Module:Yesno: Difference between revisions

From All Skies Encyclopaedia
imported>Mr. Stradivarius
(back to the old "no" value, per talk)
imported>Mr. Stradivarius
(simplify/optimise)
Line 10: Line 10:
}
}


-- Allow arguments to override defaults.
-- Allow arguments to override defaults. Arguments are taken from
-- 'any' tracks the presence of any arguments at all.
-- the parent frame; other arguments are ignored.
local args = frame.args
for k,v in pairs(frame:getParent().args) do
local any = false
for k,v in pairs(args) do
any = true
retvals[k] = v
retvals[k] = v
end
end
-- If there are no arguments, try and get them from the parent frame.
if any == false then
local pframe = frame:getParent()
args = pframe.args
for k,v in pairs(args) do
retvals[k] = v
end
end


val = args[1]
val = args[1]
Line 37: Line 26:
val = val:match'^%s*(.*%S)' or '' -- Trim whitespace.
val = val:match'^%s*(.*%S)' or '' -- Trim whitespace.


-- Cases are ordered by (probable) likelihood of use.
if val == '' then
if val == '' then
return retvals['blank'] or retvals['no']
return retvals['blank'] or retvals['no']
elseif val == 'n' or val == 'no' or tonumber(val) == 0 then
elseif val == 'yes' then
return retvals['yes']
elseif val == 'no' then
return retvals['no']
return retvals['no']
elseif val == 'y' or val == 'yes' or tonumber(val) == 1 then
elseif val == 'y' then
return retvals['yes']
return retvals['yes']
elseif val == 'n' then
return retvals['no']
elseif val == '¬' then
elseif val == '¬' then
return retvals['¬']
return retvals['¬']
elseif tonumber(val) == 1 then
return retvals['yes']
elseif tonumber(val) == 0 then
return retvals['no']
else
else
return retvals['def'] or retvals['yes']
return retvals['def'] or retvals['yes']

Revision as of 10:09, 28 March 2013

Template:Used in system Lua error in Module:Message_box at line 165: attempt to call upvalue 'yesno' (a table value). Lua error in Module:Message_box at line 165: attempt to call upvalue 'yesno' (a table value). This module provides a consistent interface for processing boolean or boolean-style string input. While Lua allows the true and false boolean values, wikicode templates can only express boolean values through strings such as "yes", "no", etc. This module processes these kinds of strings and turns them into boolean input for Lua to process. It also returns nil values as nil, to allow for distinctions between nil and false. The module also accepts other Lua structures as input, i.e. booleans, numbers, tables, and functions. If it is passed input that it does not recognise as boolean or nil, it is possible to specify a default value to return.

Syntax

yesno(value, default)

value is the value to be tested. Boolean input or boolean-style input (see below) always evaluates to either true or false, and nil always evaluates to nil. Other values evaluate to default.

Usage

First, load the module. Note that it can only be loaded from other Lua modules, not from normal wiki pages. For normal wiki pages you can use {{yesno}} instead.

local yesno = require('Module:Yesno')

Some input values always return true, and some always return false. nil values always return nil.

-- These always return true:
yesno('yes')
yesno('y')
yesno('true')
yesno('t')
yesno('on')
yesno('1')
yesno(1)
yesno(true)

-- These always return false:
yesno('no')
yesno('n')
yesno('false')
yesno('f')
yesno('off')
yesno('0')
yesno(0)
yesno(false)

-- A nil value always returns nil:
yesno(nil)
yesno()

String values are converted to lower case before they are matched:

-- These always return true:
yesno('Yes')
yesno('YES')
yesno('yEs')
yesno('Y')
yesno('tRuE')

-- These always return false:
yesno('No')
yesno('NO')
yesno('nO')
yesno('N')
yesno('fALsE')

Undefined input ('foo')

You can specify a default value if yesno receives input other than that listed above. If you don't supply a default, the module will return nil for these inputs.

-- These return nil:
yesno(nil)
yesno('foo')
yesno({})
yesno(5)
yesno('')
yesno(function() return 'This is a function.' end)
yesno(nil, true)
yesno(nil, 'bar')

-- These return true:
yesno('foo', true)
yesno({}, true)
yesno(5, true)
yesno('', true)
yesno(function() return 'This is a function.' end, true)

-- These return "bar":
yesno('foo', 'bar')
yesno({}, 'bar')
yesno(5, 'bar')
yesno('', 'bar')
yesno(function() return 'This is a function.' end, 'bar')

Although the empty string usually evaluates to false in wikitext, it evaluates to true in Lua. This module prefers the Lua behaviour over the wikitext behaviour. If treating the empty string as false is important for your module, you will need to convert empty strings to a value that evaluates to false before passing them to this module. In the case of arguments received from wikitext, this can be done by using Module:Arguments.

Handling nil results

By definition:

yesno(nil)         -- Returns nil.
yesno('foo')       -- Returns nil.
yesno(nil, true)   -- Returns nil.
yesno(nil, false)  -- Returns nil.
yesno('foo', true) -- Returns true.

To get the binary true/false-only values, use code like:

myvariable = yesno(value or false) -- When value is nil, result is false.
myvariable = yesno(value or true)  -- When value is nil, result is true. (XXX: when value is false, result is true...)
myvariable = yesno('foo') or false  -- Unknown string returns nil, result is false.
myvariable = yesno('foo', true) or false  -- Default value (here: true) applies, result is true.

Better suggestions:

local myvariable = yesno(value)
if myvariable == nil then -- value is nil or an unrecognized string
    myvariable = true
end

-- more efficient when value is nil, but more verbose
-- (note the default result has to be written twice)
local myvariable
if value == nil then
    myvariable = true
else
    myvariable = yesno(value, true)
end

local p = {}

function p.yesno(frame)

    -- defaults
    local retvals = {
        yes   = "yes",
        no    = "",
        ["¬"] = ""
    }

    -- Allow arguments to override defaults. Arguments are taken from
    -- the parent frame; other arguments are ignored.
    for k,v in pairs(frame:getParent().args) do
        retvals[k] = v
    end

    val = args[1]

    -- First deal with the case if val is nil, then deal with other cases.
    if val == nil then
        return retvals['¬']
    end

    val = val:lower()          -- Make lowercase.
    val = val:match'^%s*(.*%S)' or ''  -- Trim whitespace.

    -- Cases are ordered by (probable) likelihood of use. 
    if val == '' then
        return retvals['blank'] or retvals['no']
    elseif val == 'yes' then
        return retvals['yes']
    elseif val == 'no' then
        return retvals['no']
    elseif val == 'y' then
        return retvals['yes']
    elseif val == 'n' then
        return retvals['no']
    elseif val == '¬' then
        return retvals['¬']
    elseif tonumber(val) == 1 then
        return retvals['yes']
    elseif tonumber(val) == 0 then
        return retvals['no']
    else
        return retvals['def'] or retvals['yes']
    end
end

return p