NAME

    Data::Random::Structure::UTF8 - Produce nested data structures with
    unicode keys, values, elements.

VERSION

    Version 0.06

SYNOPSIS

    This module produces random, arbitrarily deep and long, nested Perl
    data structures with unicode content for the keys, values and/or array
    elements. Content can be forced to be exclusively strings and
    exclusively unicode. Or the strings can be unicode. Or anything goes,
    mixed unicode and non-unicode strings as well as integers, floats, etc.

    This is an object-oriented module which inherits from
    Data::Random::Structure and extends its functionality by providing for
    unicode keys and values for hashtables and unicode content for array
    elements or scalars, randomly mixed with the usual repertoire of
    Data::Random::Structure, which is non-unicode strings, numerical,
    boolean values and the assorted entourage to the court of Emperor
    Computer, post-Turing.

    For example, it produces these:

      * unicode scalars: e.g. "αβγ",

      * mixed arrays: e.g. ["αβγ", "123", "xyz"]

      * hashtables with some/all keys and/or values as unicode: e.g. {"αβγ"
      = "123", "xyz" => "αβγ"}>

      * exclusive unicode arrays or hashtables: e.g. ["αβγ", "χψζ"]

    This is accomplised by adding an extra type string-UTF8 (invisible to
    the user) and the respective generator method. All these are invisible
    to the user which will get the old functionality plus some (or maybe
    none because this is a random process which does not eliminate
    non-unicode strings, at the moment) unicode strings.

        use Data::Random::Structure::UTF8;
    
        my $randomiser = Data::Random::Structure::UTF8->new(
            'max_depth' => 5,
            'max_elements' => 20,
            # all the strings produced (keys, values, elements)
            # will be unicode strings
            'only-unicode' => 1,
            # all the strings produced (keys, values, elements)
            # will be a mixture of unicode and non-unicode
            # this is the default behaviour
            #'only-unicode' => 0,
            # only unicode strings will be produced for (keys, values, elements),
            # there will be no numbers, no bool, only unicode strings
            #'only-unicode' => 2,
        );
        my $perl_var = $randomiser->generate() or die;
        print pp($perl_var);
    
        # which prints the usual escape mess of Dump and Dumper
    [
      "\x{7D5A}\x{4EC1}",
      "\x{E6E2}\x{75A4}",
      329076,
      0.255759160148987,
      [
        "TEb97qJt",
        1,
        "_ow|J\@~=6%*N;52?W3Y\$S1",
        {
          "x{75A4}x{75A4}" => 123,
          "123" => "\x{7D5A}\x{4EC1}",
          "xyz" => [1, 2, "\x{7D5A}\x{4EC1}"],
        },
      ],
    
        # can control the scalar type (for keys, values, items) on the fly
        # this produces unicode strings in addition to
        # Data::Random::Structure's usual repertoire:
        # non-unicode-string, numbers, bool, integer, float, etc.
        # (see there for the list)
        $randomiser->only_unicode(0); # the default: anything plus unicode strings
        print $randomiser->only_unicode();
    
        # this produces unicode strings in addition to
        # Data::Random::Structure's usual repertoire:
        # numbers, bool, integer, float, etc.
        # (see there for the list)
        # EXCEPT non-unicode-strings, (all strings will be unicode)
        $randomiser->only_unicode(1);
        print $randomiser->only_unicode();
    
        # this produces unicode strings ONLY
        # Data::Random::Structure's usual repertoire does not apply
        # there will be no numbers, no bool, no integer, no float, no nothing
        $randomiser->only_unicode(2);
        print $randomiser->only_unicode();

METHODS

    This is an object oriented module which has exactly the same API as
    Data::Random::Structure.

 new

    Constructor. In addition to Data::Random::Structure <new()> API, it
    takes parameter 'only-unicode' with a valid value of 0, 1 or 2. Default
    is 0.

      * 0 : keys, values, elements of the produced data structure will be a
      mixture of unicode strings, plus Data::Random::Structure's full
      repertoire which includes non-unicode strings, integers, floats etc.

      * 1 : keys, values, elements of the produced data structure will be a
      mixture of unicode strings, plus Data::Random::Structure's full
      repertoire except non-unicode strings. That is, all strings will be
      unicode. But there will possibly be integers etc.

      * 2 : keys, values, elements of the produced data structure will be
      only unicode strings. Nothing of Data::Random::Structure's repertoire
      applies. Only unicode strings, no integers, no nothing.

    Controlling the scalar data types can also be done on the fly, after
    the object has been created using Data::Random::Structure::UTF8
    <only_unicode()> method.

    Additionally, Data::Random::Structure <new()>'s API reports that the
    constructor takes 2 optional arguments, max_depth and max_elements. See
    Data::Random::Structure <new()> for up-to-date, official information.

 only_unicode

    Controls what scalar types to be included in the nested data structures
    generated. With no parameters it returns back the current setting.
    Otherwise, valid input parameters and their meanings are listed in
    Data::Random::Structure::UTF8 <new()>

 generate

    Generate a nested data structure according to the specification set in
    the constructor. See Data::Random::Structure <generate()> for all
    options. This method is not overriden by this module.

    It returns the Perl data structure as a reference.

 generate_scalar

    Generate a scalar which may contain unicode content. See
    Data::Random::Structure::generate_scalar for all options. This method
    is overriden by this module but calls the parent's too.

    It returns a Perl string.

 generate_array

    Generate an array with random, possibly unicode, content. See
    Data::Random::Structure::generate_array for all options. This method is
    not overriden by this module.

    It returns the Perl array as a reference.

 generate_hash

    Generate an array with random, possibly unicode, content. See
    Data::Random::Structure::generate_array for all options. This method is
    not overriden by this module.

    It returns the Perl array as a reference.

 random_char_UTF8

    Return a random unicode character, guaranteed to be valid. This is a
    very simple method which selects characters from some pre-set code
    pages (Greek, Cyrillic, Cherokee, Ethiopic, Javanese) with equal
    probability. These pages and ranges were selected so that there are no
    "holes" between them which would produce an invalid character.
    Therefore, not all characters from the particular code page will be
    produced.

    Returns a random unicode character guaranteed to be valid.

 random_chars_UTF8

      my $ret = random_chars_UTF8($optional_paramshash)

    Arguments:

      * $optional_paramshash : can contain

	* 'min' sets the minimum length of the random sequence to be
	returned, default is 6

	* 'max' sets the maximum length of the random sequence to be
	returned, default is 32

    Return a random unicode-only string optionally specifying minimum and
    maximum length. See Data::Random::Structure::UTF8 <random_chars_UTF8()>
    for the range of characters it returns. The returned string is unicode
    and is guaranteed all its characters are valid.

SUBROUTINES

 check_content_recursively

      my $ret = check_content_recursively($perl_var, $paramshashref)

    Arguments:

      * $perl_var : a Perl variable containing an arbitrarily nested data
      structure

      * $paramshashref : can contain one or more of the following keys:

	* 'numbers' set it to 1 to look for numbers (possibly among other
	things). If set to 1 and a number 123 or "123" is found, this sub
	returns 1. Set it to 0 to not look for numbers at all (and not
	report if there are no numbers) - don't bother checking for
	numbers, that's what setting this to zero means.

	* 'strings-unicode' set it to 1 to look for unicode strings
	(possibly among other things). The definition of "unicode string"
	is that at least one its characters is unicode. If set to 1 and a
	"unicode string" is found, this sub returns 1.

	* 'strings-plain' set it to 1 to look for plain strings (possibly
	among other things). The definition of "plain string" is that none
	of its characters is unicode. If set to 1 and a "plain string" is
	found, this sub returns 1.

	* 'strings' set it to 1 to look for plain or unicode strings
	(possibly among other things). If set to 1 and a "plain string" or
	"unicode string" is found, this sub returns 1. Basically, it
	returns 1 when a string is found (as opposed to a "number").

    In general, by setting <'strings-unicode'=1>> you are checking whether
    the input Perl variable contains a unicode string in a key, a value, an
    array element, or a scalar reference.

    But, setting <'strings-unicode'=0>>, it simply means do not look for
    this. It does not mean report if they are NO unicode strings.

    Return value: 1 or 0 depending whether what was looking for, was found.

    This is not an object-oriented method. It is called thously:

        # check if ANY scalar (hash key, value, array element or scalar ref)
        # contains ONLY single number (integer, float)
        # the decicion is made by Scalar::Util:looks_like_number()
        if( Data::Random::Structure::UTF8::check_content_recursively(
            {'abc'=>123, 'xyz'=>[1,2,3]},
            {
                    # look for numbers, are there any?
                    'numbers' => 1,
            }
        ) ){ print "data structure contains numbers\n" }
    
        # check if it contains no numbers but it does unicode strings
        if( Data::Random::Structure::UTF8::check_content_recursively(
            {'abc'=>123, 'xyz'=>[1,2,3]},
            {
                    # don't look for numbers
                    'numbers' => 0,
                    # look for unicode strings, are there any?
                    'strings-unicode' => 1,
            }
        ) ){ print "data structure contains numbers\n" }

    CAVEAT: as its name suggests, this is a recursive function. Beware of
    extremely deep data structures. Deep, not long. If you do get <"Deep
    recursion..." warnings>, and you do insist to go ahead, this will
    remove the warnings (but are you sure?):

        {
            no warnings 'recursion';
            if( Data::Random::Structure::UTF8::check_content_recursively(
                {'abc'=>123, 'xyz'=>[1,2,3]},
                {
                    'numbers' => 1,
                }
            ) ){ print "data structure contains numbers\n" }
        }

SEE ALSO

      * The parent class Data::Random::Structure.

      * Data::Roundtrip for stringifying possibly-unicode Perl data
      structures.

AUTHOR

    Andreas Hadjiprocopis, <bliako ta cpan.org / andreashad2 ta gmail.com>

BUGS

    Please report any bugs or feature requests to
    bug-data-random-structure-utf8 at rt.cpan.org, or through the web
    interface at
    https://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Data-Random-Structure-UTF8.
    I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of
    progress on your bug as I make changes.

CAVEATS

    There are two issues users should know about.

    The first issue is that the unicode produced can make Data::Dump to
    complain with

       Operation "lc" returns its argument for UTF-16 surrogate U+DA4B at /usr/local/share/perl5/Data/Dump.pm line 302.

    This, I have found, can be fixed with the following workaround (from
    github user iafan
    <https://github.com/evernote/serge/commit/865402bbde42101345a5bee4cd0a855b9b76bdd7>,
    thank you):

        # Suppress `Operation "lc" returns its argument for UTF-16 surrogate 0xNNNN` warning
        # for the `lc()` call below; use 'utf8' instead of a more appropriate 'surrogate' pragma
        # since the latter is not available in until Perl 5.14
        no warnings 'utf8';

    The second issue is that this class inherits from
    Data::Random::Structure and relies on it complaining about not being
    able to handle certain types which are our own extensions (the
    string-UTF8 extension). We have no way to know that except from
    catching its croak'ing and parsing it with the following code

       my $rc = eval { $self->SUPER::generate_scalar(@_) };
       if( $@ || ! defined($rc) ){
         # parent doesn't know what to do, can we handle this?
         if( $@ !~ /how to generate (.+?)\R/ ){ ...  ... }
         else { print "type is $1" }
         ...

    in order to extract the type which can not be handled and handle it
    ourselves. So whenever the parent class (Data::Random::Structure)
    changes its croak song, we will have to adopt this code accordingly (in
    Data::Random::Structure::UTF8 <generate_scalar()>). For the moment, I
    have placed a catch-all, fall-back condition to handle this but it will
    be called for all kind of types and not only the types we have added.

    So, this issue is not going to make the module die but may make it to
    skew the random results in favour of unicode strings (which is the
    fallback, default action when can't parse the type).

SUPPORT

    You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.

        perldoc Data::Random::Structure::UTF8

    You can also look for information at:

      * RT: CPAN's request tracker (report bugs here)

      https://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Data-Random-Structure-UTF8

      * AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation

      http://annocpan.org/dist/Data-Random-Structure-UTF8

      * CPAN Ratings

      https://cpanratings.perl.org/d/Data-Random-Structure-UTF8

      * Search CPAN

      https://metacpan.org/release/Data-Random-Structure-UTF8

SEE ALSO

      * Data::Random::Structure

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

    Mark Allen who created Data::Random::Structure which is our parent
    class.

DEDICATIONS AND HUGS

    !Almaz!

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

    This software is Copyright (c) 2020 by Andreas Hadjiprocopis.

    This is free software, licensed under:

      The Artistic License 2.0 (GPL Compatible)