| Crates.io | cli-table-derive |
| lib.rs | cli-table-derive |
| version | 0.5.0 |
| created_at | 2020-12-10 10:07:17.000193+00 |
| updated_at | 2025-03-18 05:42:19.741225+00 |
| description | A crate for printing tables on command line |
| homepage | https://github.com/devashishdxt/cli-table |
| repository | https://github.com/devashishdxt/cli-table |
| max_upload_size | |
| id | 321455 |
| size | 39,009 |
Rust crate for printing tables on command line.
Add cli-table in your Cargo.toml's dependencies section
[dependencies]
cli-table = "0.5"
use cli_table::{format::Justify, print_stdout, Cell, Style, Table};
let table = vec![
vec!["Tom".cell(), 10.cell().justify(Justify::Right)],
vec!["Jerry".cell(), 15.cell().justify(Justify::Right)],
vec!["Scooby Doo".cell(), 20.cell().justify(Justify::Right)],
]
.table()
.title(vec![
"Name".cell().bold(true),
"Age (in years)".cell().bold(true),
])
.bold(true);
assert!(print_stdout(table).is_ok());
Below is the output of the table we created just now:
+------------+----------------+
| Name | Age (in years) | <-- This row and all the borders/separators
+------------+----------------+ will appear in bold
| Tom | 10 |
+------------+----------------+
| Jerry | 15 |
+------------+----------------+
| Scooby Doo | 25 |
+------------+----------------+
Display trait implementationTo get a Display trait implementation of TableStruct, use display() function on the struct to get an instance
of TableDisplay which implements Display trait.
use cli_table::{format::Justify, Cell, Style, Table};
let table = vec![
vec!["Tom".cell(), 10.cell().justify(Justify::Right)],
vec!["Jerry".cell(), 15.cell().justify(Justify::Right)],
vec!["Scooby Doo".cell(), 20.cell().justify(Justify::Right)],
]
.table()
.title(vec![
"Name".cell().bold(true),
"Age (in years)".cell().bold(true),
])
.bold(true);
let table_display = table.display().unwrap();
println!("{}", table_display);
Below is the output of the table we created just now:
+------------+----------------+
| Name | Age (in years) | <-- This row and all the borders/separators
+------------+----------------+ will appear in bold
| Tom | 10 |
+------------+----------------+
| Jerry | 15 |
+------------+----------------+
| Scooby Doo | 25 |
+------------+----------------+
#[derive(Table)] can also be used to print a Vec or slice of structs as table.
use cli_table::{format::Justify, print_stdout, Table, WithTitle};
#[derive(Table)]
struct User {
#[table(title = "ID", justify = "Justify::Right")]
id: u64,
#[table(title = "First Name")]
first_name: &'static str,
#[table(title = "Last Name")]
last_name: &'static str,
}
let users = vec![
User {
id: 1,
first_name: "Scooby",
last_name: "Doo",
},
User {
id: 2,
first_name: "John",
last_name: "Cena",
},
];
assert!(print_stdout(users.with_title()).is_ok());
Below is the output of the table we created using derive macro:
+----+------------+-----------+
| ID | First Name | Last Name | <-- This row will appear in bold
+----+------------+-----------+
| 1 | Scooby | Doo |
+----+------------+-----------+
| 2 | John | Cena |
+----+------------+-----------+
title | name: Used to specify title of a column. Usage: #[table(title = "Title")]justify: Used to horizontally justify the contents of a column. Usage: #[table(justify = "Justify::Right")]align: Used to vertically align the contents of a column. Usage: #[table(align = "Align::Top")]color: Used to specify color of contents of a column. Usage: #[table(color = "Color::Red")]bold: Used to specify boldness of contents of a column. Usage: #[table(bold)]order: Used to order columns in a table while printing. Usage: #[table(order = <usize>)]. Here, columns will
be sorted based on their order. For e.g., column with order = 0 will be displayed on the left followed by
column with order = 1 and so on.display_fn: Used to print types which do not implement Display trait. Usage #[table(display_fn = "<func_name>")].
Signature of provided function should be fn <func_name>(value: &<type>) -> impl Display.customize_fn: Used to customize style of a cell. Usage #[table(customize_fn = "<func_name>")]. Signature of
provided function should be fn <func_name>(cell: CellStruct, value: &<type>) -> CellStruct. This attribute can
be used when you want to change the formatting/style of a cell based on its contents. Note that this will
overwrite all the style settings done by other attributes.skip: Used to skip a field from table. Usage: #[table(skip)]For more information on configurations available on derive macro, go to cli-table/examples/struct.rs.
This crate also integrates with csv crate. On enabling "csv" feature, you can
use TryFrom<&mut Reader> for TableStruct trait implementation to convert csv::Reader to TableStruct.
For more information on handling CSV values, go to cli-table/examples/csv.rs.
Style of a table/cell can be modified by calling functions of [Style] trait. It is implementated by both
[TableStruct] and [CellStruct].
For individually formatting each cell of a table, justify, align and padding functions can be used from
CellStruct.
In addition to this, borders and separators of a table can be customized by calling border and separator
functions in TableStruct. For example, to create a borderless table:
use cli_table::{Cell, Table, TableStruct, format::{Justify, Border}, print_stdout};
fn get_table() -> TableStruct {
vec![
vec!["Tom".cell(), 10.cell().justify(Justify::Right)],
vec!["Jerry".cell(), 15.cell().justify(Justify::Right)],
vec!["Scooby Doo".cell(), 20.cell().justify(Justify::Right)],
]
.table()
}
let table = get_table().border(Border::builder().build()); // Attaches an empty border to the table
assert!(print_stdout(table).is_ok());
derive: Enables derive macro for creating tables using structs. Enabled by default.csv: Enables support for printing tables using csv. Enabled by default.Licensed under either of
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.