Timothy J Fontaine
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11 years ago | |
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Readme.md | 11 years ago | |
index.js | 11 years ago | |
package.json | 11 years ago | |
utils.js | 11 years ago |
Readme.md
columnify
Create text-based columns suitable for console output. Supports minimum and maximum column widths via truncation and text wrapping.
Designed to handle sensible wrapping in npm search results.
npm search
before & after integrating columnify:
Installation & Update
$ npm install --save columnify@latest
Usage
var columnify = require('columnify')
var columns = columnify(data, options)
console.log(columns)
Examples
Simple Columns
Text is aligned under column headings. Columns are automatically resized to fit the content of the largest cell. Each cell will be padded with spaces to fill the available space and ensure column contents are left-aligned.
var columnify = require('columnify')
var columns = columnify([{
name: 'mod1',
version: '0.0.1'
}, {
name: 'module2',
version: '0.2.0'
}])
console.log(columns)
NAME VERSION
mod1 0.0.1
module2 0.2.0
Wrapping Column Cells
You can define the maximum width before wrapping for individual cells in columns. Minimum width is also supported. Wrapping will happen at word boundaries. Empty cells or those which do not fill the max/min width will be padded with spaces.
var columnify = require('columnify')
var columns = columnify([{
name: 'mod1',
description: 'some description which happens to be far larger than the max',
version: '0.0.1',
}, {
name: 'module-two',
description: 'another description larger than the max',
version: '0.2.0',
})
console.log(columns)
NAME DESCRIPTION VERSION
mod1 some description which happens 0.0.1
to be far larger than the max
module-two another description larger 0.2.0
than the max
Truncated Columns
You can disable wrapping and instead truncate content at the maximum
column width. Truncation respects word boundaries. A truncation marker,
…
will appear next to the last word in any truncated line.
var columns = columnify(data, {
truncate: true,
config: {
description: {
maxWidth: 20
}
}
})
console.log(columns)
NAME DESCRIPTION VERSION
mod1 some description… 0.0.1
module-two another description… 0.2.0
Custom Truncation Marker
You can change the truncation marker to something other than the default
…
.
var columns = columnify(data, {
truncate: true,
truncateMarker: '>',
widths: {
description: {
maxWidth: 20
}
}
})
console.log(columns)
NAME DESCRIPTION VERSION
mod1 some description> 0.0.1
module-two another description> 0.2.0
Custom Column Splitter
If your columns need some bling, you can split columns with custom characters.
var columns = columnify(data, {
columnSplitter: ' | '
})
console.log(columns)
NAME | DESCRIPTION | VERSION
mod1 | some description which happens to be far larger than the max | 0.0.1
module-two | another description larger than the max | 0.2.0
Filtering & Ordering Columns
By default, all properties are converted into columns, whether or not they exist on every object or not.
To explicitly specify which columns to include, and in which order, supply an "include" array:
var data = [{
name: 'module1',
description: 'some description',
version: '0.0.1',
}, {
name: 'module2',
description: 'another description',
version: '0.2.0',
}]
var columns = columnify(data, {
include: ['name', 'version'] // note description not included
})
console.log(columns)
NAME VERSION
module1 0.0.1
module2 0.2.0
License
MIT