PP
Since Ruby 2.5, this library is required by default
A pretty-printer for Ruby objects.
What PP Does
Standard output by #p
returns this:
#<PP:0x81fedf0 @genspace=#<Proc:0x81feda0>, @group_queue=#<PrettyPrint::GroupQueue:0x81fed3c @queue=[[#<PrettyPrint::Group:0x81fed78 @breakables=[], @depth=0, @break=false>], []]>, @buffer=[], @newline="\n", @group_stack=[#<PrettyPrint::Group:0x81fed78 @breakables=[], @depth=0, @break=false>], @buffer_width=0, @indent=0, @maxwidth=79, @output_width=2, @output=#<IO:0x8114ee4>>
Pretty-printed output returns this:
#<PP:0x81fedf0
@buffer=[],
@buffer_width=0,
@genspace=#<Proc:0x81feda0>,
@group_queue=
#<PrettyPrint::GroupQueue:0x81fed3c
@queue=
[[#<PrettyPrint::Group:0x81fed78 @break=false, @breakables=[], @depth=0>],
[]]>,
@group_stack=
[#<PrettyPrint::Group:0x81fed78 @break=false, @breakables=[], @depth=0>],
@indent=0,
@maxwidth=79,
@newline="\n",
@output=#<IO:0x8114ee4>,
@output_width=2>
Usage
pp(obj) #=> obj
pp obj #=> obj
pp(obj1, obj2, ...) #=> [obj1, obj2, ...]
pp() #=> nil
Output obj(s)
to $>
in pretty printed format.
It returns obj(s)
.
Output Customization
To define a customized pretty printing function for your classes, redefine method #pretty_print(pp)
in the class.
#pretty_print
takes the pp
argument, which is an instance of the PP class. The method uses #text
, #breakable
, #nest
, #group
and #pp
to print the object.