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Full Discussion: Scripting Programs
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Scripting Programs Post 302502145 by Mack1982 on Monday 7th of March 2011 03:35:53 AM
Old 03-07-2011
What I am looking for is a software that make writing scripts easy. For example I can write HTML code in either notepad or visual studio. But with visual studio, i get different colors and other features that help me read and writes code easily. Another example would be SQL pretty printer for SQL code
 

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SQL::Translator::Parser::DBIx::Class(3) 		User Contributed Perl Documentation		   SQL::Translator::Parser::DBIx::Class(3)

NAME
SQL::Translator::Parser::DBIx::Class - Create a SQL::Translator schema from a DBIx::Class::Schema instance SYNOPSIS
## Via DBIx::Class use MyApp::Schema; my $schema = MyApp::Schema->connect("dbi:SQLite:something.db"); $schema->create_ddl_dir(); ## or $schema->deploy(); ## Standalone use MyApp::Schema; use SQL::Translator; my $schema = MyApp::Schema->connect; my $trans = SQL::Translator->new ( parser => 'SQL::Translator::Parser::DBIx::Class', parser_args => { dbic_schema => $schema, add_fk_index => 0, sources => [qw/ Artist CD /], }, producer => 'SQLite', ) or die SQL::Translator->error; my $out = $trans->translate() or die $trans->error; DESCRIPTION
This class requires SQL::Translator installed to work. "SQL::Translator::Parser::DBIx::Class" reads a DBIx::Class schema, interrogates the columns, and stuffs it all in an $sqlt_schema object. Its primary use is in deploying database layouts described as a set of DBIx::Class classes, to a database. To do this, see "deploy" in DBIx::Class::Schema. This can also be achieved by having DBIx::Class export the schema as a set of SQL files ready for import into your database, or passed to other machines that need to have your application installed but don't have SQL::Translator installed. To do this see "create_ddl_dir" in DBIx::Class::Schema. PARSER OPTIONS
dbic_schema The DBIx::Class schema (either an instance or a class name) to be parsed. This argument is in fact optional - instead one can supply it later at translation time as an argument to "translate" in SQL::Translator. In other words both of the following invocations are valid and will produce conceptually identical output: my $yaml = SQL::Translator->new( parser => 'SQL::Translator::Parser::DBIx::Class', parser_args => { dbic_schema => $schema, }, producer => 'SQL::Translator::Producer::YAML', )->translate; my $yaml = SQL::Translator->new( parser => 'SQL::Translator::Parser::DBIx::Class', producer => 'SQL::Translator::Producer::YAML', )->translate(data => $schema); add_fk_index Create an index for each foreign key. Enabled by default, as having indexed foreign key columns is normally the sensible thing to do. sources Arguments: @class_names Limit the amount of parsed sources by supplying an explicit list of source names. SEE ALSO
SQL::Translator, DBIx::Class::Schema AUTHORS
See "CONTRIBUTORS" in DBIx::Class. LICENSE
You may distribute this code under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.18.2 2014-01-22 SQL::Translator::Parser::DBIx::Class(3)
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