3

I have a nice little Lua table parser which prints out pretty looking lua code and I love it...it works beautifully. There is a slight snag...if I go to print a table or array that has any integer keys it loops through it using pairs (which doesn't mess the code up ironically), but I would rather it use ipairs if possible. So I want to know is it possible to check a table (without physically looking at it) if it can use ipairs to loop through it first else use pairs. Then is there a way to start looping at 0 instead of Lua's default 1?

Lua Table Parser (Base code found on google, changed it to make it print more array friendly)...

function TableParser(name, object, tabs)
    local function serializeKeyForTable(k)
        if type(k)=="number" then
            return ""
        end
        if string.find(k,"[^A-z_-]") then
            return k
        end
        return k
    end
    local function serializeKey(k)
        if type(k)=="number" then
            if k == 0 then
                return "\t[" .. k .."] = "
            else
                return "\t"
            end
        end
        if string.find(k,"[^A-z_-]") then
            return "\t" .. k .. " = "
        end
        return "\t" .. k .. " = "
    end
    if not tabs then tabs = "" end
    local function serialize(name, object, tabs) -- = {
        local output = tabs .. (name ~= "" and name .. " = " or "") .. "{" .. "\n"
        for k,v in pairs(object) do
            if type(v) == "number" then
                output = output .. tabs .. serializeKey(k) .. v
            elseif type(v) == "string" then
                output = output .. tabs .. serializeKey(k) .. string.format("%q",v)
            elseif type(v) == "table" then
                output = output .. serialize(serializeKeyForTable(k), v, tabs.."\t")
            elseif type(v) == "boolean" then
                output = output .. tabs .. serializeKey(k) .. tostring(v)
            else
                output = output .. tabs .. serializeKey(k) .. "\"" .. tostring(v) .. "\""
            end                     
            if next(object,k) then
                output = output .. ",\n"
            end
        end
        return output .. "\n" .. tabs .. "}"
    end
    return serialize(name, object, tabs)
end
2
  • 3
    It's not a "parser". It's the opposite: it's a serializer (or, more correctly, a "pretty printer", b/c it cares about aesthetics).
    – Niccolo M.
    Dec 28, 2014 at 7:56
  • 2
    if string.find(k, .. seems completely pointless. You're returning the same result in both cases regardless of the conditional outcome.
    – greatwolf
    Dec 28, 2014 at 9:03

2 Answers 2

8

So I want to know is it possible to check a table (without physically looking at it) if it can use ipairs to loop through it first else use pairs.

Don't check, just do! Use ipairs first and keep track of the largest key that the ipairs iterator returned. Then use pairs to iterate again and ignore all integer keys between 1 and that largest key from ipairs.

If you really want to check whether ipairs will do something, then look at index 1 in the table (rawget( object, 1 ) ~= nil). Checking whether ipairs will cover all elements in the table is not possible without iterating the table.

Then is there a way to start looping at 0 instead of Lua's default 1?

ipairs(t) returns three values: an iterator function, the table t as the state variable, and an initial index value 0. If you use -1 as initial index value, ipairs will start the iteration at 0 (the iterator function always increments by one before using the index value):

t = { 1, 2, 3, [ 0 ] = 0 }
for i,v in ipairs( t ), t, -1 do  -- only use first value returned by ipairs
  print( i, v )
end

However, be aware that Lua 5.2 has added support for a new metamethod __ipairs which allows you to return a custom iterator triplet to use for ipairs iteration, and the iterator function returned in this case might need different state and initial index values.

Edit: To incorporate the suggestions into your code insert before the for k,v in pairs(object) do-loop:

local largest = 0
for k,v in ipairs(object) do
    largest = k
    local t = type(v)
    if t == "table" then
        output = output .. tabs .. "\t" .. serialize( "", v, tabs.."\t" )
    elseif t == "string" then
        output = output .. tabs .. "\t" .. string.format("%q", v)
    else
        output = output .. tabs .. "\t" .. tostring(v)
    end
    output = output .. ",\n"
end

and inside the loop add an additional if statement to check for array keys:

for k,v in pairs(object) do
   if type(k) ~= "number" or k < 1 or k > largest or math.floor(k) ~= k then
       -- if type(v) == "number" then
       -- ...
   end
end

If you apply this modified TableParser function to the following table:

local t = {
  1, 2, 3,
  value = "x",
  tab = {
    "a", "b", field = "y"
  }
}
print( TableParser( "", t ) )

the output is:

{
    1,
    2,
    3,
    tab = {
        "a",
        "b",
        field = "y"
    },
    value = "x"
}

But doing table serialization properly is tricky. E.g. your implementation doesn't handle cycles or tables as keys. See the Lua Wiki for some implementations.

3
  • Thanks for sharing, but no matter how I do it now, I either get double the results or a bunch of blank tables when there should be data in them....ideas? Can you show me some examples including nested tables?
    – G.T.D.
    Dec 28, 2014 at 14:07
  • Good implementation, only snag is any key [0] prints at the end, but might overlook that. If I may ask, what are cycles? Also, why/how would you have a table as a key?
    – G.T.D.
    Dec 31, 2014 at 22:57
  • @B1313: If you change ipairs(object) to ipairs(object),object,-1 and k < 1 to k < 0, the value at index 0 will be printed with the array part. Regarding cycles: t = {}; t[1] = t. A table can (directly or indirectly) contain a reference to itself, or two table entries can reference the same table. Regarding tables as keys: Lookup tables/caches, for example. The point is: Lua allows it, so chances are that at some point you will come across such a case, and you'd better be prepared to handle it.
    – siffiejoe
    Jan 1, 2015 at 11:54
5

You can always iterate a table both with pairs and ipairs, whether it makes sense or not.

  • ipairs iterates over the sequence present in the array (which means sequential integer keys starting with 1, up to the first missing value), unless overridden with metamethod __ipairs (5.2).

  • pairs iterates over all key-value pairs with next (thus in an unspecified order), unless overridden with metamethod __pairs (5.2).

Which means that ipairs will generally not enumerate any key-value-pair pairs won't show.

And there is no way to verify whether ipairs will enumerate all keys pairs will enumerate, but enumerating everything and testing manually.

BTW: You can make your own iterator which first iterates over the sequence, and then over everything else:

function my_iter(t)
    local k, cap
    return function()
        local v
        if k == nil then k, cap = 0 end
        if not cap then
            k = k + 1
            v = t[k]
            if v ~= nil then return k, v end
            cap, k = k
        end
        repeat k, v = next(k)
        until type(k) ~= "number" or 0 < k and k < cap and math.ceil(k) == k
        return k, v
    end
end

Though probably better just sort the keys for pretty-printing:

function sorted_iter(t)
    local keys, index = {}, 0
    for k in next, t do
        keys[#keys + 1] = k
    end
    table.sort(keys)
    return function()
        index = index + 1
        local k = keys[index]
        return k, t[k]
    end
end

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