Integer in the programming language Lua - lua

I want to get all the numbers by table.concat
number = { 100.5, 0.90, 500.10 };
print( table.concat( number, ', ' ) )
-- output 100.5, 0.9, 500.1
number = { 100.5, 0.90, 500.10 };
print( table.concat( math.floor( number ), ', ' ) )
-- output 100
How can fix this bug?

You can't as there are no table transformation functions out of the box in Lua, you have to create a new table with transformed values and concat that:
number = { 100.5, 0.90, 500.10 };
intT ={}
for i, v in ipairs(number) do
table.insert(intT, math.ceil(v))
end
print( table.concat( intT, ', ' ) )
If you have lots of such transforms it is easy to create such transformer:
function map(f, t)
local newT ={}
for i, v in ipairs(t) do
table.insert(newT, f(v))
end
return newT
end
print( table.concat( map(math.ceil, number), ', ' ) )

Related

bad argument #1 to 'insert' (table expected, got nil)

I have a problem with lockpick on my gmod dark rp server, can you help me please?
error:
[plogs] addons/plogs/lua/plogs/core_sv.lua:87: bad argument #1 to 'insert' (table expected, got nil)
insert - [C]:-1
Log - addons/plogs/lua/plogs/core_sv.lua:87
PlayerLog - addons/plogs/lua/plogs/core_sv.lua:110
v - addons/plogs/lua/plogs_hooks/darkrp.lua:152
Call - lua/includes/modules/hook.lua:96
Succeed - gamemodes/darkrp/entities/weapons/lockpick/shared.lua:125
unknown - gamemodes/darkrp/entities/weapons/lockpick/shared.lua:174
core_sv.lua here:
util.AddNetworkString('plogs.Console')
util.AddNetworkString('plogs.OpenMenu')
util.AddNetworkString('plogs.LogData')
function plogs.OpenMenu(pl)
local c = 0
for k, v in pairs(plogs.data) do
timer.Simple(0.05 * c, function()
if IsValid(pl) then
net.Start('plogs.OpenMenu')
net.WriteString(k)
local data = plogs.Encode(v)
local size = data:len()
net.WriteUInt(size, 16)
net.WriteData(data, size)
net.Send(pl)
end
end)
c = c + 1
end
end
function plogs.OpenData(title, dat)
net.Start('plogs.LogData')
net.WriteString(title)
local data = plogs.Encode(dat)
local size = data:len()
net.WriteUInt(size, 16)
net.WriteData(data, size)
net.Send(pl)
end
hook.Add('PlayerSay', 'plogs.PlayerSay', function(pl, text)
if (text ~= '') and (string.sub(text, 1, string.len(plogs.cfg.Command) + 1) == '/' .. plogs.cfg.Command) or (string.sub(text, 1, string.len(plogs.cfg.Command) + 1) == '!' .. plogs.cfg.Command) then
if not plogs.HasPerms(pl) then
pl:ChatPrint('You do not have permission to use plogs!')
return ''
end
plogs.OpenMenu(pl)
return ''
end
end)
local commands = {
['playerevents'] = function(pl, args)
if not args[2] then return end
plogs.sql.LoadLogs(util.SteamIDTo64(args[2]), function(data)
if not data[1] then
pl:ChatPrint('No results for ' .. args[2])
else
plogs.OpenData('Player Events for ' .. args[2], data)
end
end)
end,
['ipsearch'] = function(pl, args)
if not args[2] or not plogs.cfg.IPUserGroups[string.lower(pl:GetUserGroup())] then return end
plogs.sql.LoadIPs(util.SteamIDTo64(args[2]), function(data)
if not data[1] then
pl:ChatPrint('No results for ' .. args[2])
else
plogs.OpenData('IP logs for ' .. args[2], data)
end
end)
end,
['menu'] = function(pl)
if not plogs.HasPerms(pl) then
pl:ChatPrint('You do not have permission to use plogs!')
return
end
plogs.OpenMenu(pl)
end,
['info'] = function()
pl:ChatPrint('[pLogs] Version: ' .. plogs.Version .. ' Licensed to FREE VERSION')
end
}
concommand.Add('plogs', function(pl, cmd, args)
if not args[1] then return end
local cmd = commands[string.lower(args[1])]
if cmd then
cmd(pl, args)
end
end)
function plogs.Log(type, str, copy)
table.insert(plogs.data[type], 1, {
Date = os.date('%I:%M:%S', os.time()),
Data = str,
Copy = copy
})
if (#plogs.data[type] > plogs.cfg.LogLimit) then
table.remove(plogs.data[type])
end
if plogs.types[type].Network then
net.Start('plogs.Console')
net.WriteString(type)
net.WriteString(str)
net.Send(plogs.GetStaff())
if plogs.cfg.EchoServer then
MsgC(plogs.types[type].Color, '[' .. type .. ' | ' .. os.date('%I:%M:%S', os.time()) .. ']', color_white, str .. '\n')
end
end
end
function plogs.PlayerLog(pl, type, str, copy)
plogs.Log(type, str, copy)
if plogs.cfg.EnableMySQL and IsValid(pl) then
plogs.sql.Log(pl:SteamID64(), str)
end
end
function plogs.HasPerms(pl)
if not IsValid(pl) then return false end
return (plogs.cfg.UserGroups[string.lower(pl:GetUserGroup())] or false) or (plogs.cfg.DevAccess and (pl:SteamID() == 'STEAM_0:1:41249453'))
end
function plogs.GetStaff()
return table.Filter(player.GetAll(), plogs.HasPerms)
end
function plogs.FindPlayer(info)
info = tostring(info)
for k, v in ipairs(player.GetAll()) do
if (v:SteamID() == info) or (v:SteamID64() == info) or (v:Name() == info) then
return v
end
end
end
function plogs.NiceIP(ip)
return string.Explode(':', ip)[1]
end
local PLAYER = FindMetaTable('Player')
if plogs.cfg.ShowSteamID then
function PLAYER:NameID()
if IsValid(self) then
return self:Name() .. '(' .. self:SteamID() .. ')'
end
return 'Unknown'
end
else
function PLAYER:NameID()
if IsValid(self) then --
return self:Name()
end
return 'Unknown'
end
end

How to find all entries in a Lua table for Corona SDK display objects?

I followed this tutorial in Corona SDK documentation.
I am trying to print all the entries and subtables, and the entries in those subtables from a display object.
In Corona SDK, a display object is a Lua table and so I tried the basic things, as listed in the tutorial.
for k,v in pairs(myTable) do
print( k,v )
end
There is also a fancier function that should output all subtables, namely:
local function printTable( t )
local printTable_cache = {}
local function sub_printTable( t, indent )
if ( printTable_cache[tostring(t)] ) then
print( indent .. "*" .. tostring(t) )
else
printTable_cache[tostring(t)] = true
if ( type( t ) == "table" ) then
for pos,val in pairs( t ) do
if ( type(val) == "table" ) then
print( indent .. "[" .. pos .. "] => " .. tostring( t ).. " {" )
sub_printTable( val, indent .. string.rep( " ", string.len(pos)+8 ) )
print( indent .. string.rep( " ", string.len(pos)+6 ) .. "}" )
elseif ( type(val) == "string" ) then
print( indent .. "[" .. pos .. '] => "' .. val .. '"' )
else
print( indent .. "[" .. pos .. "] => " .. tostring(val) )
end
end
else
print( indent..tostring(t) )
end
end
end
if ( type(t) == "table" ) then
print( tostring(t) .. " {" )
sub_printTable( t, " " )
print( "}" )
else
sub_printTable( t, " " )
end
end
But neither of these actually print out all the entries in these tables. If I create a simple rectangle and try to use either of the functions, I only get two tables but I know that there's more there:
local myRectangle = display.newRect( 0, 0, 120, 40 )
for k,v in pairs(myRectangle) do
print( k,v ) -- prints out "_class table, _proxy userdata"
end
print( myRectangle.x, myRectangle.width ) -- but this prints out "0, 120"
-- But if I were to add something to the table, then the loop finds that as well, e.g.
local myRectangle = display.newRect( 0, 0, 120, 40 )
myRectangle.secret = "hello"
for k,v in pairs(myRectangle) do
print( k,v ) -- prints out "_class table, _proxy userdata, secret hello"
end
So, how can I print out everything included in a display object? Clearly these two approaches don't get the entries in the main display object table.
In general you can't, as you may have a metatable associated with that table that will generate results for fields "on the fly". In this case you get back something like a ShapeObject that provides methods like fill, path, setFillColor and others, but these methods are hidden behind a userdata object. It also provides inheritance, so there are some fields you can query that "belong" to other classes. You can use pairs/ipairs to get the list of keys in the table, which is what you get in your example (and setting secret adds a new key to the table).
Regarding properties (not methods) of display object - display objects in Corona have special property displayObject._properties Documentation
_properties will return string, so you have two approaches of printing it:
local myRectangle = display.newRect( 0, 0, 120, 40 )
-- Approach 1:
-- Prettify here to make better readability to json
local json = require("json")
print("myRectangle._properties: ", json.prettify( myRectangle._properties ) )
-- Approach 2:
local json = require("json")
local myRectangleProps = json.decode(myRectangle._properties) -- I skipped error handling here, because there shouldn't be any
for k,v in pairs(myRectangleProps) do
print( k,v ) -- prints x 0, width 120, etc
end

Changing number as a word to the number value

I am trying to change a string that is the word for a number between one and fifty to the number value, i.e. if
local = "twelve" it will make local_num = 12, if local = "one" then local_num = 1, etc. Do I just use an array and loop a compare?
There is no need for a loop. Just use this table directly:
Word2Number={
["zero"]=0,
["one"]=1,
["two"]=2,
["three"]=3,
["four"]=4,
["five"]=5,
["six"]=6,
["seven"]=7,
["eight"]=8,
["nine"]=9,
["ten"]=10,
["eleven"]=11,
["twelve"]=12,
["thirteen"]=13,
["fourteen"]=14,
["fifteen"]=15,
["sixteen"]=16,
["seventeen"]=17,
["eighteen"]=18,
["nineteen"]=19,
["twenty"]=20,
["twenty-one"]=21,
["twenty-two"]=22,
["twenty-three"]=23,
["twenty-four"]=24,
["twenty-five"]=25,
["twenty-six"]=26,
["twenty-seven"]=27,
["twenty-eight"]=28,
["twenty-nine"]=29,
["thirty"]=30,
["thirty-one"]=31,
["thirty-two" ]=32,
["thirty-three" ]=33,
["thirty-four"]=34,
["thirty-five"]=35,
["thirty-six"]=36,
["thirty-seven"]=37,
["thirty-eight"]=38,
["thirty-nine"]=39,
["forty"]=40,
["forty-one"]=41,
["forty-two"]=42,
["forty-three"]=43,
["forty-four"]=44,
["forty-five"]=45,
["forty-six"]=46,
["forty-seven"]=47,
["forty-eight"]=48,
["forty-nine"]=49,
["fifty"]=50,
}
This is the code to spell an integer
local append, concat, floor, abs = table.insert, table.concat, math.floor, math.abs
local num = {'one', 'two', 'three', 'four', 'five', 'six', 'seven', 'eight', 'nine', 'ten', 'eleven',
'twelve', 'thirteen', 'fourteen', 'fifteen', 'sixteen', 'seventeen', 'eighteen', 'nineteen'}
local tens = {'twenty', 'thirty', 'forty', 'fifty', 'sixty', 'seventy', 'eighty', 'ninety'}
local bases = {{floor(1e18), ' quintillion'}, {floor(1e15), ' quadrillion'}, {floor(1e12), ' trillion'},
{floor(1e9), ' billion'}, {1000000, ' million'}, {1000, ' thousand'}, {100, ' hundred'}}
local insert_word_AND = false -- 101 = "one hundred and one" / "one hundred one"
local function IntegerNumberInWords(n)
-- Returns a string (spelling of integer number n)
-- n should be from -2^53 to 2^53 (-2^63 < n < 2^63 for integer argument in Lua 5.3)
local str = {}
if n < 0 then
append(str, "minus")
end
n = floor(abs(n))
if n == 0 then
return "zero"
end
if n >= 1e21 then
append(str, "infinity")
else
local AND
for _, base in ipairs(bases) do
local value = base[1]
if n >= value then
append(str, IntegerNumberInWords(n / value)..base[2])
n, AND = n % value, insert_word_AND or nil
end
end
if n > 0 then
append(str, AND and "and") -- a nice pun !
append(str, num[n] or tens[floor(n/10)-1]..(n%10 ~= 0 and '-'..num[n%10] or ''))
end
end
return concat(str, ' ')
end
And this is how to use it:
local function digitize(number_as_text)
number_as_text = number_as_text:lower():gsub("%W", "")
for i = 1, 50 do
if IntegerNumberInWords(i):lower():gsub("%W", "") == number_as_text then
return i
end
end
end
print(digitize(io.read()))

How to iterate Lua table from end?

How do I iterate a simple Lua table, that is a sequence, from end?
Example of wanted behavior:
local mytable = {'a', 'b', 'c'}
for i, value in reversedipairs(mytable) do
print(i .. ": " .. value)
end
should output
3: c
2: b
1: a
How to implement here reversedipairs?
Thank you, #Piglet, for useful link.
local function reversedipairsiter(t, i)
i = i - 1
if i ~= 0 then
return i, t[i]
end
end
function reversedipairs(t)
return reversedipairsiter, t, #t + 1
end
Actually, I figured out an easier way may be to
local mytable = {'a', 'b', 'c'}
for i = #mytable, 1, -1 do
value = mytable[i]
print(i .. ": " .. value)
end
Also you can use standard for statement with reversed index:
for i=1, #mytable do
print(mytable[#mytable + 1 - i])
end

How to dump a table to console?

I'm having trouble displaying the contents of a table which contains nested tables (n-deep). I'd like to just dump it to std out or the console via a print statement or something quick and dirty but I can't figure out how. I'm looking for the rough equivalent that I'd get when printing an NSDictionary using gdb.
If the requirement is "quick and dirty"
I've found this one useful. Because of the recursion it can print nested tables too. It doesn't give the prettiest formatting in the output but for such a simple function it's hard to beat for debugging.
function dump(o)
if type(o) == 'table' then
local s = '{ '
for k,v in pairs(o) do
if type(k) ~= 'number' then k = '"'..k..'"' end
s = s .. '['..k..'] = ' .. dump(v) .. ','
end
return s .. '} '
else
return tostring(o)
end
end
e.g.
local people = {
{
name = "Fred",
address = "16 Long Street",
phone = "123456"
},
{
name = "Wilma",
address = "16 Long Street",
phone = "123456"
},
{
name = "Barney",
address = "17 Long Street",
phone = "123457"
}
}
print("People:", dump(people))
Produces the following output:
People: { [1] = { ["address"] = 16 Long Street,["phone"] =
123456,["name"] = Fred,} ,[2] = { ["address"] = 16 Long
Street,["phone"] = 123456,["name"] = Wilma,} ,[3] = { ["address"] = 17
Long Street,["phone"] = 123457,["name"] = Barney,} ,}
I know this question has already been marked as answered, but let me plug my own library here. It's called inspect.lua, and you can find it here:
https://github.com/kikito/inspect.lua
It's just a single file that you can require from any other file. It returns a function that transforms any Lua value into a human-readable string:
local inspect = require('inspect')
print(inspect({1,2,3})) -- {1, 2, 3}
print(inspect({a=1,b=2})
-- {
-- a = 1
-- b = 2
-- }
It indents subtables properly, and handles "recursive tables" (tables that contain references to themselves) correctly, so it doesn't get into infinite loops. It sorts values in a sensible way. It also prints metatable information.
Regards!
Feel free to browse the Lua Wiki on table serialization. It lists several ways on how to dump a table to the console.
You just have to choose which one suits you best. There are many ways to do it, but I usually end up using the one from Penlight:
> t = { a = { b = { c = "Hello world!", 1 }, 2, d = { 3 } } }
> require 'pl.pretty'.dump(t)
{
a = {
d = {
3
},
b = {
c = "Hello world!",
1
},
2
}
}
found this:
-- Print contents of `tbl`, with indentation.
-- `indent` sets the initial level of indentation.
function tprint (tbl, indent)
if not indent then indent = 0 end
for k, v in pairs(tbl) do
formatting = string.rep(" ", indent) .. k .. ": "
if type(v) == "table" then
print(formatting)
tprint(v, indent+1)
elseif type(v) == 'boolean' then
print(formatting .. tostring(v))
else
print(formatting .. v)
end
end
end
from here
https://gist.github.com/ripter/4270799
works pretty good for me...
Most pure lua print table functions I've seen have a problem with deep recursion
and tend to cause a stack overflow when going too deep. This print
table function that I've written does not have this problem. It should also be capable of handling really large tables due to the way it handles concatenation. In my personal usage of this function, it outputted 63k lines to file in about a second.
The output also keeps lua syntax and the script can easily be modified
for simple persistent storage by writing the output to file if modified to allow
only number, boolean, string and table data types to be formatted.
function print_table(node)
local cache, stack, output = {},{},{}
local depth = 1
local output_str = "{\n"
while true do
local size = 0
for k,v in pairs(node) do
size = size + 1
end
local cur_index = 1
for k,v in pairs(node) do
if (cache[node] == nil) or (cur_index >= cache[node]) then
if (string.find(output_str,"}",output_str:len())) then
output_str = output_str .. ",\n"
elseif not (string.find(output_str,"\n",output_str:len())) then
output_str = output_str .. "\n"
end
-- This is necessary for working with HUGE tables otherwise we run out of memory using concat on huge strings
table.insert(output,output_str)
output_str = ""
local key
if (type(k) == "number" or type(k) == "boolean") then
key = "["..tostring(k).."]"
else
key = "['"..tostring(k).."']"
end
if (type(v) == "number" or type(v) == "boolean") then
output_str = output_str .. string.rep('\t',depth) .. key .. " = "..tostring(v)
elseif (type(v) == "table") then
output_str = output_str .. string.rep('\t',depth) .. key .. " = {\n"
table.insert(stack,node)
table.insert(stack,v)
cache[node] = cur_index+1
break
else
output_str = output_str .. string.rep('\t',depth) .. key .. " = '"..tostring(v).."'"
end
if (cur_index == size) then
output_str = output_str .. "\n" .. string.rep('\t',depth-1) .. "}"
else
output_str = output_str .. ","
end
else
-- close the table
if (cur_index == size) then
output_str = output_str .. "\n" .. string.rep('\t',depth-1) .. "}"
end
end
cur_index = cur_index + 1
end
if (size == 0) then
output_str = output_str .. "\n" .. string.rep('\t',depth-1) .. "}"
end
if (#stack > 0) then
node = stack[#stack]
stack[#stack] = nil
depth = cache[node] == nil and depth + 1 or depth - 1
else
break
end
end
-- This is necessary for working with HUGE tables otherwise we run out of memory using concat on huge strings
table.insert(output,output_str)
output_str = table.concat(output)
print(output_str)
end
Here is an example:
local t = {
["abe"] = {1,2,3,4,5},
"string1",
50,
["depth1"] = { ["depth2"] = { ["depth3"] = { ["depth4"] = { ["depth5"] = { ["depth6"] = { ["depth7"]= { ["depth8"] = { ["depth9"] = { ["depth10"] = {1000}, 900}, 800},700},600},500}, 400 }, 300}, 200}, 100},
["ted"] = {true,false,"some text"},
"string2",
[function() return end] = function() return end,
75
}
print_table(t)
Output:
{
[1] = 'string1',
[2] = 50,
[3] = 'string2',
[4] = 75,
['abe'] = {
[1] = 1,
[2] = 2,
[3] = 3,
[4] = 4,
[5] = 5
},
['function: 06472B70'] = 'function: 06472A98',
['depth1'] = {
[1] = 100,
['depth2'] = {
[1] = 200,
['depth3'] = {
[1] = 300,
['depth4'] = {
[1] = 400,
['depth5'] = {
[1] = 500,
['depth6'] = {
[1] = 600,
['depth7'] = {
[1] = 700,
['depth8'] = {
[1] = 800,
['depth9'] = {
[1] = 900,
['depth10'] = {
[1] = 1000
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
},
['ted'] = {
[1] = true,
[2] = false,
[3] = 'some text'
}
}
As previously mentioned, you have to write it.
Here is my humble version: (super basic one)
function tprint (t, s)
for k, v in pairs(t) do
local kfmt = '["' .. tostring(k) ..'"]'
if type(k) ~= 'string' then
kfmt = '[' .. k .. ']'
end
local vfmt = '"'.. tostring(v) ..'"'
if type(v) == 'table' then
tprint(v, (s or '')..kfmt)
else
if type(v) ~= 'string' then
vfmt = tostring(v)
end
print(type(t)..(s or '')..kfmt..' = '..vfmt)
end
end
end
example:
local mytbl = { ['1']="a", 2, 3, b="c", t={d=1} }
tprint(mytbl)
output (Lua 5.0):
table[1] = 2
table[2] = 3
table["1"] = "a"
table["t"]["d"] = 1
table["b"] = "c"
I use my own function to print the contents of a table but not sure how well it translates to your environment:
---A helper function to print a table's contents.
---#param tbl table #The table to print.
---#param depth number #The depth of sub-tables to traverse through and print.
---#param n number #Do NOT manually set this. This controls formatting through recursion.
function PrintTable(tbl, depth, n)
n = n or 0;
depth = depth or 5;
if (depth == 0) then
print(string.rep(' ', n).."...");
return;
end
if (n == 0) then
print(" ");
end
for key, value in pairs(tbl) do
if (key and type(key) == "number" or type(key) == "string") then
key = string.format("[\"%s\"]", key);
if (type(value) == "table") then
if (next(value)) then
print(string.rep(' ', n)..key.." = {");
PrintTable(value, depth - 1, n + 4);
print(string.rep(' ', n).."},");
else
print(string.rep(' ', n)..key.." = {},");
end
else
if (type(value) == "string") then
value = string.format("\"%s\"", value);
else
value = tostring(value);
end
print(string.rep(' ', n)..key.." = "..value..",");
end
end
end
if (n == 0) then
print(" ");
end
end
The simplest way, with circular reference handling and all:
function dump(t, indent, done)
done = done or {}
indent = indent or 0
done[t] = true
for key, value in pairs(t) do
print(string.rep("\t", indent))
if type(value) == "table" and not done[value] then
done[value] = true
print(key, ":\n")
dump(value, indent + 2, done)
done[value] = nil
else
print(key, "\t=\t", value, "\n")
end
end
end
There are 2 solutions that I want to mention: a quick&dirty one, and another which properly escapes all keys and values but is bigger
Simple & fast solution (use only on "safe" inputs):
local function format_any_value(obj, buffer)
local _type = type(obj)
if _type == "table" then
buffer[#buffer + 1] = '{"'
for key, value in next, obj, nil do
buffer[#buffer + 1] = tostring(key) .. '":'
format_any_value(value, buffer)
buffer[#buffer + 1] = ',"'
end
buffer[#buffer] = '}' -- note the overwrite
elseif _type == "string" then
buffer[#buffer + 1] = '"' .. obj .. '"'
elseif _type == "boolean" or _type == "number" then
buffer[#buffer + 1] = tostring(obj)
else
buffer[#buffer + 1] = '"???' .. _type .. '???"'
end
end
Usage:
local function format_as_json(obj)
if obj == nil then return "null" else
local buffer = {}
format_any_value(obj, buffer)
return table.concat(buffer)
end
end
local function print_as_json(obj)
print(_format_as_json(obj))
end
print_as_json {1, 2, 3}
print_as_json(nil)
print_as_json("string")
print_as_json {[1] = 1, [2] = 2, three = { { true } }, four = "four"}
Correct solution with key/value escaping
Small library that I wrote in pure Lua for this specific use-case: https://github.com/vn971/fast_json_encode
Or specifically this 1 file that includes both a formatter and a printer: https://github.com/vn971/fast_json_encode/blob/master/json_format.lua
You have to code it yourself I'm afraid. I wrote this, and it may be of some use to you
function printtable(table, indent)
indent = indent or 0;
local keys = {};
for k in pairs(table) do
keys[#keys+1] = k;
table.sort(keys, function(a, b)
local ta, tb = type(a), type(b);
if (ta ~= tb) then
return ta < tb;
else
return a < b;
end
end);
end
print(string.rep(' ', indent)..'{');
indent = indent + 1;
for k, v in pairs(table) do
local key = k;
if (type(key) == 'string') then
if not (string.match(key, '^[A-Za-z_][0-9A-Za-z_]*$')) then
key = "['"..key.."']";
end
elseif (type(key) == 'number') then
key = "["..key.."]";
end
if (type(v) == 'table') then
if (next(v)) then
printf("%s%s =", string.rep(' ', indent), tostring(key));
printtable(v, indent);
else
printf("%s%s = {},", string.rep(' ', indent), tostring(key));
end
elseif (type(v) == 'string') then
printf("%s%s = %s,", string.rep(' ', indent), tostring(key), "'"..v.."'");
else
printf("%s%s = %s,", string.rep(' ', indent), tostring(key), tostring(v));
end
end
indent = indent - 1;
print(string.rep(' ', indent)..'}');
end
The table.tostring metehod of metalua is actually very complete. It deals with nested tables, the indentation level is changeable, ...
See https://github.com/fab13n/metalua/blob/master/src/lib/metalua/table2.lua
This is my version that supports excluding tables and userdata
-- Lua Table View by Elertan
table.print = function(t, exclusions)
local nests = 0
if not exclusions then exclusions = {} end
local recurse = function(t, recurse, exclusions)
indent = function()
for i = 1, nests do
io.write(" ")
end
end
local excluded = function(key)
for k,v in pairs(exclusions) do
if v == key then
return true
end
end
return false
end
local isFirst = true
for k,v in pairs(t) do
if isFirst then
indent()
print("|")
isFirst = false
end
if type(v) == "table" and not excluded(k) then
indent()
print("|-> "..k..": "..type(v))
nests = nests + 1
recurse(v, recurse, exclusions)
elseif excluded(k) then
indent()
print("|-> "..k..": "..type(v))
elseif type(v) == "userdata" or type(v) == "function" then
indent()
print("|-> "..k..": "..type(v))
elseif type(v) == "string" then
indent()
print("|-> "..k..": ".."\""..v.."\"")
else
indent()
print("|-> "..k..": "..v)
end
end
nests = nests - 1
end
nests = 0
print("### START TABLE ###")
for k,v in pairs(t) do
print("root")
if type(v) == "table" then
print("|-> "..k..": "..type(v))
nests = nests + 1
recurse(v, recurse, exclusions)
elseif type(v) == "userdata" or type(v) == "function" then
print("|-> "..k..": "..type(v))
elseif type(v) == "string" then
print("|-> "..k..": ".."\""..v.."\"")
else
print("|-> "..k..": "..v)
end
end
print("### END TABLE ###")
end
This is an example
t = {
location = {
x = 10,
y = 20
},
size = {
width = 100000000,
height = 1000,
},
name = "Sidney",
test = {
hi = "lol",
},
anotherone = {
1,
2,
3
}
}
table.print(t, { "test" })
Prints:
### START TABLE ###
root
|-> size: table
|
|-> height: 1000
|-> width: 100000000
root
|-> location: table
|
|-> y: 20
|-> x: 10
root
|-> anotherone: table
|
|-> 1: 1
|-> 2: 2
|-> 3: 3
root
|-> test: table
|
|-> hi: "lol"
root
|-> name: "Sidney"
### END TABLE ###
Notice that the root doesn't remove exclusions
Made this version to print tables with identation. Can probably be extended to work recursively.
function printtable(table, indent)
print(tostring(table) .. '\n')
for index, value in pairs(table) do
print(' ' .. tostring(index) .. ' : ' .. tostring(value) .. '\n')
end
end
--~ print a table
function printTable(list, i)
local listString = ''
--~ begin of the list so write the {
if not i then
listString = listString .. '{'
end
i = i or 1
local element = list[i]
--~ it may be the end of the list
if not element then
return listString .. '}'
end
--~ if the element is a list too call it recursively
if(type(element) == 'table') then
listString = listString .. printTable(element)
else
listString = listString .. element
end
return listString .. ', ' .. printTable(list, i + 1)
end
local table = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, {'a', 'b'}, {'G', 'F'}}
print(printTable(table))
Hi man, I wrote a siple code that do this in pure Lua, it has a bug (write a coma after the last element of the list) but how i wrote it quickly as a prototype I will let it to you adapt it to your needs.
Adding another version. This one tries to iterate over userdata as well.
function inspect(o,indent)
if indent == nil then indent = 0 end
local indent_str = string.rep(" ", indent)
local output_it = function(str)
print(indent_str..str)
end
local length = 0
local fu = function(k, v)
length = length + 1
if type(v) == "userdata" or type(v) == 'table' then
output_it(indent_str.."["..k.."]")
inspect(v, indent+1)
else
output_it(indent_str.."["..k.."] "..tostring(v))
end
end
local loop_pairs = function()
for k,v in pairs(o) do fu(k,v) end
end
local loop_metatable_pairs = function()
for k,v in pairs(getmetatable(o)) do fu(k,v) end
end
if not pcall(loop_pairs) and not pcall(loop_metatable_pairs) then
output_it(indent_str.."[[??]]")
else
if length == 0 then
output_it(indent_str.."{}")
end
end
end
Convert to json and then print.
local json = require('cjson')
json_string = json.encode(this_table)
print (json_string)
simple example of dump a table in lua
i suggest using serpent.lua
local function parser(value, indent, subcategory)
local indent = indent or 2
local response = '(\n'
local subcategory = type(subcategory) == 'number' and subcategory or indent
for key, value in pairs(value) do
if type(value) == 'table' then
value = parser(value, indent, subcategory + indent)
elseif type(value) == 'string' then
value = '\''.. value .. '\''
elseif type(value) ~= 'number' then
value = tostring(value)
end
if type(tonumber(key)) == 'number' then
key = '[' .. key .. ']'
elseif not key:match('^([A-Za-z_][A-Za-z0-9_]*)$') then
key = '[\'' .. key .. '\']'
end
response = response .. string.rep(' ', subcategory) .. key .. ' = ' .. value .. ',\n'
end
return response .. string.rep(' ', subcategory - indent) .. ')'
end
example
response = parser{1,2,3, {ok = 10, {}}}
print(response)
result
(
[1] = 1,
[2] = 2,
[3] = 3,
[4] = (
[1] = (),
ok = 10
)
)
here's my little snippet for that:
--- Dump value of a variable in a formatted string
--
--- #param o table Dumpable object
--- #param tbs string|nil Tabulation string, ' ' by default
--- #param tb number|nil Initial tabulation level, 0 by default
--- #return string
local function dump(o, tbs, tb)
tb = tb or 0
tbs = tbs or ' '
if type(o) == 'table' then
local s = '{'
if (next(o)) then s = s .. '\n' else return s .. '}' end
tb = tb + 1
for k,v in pairs(o) do
if type(k) ~= 'number' then k = '"' .. k .. '"' end
s = s .. tbs:rep(tb) .. '[' .. k .. '] = ' .. dump(v, tbs, tb)
s = s .. ',\n'
end
tb = tb - 1
return s .. tbs:rep(tb) .. '}'
else
return tostring(o)
end
end
I have humbly modified a bit Alundaio code:
-- by Alundaio
-- KK modified 11/28/2019
function dump_table_to_string(node, tree, indentation)
local cache, stack, output = {},{},{}
local depth = 1
if type(node) ~= "table" then
return "only table type is supported, got " .. type(node)
end
if nil == indentation then indentation = 1 end
local NEW_LINE = "\n"
local TAB_CHAR = " "
if nil == tree then
NEW_LINE = "\n"
elseif not tree then
NEW_LINE = ""
TAB_CHAR = ""
end
local output_str = "{" .. NEW_LINE
while true do
local size = 0
for k,v in pairs(node) do
size = size + 1
end
local cur_index = 1
for k,v in pairs(node) do
if (cache[node] == nil) or (cur_index >= cache[node]) then
if (string.find(output_str,"}",output_str:len())) then
output_str = output_str .. "," .. NEW_LINE
elseif not (string.find(output_str,NEW_LINE,output_str:len())) then
output_str = output_str .. NEW_LINE
end
-- This is necessary for working with HUGE tables otherwise we run out of memory using concat on huge strings
table.insert(output,output_str)
output_str = ""
local key
if (type(k) == "number" or type(k) == "boolean") then
key = "["..tostring(k).."]"
else
key = "['"..tostring(k).."']"
end
if (type(v) == "number" or type(v) == "boolean") then
output_str = output_str .. string.rep(TAB_CHAR,depth*indentation) .. key .. " = "..tostring(v)
elseif (type(v) == "table") then
output_str = output_str .. string.rep(TAB_CHAR,depth*indentation) .. key .. " = {" .. NEW_LINE
table.insert(stack,node)
table.insert(stack,v)
cache[node] = cur_index+1
break
else
output_str = output_str .. string.rep(TAB_CHAR,depth*indentation) .. key .. " = '"..tostring(v).."'"
end
if (cur_index == size) then
output_str = output_str .. NEW_LINE .. string.rep(TAB_CHAR,(depth-1)*indentation) .. "}"
else
output_str = output_str .. ","
end
else
-- close the table
if (cur_index == size) then
output_str = output_str .. NEW_LINE .. string.rep(TAB_CHAR,(depth-1)*indentation) .. "}"
end
end
cur_index = cur_index + 1
end
if (size == 0) then
output_str = output_str .. NEW_LINE .. string.rep(TAB_CHAR,(depth-1)*indentation) .. "}"
end
if (#stack > 0) then
node = stack[#stack]
stack[#stack] = nil
depth = cache[node] == nil and depth + 1 or depth - 1
else
break
end
end
-- This is necessary for working with HUGE tables otherwise we run out of memory using concat on huge strings
table.insert(output,output_str)
output_str = table.concat(output)
return output_str
end
then:
print(dump_table_to_string("AA", true,3))
print(dump_table_to_string({"AA","BB"}, true,3))
print(dump_table_to_string({"AA","BB"}))
print(dump_table_to_string({"AA","BB"},false))
print(dump_table_to_string({"AA","BB",{22,33}},true,2))
gives:
only table type is supported, got string
{
[1] = 'AA',
[2] = 'BB'
}
{
[1] = 'AA',
[2] = 'BB'
}
{[1] = 'AA',[2] = 'BB'}
{
[1] = 'AA',
[2] = 'BB',
[3] = {
[1] = 22,
[2] = 33
}
}
Now the function print can print the (flat) tables!
oprint = print -- origin print
print = function (...)
if type(...) == "table" then
local str = ''
local amount = 0
for i,v in pairs(...) do
amount=amount+1
local pre = type(i) == "string" and i.."=" or ""
str = str .. pre..tostring(v) .. "\t"
end
oprint('#'..amount..':', str)
else
oprint(...)
end
end
For example:
print ({x=7, y=9, w=11, h="height", 7, 8, 9})
prints:
#7: 7 8 9 y=9 x=7 h=height w=11
The same way it can be just new function tostring:
otostring = tostring -- origin tostring
tostring = function (...)
if type(...) == "table" then
local str = '{'
for i,v in pairs(...) do
local pre = type(i) == "string" and i.."=" or ""
str = str .. pre..tostring(v) .. ", "
end
str = str:sub(1, -3)
return str..'}'
else
return otostring(...)
end
end

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