->del_reading( $rdg );
+ } else {
+ # No lacuna, save the reading.
+ push( @$new_p, $rdg );
+ }
+ }
+ push( @$new_p, $c->end );
+ $wit->path( $new_p );
}
+ # Fold any a.c. witnesses into their main witness objects, and
+ # delete the independent a.c. versions.
+ foreach my $a ( keys %ac_wits ) {
+ my $main_wit = $tradition->witness( $a );
+ next unless $main_wit;
+ my $ac_wit = $ac_wits{$a};
+ $main_wit->uncorrected_path( $ac_wit->path );
+ $tradition->del_witness( $ac_wit );
+ }
+
# Join up the paths.
$c->make_witness_paths;
-
- # Save the alignment table that was so handily provided to us.
- # TODO if we support other delimiters, we will have to re-export this
- # rather than saving the original string.
- $c->_save_csv( $tab_str );
}
sub make_nodes {
return \%unique;
}
-1;
\ No newline at end of file
+1;
+
+=head1 LICENSE
+
+This package is free software and is provided "as is" without express
+or implied warranty. You can redistribute it and/or modify it under
+the same terms as Perl itself.
+
+=head1 AUTHOR
+
+Tara L Andrews E<lt>aurum@cpan.orgE<gt>