A formatted and aligned table printer library for Rust.
Copyright © 2018 Pierre-Henri Symoneaux
THIS SOFTWARE IS DISTRIBUTED WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY
Check LICENSE.txt file for more information.
Include the library as a dependency to your project by adding the following lines to your Cargo.toml file:
[dependencies] prettytable-rs = "^0.8"
The library requires at least rust v1.26.0
.
Start using it like this:
#[macro_use] extern crate prettytable; use prettytable::{Table, Row, Cell}; fn main() { // Create the table let mut table = Table::new(); // Add a row per time table.add_row(row!["ABC", "DEFG", "HIJKLMN"]); table.add_row(row!["foobar", "bar", "foo"]); // A more complicated way to add a row: table.add_row(Row::new(vec![ Cell::new("foobar2"), Cell::new("bar2"), Cell::new("foo2")])); // Print the table to stdout table.printstd(); }
The code above will output
+---------+------+---------+ | ABC | DEFG | HIJKLMN | +---------+------+---------+ | foobar | bar | foo | +---------+------+---------+ | foobar2 | bar2 | foo2 | +---------+------+---------+
For everyday usage consider table!
macro. This code will produce the same output as above:
#[macro_use] extern crate prettytable; fn main() { let table = table!(["ABC", "DEFG", "HIJKLMN"], ["foobar", "bar", "foo"], ["foobar2", "bar2", "foo2"]); table.printstd(); }
The ptable!
macro combines creating and printing a table:
#[macro_use] extern crate prettytable; fn main() { let table = ptable!(["ABC", "DEFG", "HIJKLMN"], ["foobar", "bar", "foo"], ["foobar2", "bar2", "foo2"]); }
Tables also support multiline cells content. As a result, you can print a table into another table (yo dawg ;). For example:
let table1 = table!(["ABC", "DEFG", "HIJKLMN"], ["foobar", "bar", "foo"], ["foobar2", "bar2", "foo2"]); let table2 = table!(["Title 1", "Title 2"], ["This is\na multiline\ncell", "foo"], ["Yo dawg ;) You can even\nprint tables\ninto tables", table1]); table2.printstd();
will print
+-------------------------+------------------------------+ | Title 1 | Title 2 | +-------------------------+------------------------------+ | This is | foo | | a multiline | | | cell | | +-------------------------+------------------------------+ | Yo dawg ;) You can even | +---------+------+---------+ | | print tables | | ABC | DEFG | HIJKLMN | | | into tables | +---------+------+---------+ | | | | foobar | bar | foo | | | | +---------+------+---------+ | | | | foobar2 | bar2 | foo2 | | | | +---------+------+---------+ | +-------------------------+------------------------------+
Rows may have different numbers of cells. The table will automatically adapt to the largest row by printing additional empty cells in smaller rows.
Tables can have a styled output with background and foreground colors, bold and italic as configurable settings, thanks to the term
crate. Alignment in cells can also be set (Left, Right, Center), and a cell can span accross multiple columns.
term
style attributes are reexported
directly:
use prettytable::{Attr, color}; /* ... */ table.add_row(Row::new(vec![ Cell::new("foobar") .with_style(Attr::Bold) .with_style(Attr::ForegroundColor(color::GREEN)), Cell::new("bar") .with_style(Attr::BackgroundColor(color::RED)) .with_style(Attr::Italic(true)) .with_hspan(2), Cell::new("foo") ]));
through style strings:
table.add_row(Row::new(vec![ Cell::new("foobar").style_spec("bFg"), Cell::new("bar").style_spec("BriH2"), Cell::new("foo")]));
using row!
macro:
table.add_row(row![bFg->"foobar", BriH2->"bar", "foo"]);
using table!
macro (this one creates a new table, unlike previous examples):
table!([bFg->"foobar", BriH2->"bar", "foo"]);
Here
Another example: FrBybc means Foreground: red, Background: yellow, bold, center.
All cases of styling cells in macros:
row!
, for each cell separately:row![FrByb->"ABC", FrByb->"DEFG", "HIJKLMN"];
row!
, for the whole row:row![FY => "styled", "bar", "foo"];
table!
, for each cell separately:table!([FrBybl->"A", FrBybc->"B", FrBybr->"C"], [123, 234, 345, 456]);
table!
, for whole rows:table!([Frb => "A", "B", "C"], [Frb => 1, 2, 3, 4], [1, 2, 3]);
table!
, mixed styling:table!([Frb => "A", "B", "C"], [Frb->1, Fgi->2, 3, 4], [1, 2, 3]);
Lowercase letters stand for usual colors:
Uppercase letters stand for bright counterparts of the above colors:
Tables can be sliced into immutable borrowed subtables. Slices are of type prettytable::TableSlice<'a>
.
For example,
use prettytable::Slice; /* ... */ let slice = table.slice(2..5); table.printstd();
will print a table with only lines 2, 3 and 4 from table
.
Other Range
syntaxes are supported. For example:
table.slice(..); // Returns a borrowed immutable table with all rows table.slice(2..); // Returns a table with rows starting at index 2 table.slice(..3); // Returns a table with rows until the one at index 3
The look and feel of a table can be customized with prettytable::format::TableFormat
.
Configurable settings include:
table.set_titles()
)To do this, either:
TableFormat
object, then call setters until you get the desired configuration;FormatBuilder
and Builder pattern, shown belowlet mut table = Table::new(); let format = format::FormatBuilder::new() .column_separator('|') .borders('|') .separators(&[format::LinePosition::Top, format::LinePosition::Bottom], format::LineSeparator::new('-', '+', '+', '+')) .padding(1, 1) .build(); table.set_format(format); table.set_titles(row!["Title 1", "Title 2"]); table.add_row(row!["Value 1", "Value 2"]); table.add_row(row!["Value three", "Value four"]);
The code above will make the table look like
+-------------+------------+ | Title 1 | Title 2 | | Value 1 | Value 2 | | Value three | Value four | +-------------+------------+
For convenience, several formats are predefined in prettytable::format::consts
module.
Some formats and their respective outputs:
use prettytable::format; table.set_format(*format::consts::FORMAT_NO_LINESEP_WITH_TITLE);
+-------------+------------+ | Title 1 | Title 2 | +-------------+------------+ | Value 1 | Value 2 | | Value three | Value four | +-------------+------------+
use prettytable::format; table.set_format(*format::consts::FORMAT_NO_BORDER_LINE_SEPARATOR);
Title 1 | Title 2 ------------+------------ Value 1 | Value 2 Value three | Value four
Check API documentation for the full list of available predefined formats.
Tables can be imported from and exported to CSV. This is possible thanks to the default & optional feature csv
.
The
csv
feature may become deactivated by default on future major releases.
A Table
can be imported from a string:
let table = Table::from_csv_string("ABC,DEFG,HIJKLMN\n\ foobar,bar,foo\n\ foobar2,bar2,foo2")?;
or from CSV files:
let table = Table::from_csv_file("input_csv.txt")?;
Those 2 ways of importing CSV assumes a CSV format with
no headers
, and delimited withcommas
Import can also be done from a CSV reader which allows more customization around the CSV format:
let reader = /* create a reader */; /* do something with the reader */ let table = Table::from_csv(reader);
Export to a generic Write
:
let out = File::create("output_csv.txt")?; table.to_csv(out)?;
or to a csv::Writer<W: Write>
:
let writer = /* create a writer */; /* do something with the writer */ table.to_csv_writer(writer)?;
By default, the library prints tables with platform specific line ending. This means on Windows, newlines will be rendered with \r\n
while on other platforms they will be rendered with \n
. Since v0.6.3
, platform specific line endings are activated though the default feature win_crlf
, which can be deactivated. When this feature is deactivated (for instance with the --no-default-features
flag in cargo), line endings will be rendered with \n
on any platform.
This customization capability will probably move to Formatting API in a future release.
Additional examples are provided in the documentation and in examples directory.