NAME
    Data::Dumper::EasyOO - wraps DD for easy use of various printing styles

ABSTRACT
    EzDD is an object wrapper upon Data::Dumper (henceforth just DD), and
    uses an inner DD object to produce all its output. Its purpose is to
    provide shiny new interface that makes it easy to:

     1. label your data meaningfully, not just as $VARx
     2. make and reuse EzDD objects
     3. customize print styles on any/all of them independently
     4. provide essentially all of DD's functionality
     5. do so with fewest keystrokes possible

SYNOPSIS
     my $ezdd;      # declare a default object (optional)

     use Data::Dumper::EasyOO
        (
         alias      => EzDD,        # a temporary top-level-name alias
     
         # set some print-style defaults
         indent     => 1,           # change DD's default from 2
         sortkeys   => 1,           # a personal favorite

         # autoconstruct a printer obj (calls EzDD->new) with the defaults
         init       => \$ezdd,      # var must be undef b4 use

         # set some more default print-styles
         terse      => 1,           # change DD's default of 0
         autoprint  => $fh,         # prints to $fh when you $ezdd->(\%something);

         # autoconstruct a 2nd printer object, using current print-styles
         init       => \our $ez2,   # var must be undef b4 use
         );

     $ezdd->(p1 => $person);        # print as '$p1 => ...'

     my $foo = EzDD->new(%style)    # create a printer, via alias, w new style
        ->(there => $place);        # and print with it too.

     $ez2-> (p2 => $person);        # dump w $ez2, use its style

     $foo->(here => $where);        # dump w $foo style (use 2 w/o interference)

     $foo->Set(%morestyle);         # change style at runtime
     $foo->($_) foreach @things;    # print many things

DESCRIPTION
    EzDD wraps Data::Dumper, and uses an inner DD object to print/dump. By
    default the output is identical to DD. That said, EzDD gives you a nicer
    interface, thus encouraging you to tailor DD output the way you like it.

    At use-time, you can specify default print style(s), and can also create
    many EzDD printer objects to use those style(s). Each printer object's
    style can be adjusted thereafter.

    EzDD has similar goals as its step-sibling, Data::Dumper::Simple, but
    differs in that it does not use source filtering, and it exposes
    essentially all of DD's functionality, but with an easier interface.

  Automatic Labelling of your data
    This module 'knows' you prefer labelled => $data, and assumes that
    you've called it that way, except when you havent. Any arglist that
    looks like a list of pairs is treated as as such, by 2 rules:

      1. arglist length is even
      2. no candidate-labels are refs to other structures

    so this labels your data:

      $ezdd->(person => $person, place => $place);

    but this doesn't (assuming that $person is an object, not a string):

      $ezdd->($person, $place);

    If you find that EzDD sometimes misinterprets your array data, just
    explicitly label it, like so:

        $ezdd->(some_label => \@yourdata);

    DD::Simple does more magic labelling than EzDD (it grabs the name of the
    variable being dumped), but EzDD avoids source filtering, and gives you
    an unsuprising way to get what you want without fuss.

  Dumping is default operation
    EzDD recognizes that the only reason you'd use it is to dump your data,
    so it gives you a shorthand to do so.

      print $ezdd->dump($foo);      # long way
      print $ezdd->pp($foo);        # still a long way
      print $ezdd->($foo);          # identical shorthand

    It helps to think of an EzDD object as analogous to a printer; sometimes
    you want to change the paper-tray, or the landscape/portrait
    orientation, but mostly you just want to print.

  Dumping without calling 'print'
    To save more keystrokes, you can set autoprint => 1, either at use-time
    (see synopsis), or subequently. Printing is then done for you when you
    call the object.

        $ezdd->Set(autoprint=>1);   # unless already done
        $ezdd->($foo);              # even shorter

    But this happens only when you want it to, not when you assign the
    results to something else.

        $b4 = $ezdd->($foo);        # save rendering in var
        $foo->bar();                # alter printed obj

        # now dump before and after
        print "before: $b4, after: ", $ezdd->($foo);

  setting print styles (on existing objects)
    You can set an object's print-style by imitating the way you'd do it
    with object oriented DD. All of DDs style-changing methods are emulated
    this way, not just the 2 illustrated here.

        $ezdd->Indent(2);
        $ezdd->Terse(1);

    You can chain them too:

        $ezdd->Indent(2)->Terse(1);

  setting print styles using Set()
    The emulation above is really dispatched to Set(); those 2 examples
    above can be restated:

        $ezdd->Set(indent => 2)->Set(terse => 1);

    or more compactly:

        $ezdd->Set(indent => 2, terse => 1);

    Multiple objects' print-styles can be altered independently of each
    other:

        $ez2->Set(%addstyle2);
        $ez3->Set(%addstyle3);

  Creating new printer-objects
    Create a new printer, using default style:

        $ez3 = Data::Dumper::EasyOO->new();

    Create a new printer, with some style overrides that are passed to
    Set():

        $ez4 = Data::Dumper::EasyOO->new(%addstyle);

    Clone an existing printer:

        $ez5 = $ez4->new();

    Clone an existing printer, with style overrides:

        $ez5 = $ez4->new(%addstyle2);

  Dumping to other filehandles
        # obvious way
        print $fh $ezdd->($bar);

        # auto-print way
        $ezdd->Set(autoprint => 1); # to stdout
        $ezdd->($bar);

    You can set autoprint style to any open filehandle, for example
    \*STDOUT, \*STDERR, or $fh. For convenience, 1, 2 are shorthand for
    STDOUT, STDERR. autoprint => 0 turns it off.

    TBC: autoprint => 3 prints to fileno(3) if it's been opened, or warns
    and prints to stdout if it hasnt.

  Namespace aliasing
    Data::Dumper::EasyOO is cumbersome to type more than once in a program,
    and is unnecessary too. Just provide an alias at use-time, and then use
    that alias thereafter.

       use Data::Dumper::EasyOO ( alias => 'EzDD' );
       $ez6 = EzDD->new();

  use-time object initialization
    If calling "$ez1 = EzDD->new" is too much work, you can initialize it by
    passing it at use time.

        use Data::Dumper::EasyOO ( %style, init => \our $ez );

    By default, $ez is initialized with DD's defaults, these can be
    overridden by %style.

    If you want to store the handle in "my $ez", then declare the myvar
    prior to the use statement, otherwize the object assigned to it at BEGIN
    time is trashed at program INIT time.

        my $ez;
        use Data::Dumper::EasyOO ( init => \$ez );

  use-time multi-object initialization
    You can even create multiple objects at use-time. EzDD treats the
    arguments as an order-dependent list, and initializes any specified
    objects with the settings seen thus far.

    In the synopsis example, $ezdd and $ez2 are both initialized, but $ez2
    gets a few more style-tweaks. To better clarify, consider this example:

      use Data::Dumper::EasyOO 
        (
         alias => EzDD,
         # %DDdefstyle,     # since we use a DD object, we get its default style
         %styleA,
         init => \$ez1,     # gets DDdef and styleA
         %styleB,
         init => \$ez2,     # gets DDdef, styles A and B
         %styleC,
         init => \$ez3,     # gets DDdef, styles A, B and C
         %styleD,
         );

    This is equivalent:

      use Data::Dumper::EasyOO (alias => 'EzDD');
      BEGIN {
        $ez1 = EzDD->new(%DDdefstyle, %styleA);
        $ez2 = EzDD->new(%DDdefstyle, %styleA, %styleB);
        $ez2 = EzDD->new(%DDdefstyle, %styleA, %styleB, %styleC );
      }

    Each %style can supplement or override the previous ones. %styleD is not
    used for any of the initialized objects; it is incorporated into the
    using package's default style, and is used in all new objects created at
    runtime.

    Each user package can set its own default style; you can use this, for
    example, to set a different sortkeys => \&pkg_filter for each. With
    this, YourReport::Summary and YourReport::Details can dump the info
    appropriate for your needs.

SEE ALSO (its a crowded space, isnt it!)
    Data::Dumper Data::Dumper::Simple Data::Dump Data::Dump::Streamer
    Data::TreeDumper

AUTHOR
    Jim Cromie <jcromie@cpan.org>

    Copyright (c) 2003,2004,2005 Jim Cromie. All rights reserved. This
    program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
    the same terms as Perl itself.

