This library arranges textual data in a grid format suitable for fixed-width fonts, using an algorithm to minimise the amount of space needed.
This library is forked from the unmaintained
rust-term-grid
library. The core
functionality has remained the same, with some additional bugfixes, performance
improvements and a new API.
This crate works with cargo
. Add the following to your Cargo.toml
dependencies section:
[dependencies]
uutils_term_grid = "0.6"
The Minimum Supported Rust Version is 1.70.
To add data to a grid, first create a new [Grid
] value with a list of strings
and a set of options.
There are three options that must be specified in the [GridOptions
] value that
dictate how the grid is formatted:
filling
: what to put in between two columns — either a number of spaces, or a text string;direction
: specifies whether the cells should go along rows, or columns:Direction::LeftToRight
starts them in the top left and moves rightwards, going to the start of a new row after reaching the final column;Direction::TopToBottom
starts them in the top left and moves downwards, going to the top of a new column after reaching the final row.
width
: the width to fill the grid into. Usually, this should be the width of the terminal.
In practice, creating a grid can be done as follows:
use term_grid::{Grid, GridOptions, Direction, Filling};
// Create a `Vec` of text to put in the grid
let cells = vec![
"one", "two", "three", "four", "five", "six",
"seven", "eight", "nine", "ten", "eleven", "twelve"
];
// Then create a `Grid` with those cells.
// The grid requires several options:
// - The filling determines the string used as separator
// between the columns.
// - The direction specifies whether the layout should
// be done row-wise or column-wise.
// - The width is the maximum width that the grid might
// have.
let grid = Grid::new(
cells,
GridOptions {
filling: Filling::Spaces(1),
direction: Direction::LeftToRight,
width: 24,
}
);
// A `Grid` implements `Display` and can be printed directly.
println!("{grid}");
Produces the following tabular result:
one two three four
five six seven eight
nine ten eleven twelve
This library calculates the width of strings as displayed in the terminal using
the textwrap
library (with the display_width
function).
This takes into account the width of characters and ignores ANSI codes.
The width calculation is currently not configurable. If you have a use-case for which this calculation is wrong, please open an issue.