quote_buffer 0.1.5 quote_buffer: ^0.1.5 copied to clipboard
Extension on StringBuffer that simplifies transforming single objects and lists of objects into quoted strings.
Quote Buffer #
Introduction #
In the context of source code generation it is required to enclose emitted strings with (escaped) quotation marks. In the following, such strings are called quoted strings. Manually delimiting strings with quotation marks is error-prone and repetitive especially when dealing with a collection of string-items.
The package quote_buffer
provides Quote
an extension on Dart's StringBuffer
that adds methods for
transforming single objects and lists of objects into quoted strings.
Usage #
To use this library include quote_buffer as dependency in your pubspec.yaml
file.
The section below lists the methods provided for writing quoted strings to the
buffer and shows the console output obtained by printing the buffer content.
It is assumed that buffer
is an instance of StringBuffer
.
-
writeQ(Object obj, {QuotationMark delimiter})
Writes delimiter, obj, delimiter to the buffer.
buffer.writeQ(29); print(buffer.toString()); // Console output below \/
'29'
-
writelnQ(Object obj, {QuotationMark delimiter})
Writes delimiter, obj, delimiter, newline symbol to the buffer.
final bufferS = QuoteBuffer(); buffer.writelnQ('name', delimiter: QuotationMark.DOUBLE); print(buffer.toString()); // Console output below \/ print('--- ---');
"name" --- ---
-
writeAllQ(Iterable objects, {String separator, QuotationMark delimiter})
Writes delimiter, sequence of objects, delimiter to the buffer.
buffer.writeAllQ( ['one','two','three','four'], separator: ',', ); print(buffer.toString()); // Console output below \/
"one, two, three, four"
-
writelnAllQ(Iterable objects, {String separator1, String separator2, QuoationMark delimiter})
Writes objects in sequence: delimiter, objects[0], separator1, delimiter, separator2, newline symbol, etc.
buffer.writelnAllQ( ['one','two','three','four'], separator1: ' #', separator2: ',', delimiter: QuotationMark.DOUBLE, ); print(buffer.toString()); // Console output below \/ print('--- ---');
"one #", "two #", "three #", "four" --- ---
Examples #
The example located in the folder example shows how to use the extension Quote
to simplify the generation of string literals whose content is enclosed by escaped quotation marks.
Features and bugs #
Please file feature requests and bugs at the issue tracker.