This was originally developed to optimize string concatenation as a helper method within Module:Asbox, but has been generalized for all modules.

The interface for Module:Buffer objects is similar to that of आकृति:Luaref objects in that you may build complex strings with independent child nodes. In most cases, you may use Buffer objects like a normal string, including using .. operator (though आकृति:Luaself has the same role, but potentially over 10 times faster than ..). See also: #String, mw.ustring, and mw.text libraries

Additionally, there are several specialized forms and extended objects, described further in their respective sections:

Last but not least, this module has an ordered __pairs which can be more thorough than आकृति:Luaref and आकृति:Luaref. (Even reads nil keys!) The logical uniqueness of this iterator may be reason enough to आकृति:Luaref Module:Buffer.

require'Module:Buffer'

सम्पादन करी

आकृति:Luaself

Creates a new Module:Buffer object when the module returned by आकृति:Luaref is called as a functionआकृति:--i.e., there is no 'main'.

Because आकृति:Luaref are a pet peeve of this developer, this forwards arguments to आकृति:Luaself; if that op is not desired, you may chain a Buffer object function directly to the module and the self-action will be redirected to a new Buffer objectआकृति:-- i.e require'Module:Buffer':_inHTML'table' is equivalent to require'Module:Buffer'():_inHTML'table'.[note २]

The global variable आकृति:Luaref is "magic" when passed as the first arg. Such enables the global functions and, if followed by a name string, will declare the new Buffer with that name in the global scope. If the argument following name is a table with no metatable, it and any other आकृति:Luaref are forwarded to आकृति:Luaself; otherwise, as long as the first vararg is not nil or false, this passes them to आकृति:Luaself.[note ३] The _G passed may also gain a __call आकृति:Luaref (details at _G object).

As a final note, if you आकृति:Luaref text from a module which returns a Buffer object, it may be more efficient to create a new Buffer via chaining आकृति:Luaself after a require statement for the other module and use आकृति:Luaself at the point where you would append the required text. (Best add --:_in == indirect require Module:Buffer so future editors won't hunt for function ...:_in at the other module)

आकृति:Luaself

See also आकृति:Luaself for advanced string conversion.

Get a Buffer as a आकृति:Luaref via a function call on the Buffer object (as opposed to a call on the module). This is basically shorthand for आकृति:Luaref, or, with no args, आकृति:Luaref. However, if this Buffer is in raw mode[note ४] or contains at least one आकृति:Luaref index, this reconstructs the Buffer by creating a new table, coercing it contents to strings and appending them sequentially to the temporary "buffer" via new-आकृति:Luaself (or a similar process).

Unconventionally, any आकृति:Luaref-type position passed as i or j are treated as relative to length; that is, आकृति:Luaself is equivalent to आकृति:Luaself (which obviates the need to आकृति:Luaref Buffer just to use the आकृति:Luaref). Moreover, unlike table.concat, this automatically adjusts numerical[note ५] positions to be within the range of the lowest and greatest indicies.

Note you may append a Buffer object without tostring coercion to an आकृति:Luaref object via आकृति:Luaref (though not mw.html:wikitext because of type checking).

When strung without a (valid) sep, the result is cached at Buffer.last_concat. Until purged, future calls to return that Buffer as a string will return this index instead.[note ६]

This should clear automatically whenever a Buffer object function changes the contents of a Buffer. You may manually purge the cache by setting this key to nil, as well as by passing nothing to आकृति:Luaself.

आकृति:Luaself

See also आकृति:Luaself for a faster, simpler version of this op.

Appends a value to the Buffer. In rough terms, Buffer:_'string1':_'string2' is the same as Buffer = Buffer..'string1'..'string2'. (It may help to imagine :_ as a .. that has stood up and is now casting a shadow.)

If passed an invalid value listed below, this is a no-op:

A table with no __tostring will pass through आकृति:Luaref before insertion. An आकृति:Luaref may be thrown if the table would cause table.concat to error. (Use आकृति:Luaself instead for such tables.)

When passed pos of type आकृति:Luaref, the argument is identical to pos for आकृति:Luaref. In fact, assuming a valid value, आकृति:Luaself is exactly the same as आकृति:Luaref.

Just like with the position arguments of Buffer(), any pos of type आकृति:Luaref would be treated as relative to length.

Set raw to true to force append a value without tostring coercion, including invalid values.[note ४] If given only two (non-self) arguments with the second being a boolean, then the second is read as raw instead.

आकृति:Luaself

Removes the value buffered at pos. As with आकृति:Luaself, a string pos string is treated as #Buffer + pos.

If a non-boolean replacement is provided, then it will replace the value indexed at pos. Passing a boolean as the second argument is a no-op.

When replacement is nil, the op is basically आकृति:Luaref. As with the positional arguments of other Buffer methods, any numerical string pos is added to length, such that आकृति:Luaself removes the last item. Note the only type check on replacement is a direct comparison to both booleans (nil is implied). Any other type, including strings, sets the Buffer to raw mode.

A pos that is omitted, nil, or false has the same effect as though '0' (or आकृति:Luaself) were passed. Given only one non-numerical argument which evaluates true but आकृति:Luaref would return it as nil, this treats it as though it were passed as the second. If passed a non-numerical pos with any other argument, including nil, this is effectively a no op (though may still purge the cache).

आकृति:Luaself

Takes a table value, iterates through all number keys आकृति:Luaref, appending each valid value to the end of the Buffer. In contrast to आकृति:Luaref, this starts at the most negative key (down to आकृति:Luaref) and ends at the most positive index, continuing through any nil keys and includes non-integer number keys. (Note: despite more thorough iteration, the runtime of Module:Buffer.__pairs is almost statisically indistinguishable from that of ipairs in most cases. Details at Performance and require'Module:Buffer'.__pairs.)

A table value that has no metatable will have its contents iterated by this function before moving on to the next value. All other data types are processed by आकृति:Luaself.

By default, this ignores non-number keys unless nanKeys evaluates true. If so, non-number keys are processed after number keys. Keep in mind such keys are iterated in आकृति:Luaref order, though an order may be imposed by wrapping each pair in a table indexed at a number key.

If given a value = pos pair, defined as a number or number string indexed at a non-number key, then they will be passed as the value and pos arguments for आकृति:Luaself. Thus,

आकृति:Luaself

produces the same result as:

Buffer:_(1):_(2):_(3)
if variable then
	Buffer:_(4)
else
	Buffer:_'four':_('zero',1)--vs :_all{four='1',zero=1}; less redundant would be
end                           --   :_all{'four',zero=1}, but that doesn't demo string numbers
Buffer:_'... done'
--returns "1234... done" if variable evaluates true or "zero123four... done" if false

If a non-number key points to a value that cannot be coerced into a आकृति:Luaref then the pair may be treated as functionName = args, when functionName matches a Buffer object function and args is not boolean. If args is such that value[1] evaluates true, then this will pass the return of आकृति:Luaref to the named function; otherwise, the value is passed as is. [note ७]

आकृति:Luaself

Passes any arguments to Module:Buffer to create a new Buffer object, sets an external reference to the parent Buffer and returns the child.[note ८]

This does not append the child to the parent. (See आकृति:Luaself)

Also, be aware that Buffer parent references are आकृति:Luaref. Thus, if you were to (re-)set a local variable that is currently set to the parent, such could trigger immediate garbage collection on the parent.

आकृति:Luaself

Joins a Buffer with sep and appends result to its parent, which is returned. If no parent is found, this is a no-op and returns the same Buffer.

When given two or more arguments, this reads the first as opsआकृति:--the number of :_out() operations to perform.[note ९] This applies the first sep in sep-list for the current Buffer, the second for its parent, the third for its grandparent, and so on.

If the last item is a आकृति:Luaref, then any nil in sep-list default to table[1]; any false mean "no-sep".[note १०] The table may be the second arg (i.e. sep-list may be omitted). If it has other keys, then table[n] would apply instead of table[1], making these synonymous:
आकृति:Luaself and आकृति:Luaself.

The number 0 is "magic" when passed as the first arg (even by itself), joining and appending to the same Buffer after it has been आकृति:Luaself. This is the only method by which a Buffer in raw mode may lose that status. Parent references are preserved.

आकृति:Luaself

Joins a Buffer with sep and returns the string.

This uses the same helper method as आकृति:Luaself to handle multiple arguments, with which, if provided, this creates a new temporary Buffer to which this appends the results of the number of generations specified by ops, with each ancestor in front of its descendants. This then performs one additional concat op using the sep at ops + 1 and returns the result. If a parent-less Buffer is reached before ops, then the sep that follows its op number will separate the generations.

When no valid sep is given, this returns a string identical to what would append to the next ancestor, if those arguments were passed to Buffer:_out instead and one additional :_out() op performed.

However, because this does not actually append child Buffers to their parent, the result may differ where this would insert the sep at ops + 1 and Buffer:_out would place the parent's sep between it and its child instead.

आकृति:Luaself

Nils all keys of the table referenced by clear and unsets its metatable. If clear evaluates false, this simply purges the cache at आकृति:Luaself.

If given a table to copy, this will duplicate all key-value pairs of copy into clear, cloning any table value recursively via Buffer:_cc(0, value). This returns the Buffer unless passed the number 0 as clear, which causes this to create a new table and return that instead. Passing true as copy is equivalent to passing the Buffer itself. If copy is not a table, then it will be set as the first item in clear as long as it is not false.

While this may resemble आकृति:Luaref, there are several differences, namely that this:

To obtain the key-value pairs left as empty strings in the previous copy op in a table, simply call this again such with value such that rawequal(clear, copy) is true; call :getParent() on this table returns clear (useful after leeaving the local scope which referenced clear).

आकृति:Luaself

To skip generations without breaking the Buffer chain, see #global functions.

Resembling the reverse of आकृति:Luaself, this calls आकृति:Luaself on the Buffer's parent with the arguments given and appends the strung ancestor(s) to the current Buffer, which is returned.

The parent is unaffected by this operation and may still be retrieved via आकृति:Luaself or re-appended again with this function.

आकृति:Luaself

Note that there is no 'getChild' method[note ८]

Returns parent Buffer, or, if none exists, creates a new Buffer and returns it as the adopted parent. As with आकृति:Luaself, this does not automatically append the adoptive child to the new parent.

Pass a non-false value and this performs an op on the parent object.

If passed anything other than value (including nil), this requires that value names a function available to the parent object, which this calls and forwards the additional आकृति:Luaself.

Pass only a table value which has no metatable and this forwards value to the parent which calls आकृति:Luaself.

Given only a string starting with _ and naming a parent function, this calls it on the parent without arguments. Any other valid singular argument appends to the end of the parent Buffer.[note १२]

आकृति:Luaself

Unsets Buffer parent reference.

If passed any args, they are forwarded to the current parent, if one exists, via Buffer:getParent as a "parting gift". In either case, returns the current Buffer.

This is not necessary for आकृति:Luaref since Buffer parent references are weak. Rather, use this when it is desirable to assign a new parent via Buffer:getParent or, for example, to prevent the inclusion of an ancestor when passing आकृति:Luaref as ops for functions such as आकृति:Luaself (more useful when recycling Module:Buffer from another Module).

आकृति:Luaself

Switches a Buffer to stream mode. While streaming, the __call metamethod will append values to the end of the Buffer instead of the usual op.

Aside from that, there is only one other function: आकृति:Luaself. Any args passed to Buffer:stream are forwarded to that function for a reason that should be evident when you finish reading this very short section.

No special action is needed to exit this mode. The normal call to string op is restored upon the use of any regular Buffer function or any operation which coerces the Buffer into a string (e.g. the .. operator).

आकृति:Luaself

Stream-Buffer objects accept only one argument which they append if valid. That is, the op is a streamlined version of आकृति:Luaself sans the pos and raw args, improving performance by about 50 percent (or, in one test versus .., over 2000 percent).

This also exploits आकृति:Luaref to append a series of string literals (and tables) with nothing between them (or only आकृति:Luaref if desired).

For example, both A and B will produce identical strings:

local A = require'Module:Buffer':stream'A string of text may flow''with nothing between each string' 'or perhaps only a space'
	'or even tab and line-break characters''and continue to append individually''for use with a joiner'
local B = require'Module:Buffer':_'A string of text may flow':_'with nothing between each string' :_ 'or perhaps only a space'
	:_'or even tab and line-break characters':_'and continue to append individually':_'for use with a joiner'
mw.log(A==B, A:_str' ')
true	A string of text may flow with nothing between each string or perhaps only a space or even tab and line-break characters and continue to append individually for use with a joiner

आकृति:Luaself

Appends an undetermined number of valid values to the Buffer object.[note १३]

If the above line gives you Déjà vu, that is because it is drawn from आकृति:Luaref. However, unlike mw.html:wikitext, this does not stop at the first nil value.[note १४]

Also, despite a more nuanced handling of non-string objects, this is over twice as fast as its mw.html analog and should be preferred for appending multiple strings to (Stream-)Element-Buffers.

HTML library extension

सम्पादन करी

Upon the first call to आकृति:Luaself, Module:Buffer clones the आकृति:Luaref, adding Module:Buffer's __eq and __concat metamethods along with a few additional functions.

Objects with this modified metatable are referred to as Buffer-HTML objects. Yet, though dressed in bells and whistles, they are only named with Buffer as an adverb since they lack most Buffer object functions.

In contrast, the Element-Buffer (returned by the function call on a Buffer-HTML object) is a true Buffer object with specialized "tricks" allowing complex structures to be built via both mw.html and Buffer object methods as well as through a builder that perhaps marries the best of both worlds.

Buffer functions for HTML

सम्पादन करी

आकृति:Luaself

Accepts the same parameters as आकृति:Luaref to create and return a modified mw.html object. As with आकृति:Luaself, this does not append the child object to the parent Buffer and instead sets a Buffer-style parent reference.

An exception to the above is when chaining this to an Element-Buffer and such produces a selfClosing tag; when both conditions are met, this appends the tag and returns to the same Buffer.[note १५]

Unlike mw.html.create, if args has keys other than args.parent and args.selfClosing, it will pass for further processing through आकृति:Luaself (a cousin of आकृति:Luaself that handles mw.html functions). Moreover, if passed a table where mw.html.create expects tagName, this treats it as args instead.

Finally, this does not automatically set the mw.html.parent reference, making this an alternative to mw.html:tag

आकृति:Luaself

Available only after आकृति:Luaself is used the first time.

Accepts the same arguments as आकृति:Luaself, however this instead return the last Buffer-HTML object ("lastHTML") created, or, if available, the lastHTML passed to any of the following functions:

आकृति:Luaself

Available only after आकृति:Luaself is used the first time.

This (re-)appends the last Buffer-HTML object to the current Buffer object. The raw and pos args are generally the same as those in आकृति:Luaself.

When called with no arguments on an Element-Buffer, this appends lastHTML without string coercion. Be warned however that if the Element-Buffer belongs to lastHTML or one of its tags, such will cause an infinite loop, which can be avoided by passing an explicit nil to append lastHTML as a string.[note १६]

Buffer-HTML objects may be used like any mw.html object. (In fact, merely replacing mw.html.create with require'Module:Buffer':_inHTML in an existing Module should produce the same output.)

Most mw.html functions are unchanged, except आकृति:Luaref, आकृति:Luaref, and आकृति:Luaref are embedded in a wrapper function that checks whether they return a normal mw.html object. If so, switches the metatable to convert it to a Buffer-HTML object and sets a parent reference. [note १७]

As a side bonus, the .. may be used on Buffer-mw.html objects directly (no आकृति:Luaref needed).

आकृति:Luaself

Call this object as a function to return its .nodes index[note १८], which this converts to an आकृति:Luaself object, granting it the same metatable as regular Module:Buffer objects (as well as several additional "tricks") and assigning the Buffer-HTML as its parent Buffer.[note १९]

This takes one argument which is forwarded to its Element-Buffer. Tables pass to the specialized HTML builder आकृति:Luaself. All other #valid values are appended to its Element-Buffer via आकृति:Luaself.

आकृति:TOC tab

You cannot chain call regular Buffer functions on a Buffer-HTML object; however, since mw.html functions cannot read Buffer-style parent references, modified versions of methods that return the parent Buffer are available to Buffer-HTML without having to call into the Element-Buffer. For convenience, आकृति:Luaref is called automatically prior to the op, though after the lastHTML reference has been set for आकृति:Luaself.[note २०]

0 if passed 0 as the first argument, these do not redirect the self-action via :allDone(), however, these always return a Buffer-HTML object (think आकृति:Luaself). For :_out only, the "magic" number zero permanently consolidates Buffer-HTML.nodes (whether or not converted) just like :_out(0) on a normal Buffer except it would not unset raw mode on an Element-Buffer.

$ When passed a valid sep for the first op, these temporarily[0] switch the Element-Buffer (or unconverted .nodes) with a table containing only the concatenated string before stringing the Buffer-HTML in the first op. As with the non-HTML versions, only :_out appends the string to the parent Buffer.

^ This takes arguments for आकृति:Luaself and calls it on the parent Buffer of the HTML tree, returning and appending the result to the same Buffer-HTML object. In other words, the "auto-allDone" doesn't really apply here, or at least not in the same sense as with the other functions. (As a reminder, Buffer:_inHTML does not append to the parent Buffer those Buffer-HTML objects which it returns.)

In addition to the above, global functions may be available to Buffer-HTML if enabled; these functions are the same for all Module:Buffer objectsआकृति:--i.e. the self action is never redirected.

Element-Buffer functions

सम्पादन करी

आकृति:Luaself

Sharing the same metatable as with regular Buffer objects, Element-Buffers concatenate the same way when called to produce a string analogous to the JavaScript DOM "innerHTML" property. In other words, when strung, it is generally the contents of the Buffer-HTML object without the "outerHTML" or tag.

There are exceptions to this "innerHTML" behavior. For instance, as appended to another object via आकृति:Luaref, an Element-Buffer and its Buffer-HTML are interchangeable (though appending the former via आकृति:Luaself only includes the inner result).

Also, using the concatenation operator .. on an Element-Buffer includes its tag in a manner depending on if it is selfClosing:

  • For most tags, the conjoined string is placed inside the tag, e.g. Buffer:_inHTML'p' 'inner text' .. 1 returns '<p>inner text1</p>'.
  • For selfClosers, the .. op redirects to its Buffer-HTML, e.g. insert :_add{selfClosing=true} in the above example before .. 1 to produce '<p />1'.
आकृति:See

You may use most Buffer object functions normally, however if there is a Buffer-HTML version, it instead behaves as though chained on the outer HTML object.[note २१] You may also chain any mw.html object function. Unless otherwise indicated, such returns a wrapper method that merely redirects the self-action to the outside Buffer-HTML.[note २२]

As a final note, Element-Buffers are in permanent raw mode since it is expected that some mw.html method (e.g. :tag and :node) may or will append non-string elements.[note २३]

आकृति:Luaself

When passed nothing, this should behave just like आकृति:Luaref as called the "outer" HTML objectआकृति:--returning Buffer-HTML.parent, if available, or Buffer-HTML if not.

However, this has been re-designed to accept ops, the number of :done() operations to perform. Thus, ElementBuffer:done(4) is equivalent to BufferHTML:done():done():done():done().

Pass 0 (zero) as dones to return to the Element-Buffer's direct HTML container.

Finally, keep in mind that Buffer-HTML objects use the original mw.html:done (albeit in a light wrapper).

आकृति:Luaself

This uses the same helper method as आकृति:Luaself to handle arguments and produce new Buffer-HTML objects, selectively passing args to आकृति:Luaself when it contains keys not used by आकृति:Luaref.

As may be expected, this differs from Buffer:_inHTML in that this actually appends the tag and will set a mw.html-style parent reference. This also lacks the other function's "auto-done" feature for selfClosing tags.

As with the other Element-Buffer remake of an mw.html method, the features described here do not apply to the version used by Buffer-HTML objects.

आकृति:Luaself

Takes a table as its only argument. This then thoroughly iterates all number keys from lowest to highest using this module's custom __pairs method. Most values append as wikitext if valid. If a table is indexed at a number key, this recursively iterates the table before moving on to the next key.

After processing all number key-value pairs, this then iterates the other (non-number) keys. For those naming a core Buffer object function, this selectively unpacks args in a manner described at आकृति:Luaself when that function is passed the nanKey parameter (excepting that this does not read numbers as pos, i.e. treats them the same way as strings).

This also accepts keys naming HTML and global functions as well as mw.html arguments. Thus, ElementBuffer:_add{ tag = 'br', 'text'} appends a BR tag after the text and ElementBuffer:_add{ {tag = 'br' }, 'text'} appends the BR before the text. Note however that how this handles args for such keys depends on the particular function or argument named:

ElementBuffer:_add{ arg = value }
The effect of passing args with keys such as args.selfClosing and args.parent is the same as though args were passed to आकृति:Luaref. This also takes one additional arg, i.e. args.tagName, which value replaces the original tagName of the HTML object (or, if false, removes the tag).

Note that these are the only keys for which a boolean arg would result in an op. (For Buffer object functions that do not no-op when passed only a boolean, place the boolean in an args table for unpacking.)

ElementBuffer:_add{ cssName = cssValue }
A non-number key and value pair may default as the cssName and cssValue parameters for आकृति:Luaref when the key matches none of the three argName keys nor the name of any available function for Buffer and mw.html objects.

This sends non-boolean cssValue though आकृति:Luaref prior to forwarding it to mw.html:css. Because this is the default, any typoed key goes to mw.html:css as cssName. Names of functions not yet loaded also end up there.

For convenience, any _ character in the key string is automatically substituted with the - character; thus border_bottom_style = is equivalent to ['border-bottom-style'] =.

The form Element-Buffer:_add{ css = { cssName = cssValue } } also works if sacrificing performance to reduce ambiguity is your thing (or to clear a previously set value; see example at args.htmlFunction for more details).

ElementBuffer:_add{ tag = tagName }
ElementBuffer:_add{ tag = { tagName, argslist } }
Set the key args.tag to a string and this calls आकृति:Luaref with it as the tagName argument. This then raw inserts the returned mw.html object ("tag"), emulating the effect of आकृति:Luaref minus parent references, which are unnecessary.

Pair the args.tag key with a table value and this calls mw.html.create with table[1] as tagName (or nil if #invalid), appending it as described above for string values, but also pointing tag.parent to the Element-Buffer's parent as well as temporarily setting the tag as the parent Buffer of tag.nodes. This then treats tag.nodes as a pseudo-Element-Buffer, recursing tag.nodes as "self" and the table as args, though only iterating keys not equal to 1 (or less).[*]

Note this appends normal mw.html objects. That said, most Buffer functions named in args-list should still work as though the tag and tag.nodes were Buffer objects.[note २४]

Upon completing a recursive iteration for args.tag, this checks if the tag is selfClosing, in which case, this saves memory (which can improve performance) by setting tag.nodes to nil. Likewise, if its tagName property evaluates false, this nils tag.styles and tag.attributes. Such presumes those properties will not be modified afterwards, so use mw.html:tag outside of Element-Buffer:_add if such is not the case.

ElementBuffer:_add{ done = wikitext }
ElementBuffer:_add{ done = { ops, argslist } }
Similar to args.tag, this treats the first index of the table as the ops argument of आकृति:Luaself. After calling that function, this then iterates all subsequent keys in a recursive call on the Element-Buffer of the Buffer-HTML object returned.

ElementBuffer:_add{ allDone = wikitext }
ElementBuffer:_add{ allDone = { argslist } }
Similar to the previous two, except that the first index is not used as an argument; thus, the entire table is iterated.

ElementBuffer:_add{ globalFunction = name }
ElementBuffer:_add{ globalFunction = { name, save, argslist } }
ElementBuffer:_add{ _B = { var, argslist } }
If the global functions have been loaded and a key matches one, this calls the function with the first two arguments आकृति:Luarefed from the paired args-list table. This then recursively iterates the list, excluding keys less than or equal to 2, with whatever object is returned as self. However, if the returned object has a metatable and object.nodes exists, the self will be object.nodes instead.

Because आकृति:Luaself takes only one argument, args._B only unpacks the first index and starts the iteration after that key.

If neither of the first two keys evaluate true, this assumes the paired value is a string for use as the name argument for the function matching its key.[note २५] In that case, the current call stack's self (an Element-Buffer or tag.nodes if this was called indirectly) is self' for the global function.

ElementBuffer:_add{ htmlFunction = object }
ElementBuffer:_add{ htmlFunction = { arg-list, name = value } }
If args.key matches an आकृति:Luaref that does not have its own args section, this checks if the associated object is table. If not a table, or if object.nodes evaluates true, this calls the mw.html function with the object as the only argument.

For table objects without an object.nodes, this iterates the table (non-recursively), repeatedly calling the named mw.html function with one or two arguments depending on key's type in each loop. Non-number key-value pairs are both passed as arguments. For numeric indices, only the value is passed. Boolean values are a no-op.

Unlike with most implementions of Module:Buffer's __pairs, this first loops through non-number keys, followed by number keys (still ordered from lowest to highest). Thus, something like ElementBuffer:_add{ attr = { 'width', width = 20 } } is equivalent to ElementBuffer:attr( 'width', 20 ):attr( 'width' )(), setting then unsetting the width attribute and returning the Element-Buffer for a net no-op (though the practical purpose of such is a mystery for this developer).

For args.css only, this auto-replaces underscores with hypens for string keysआकृति:--i.e., you may save four keystrokes/pair by typing css_property = instead of ["css-property"] =. This does not apply to strings indexed at number keys.



 Unlike with tables passed directly, recursive iterations for functions marked with start at the smallest number greater than 1 instead of negative infinity. Such was decided for performance and coding simplicity on the reasoning that any practical purpose for indexing at a key less than one may be accomplished by instead indexing it at any of the trillion or so floating point values between one and twoआकृति:--e.g. 1.01.

 The iteration may start after 2 for some global functions.

Loadable convenience extensions

सम्पादन करी

The methods here are loaded on demand or depend on subroutines which need initialization.

Whereas most Module:Buffer methods are built for performance, these methods perform tasks which generally require less CPU usage if handled outside of Module:Buffer (i.e. via local variable declarations). That said, they can greatly simplify the structure of the modules which employ them by doing, in a fluent manner, many tasks which may otherwise force an awkward interruption in Buffer call chains.

Methods such as आकृति:Luaref and आकृति:Luaself traverse a node tree in only one direction. While fine for returning to an ancestor, they do not provide navigation to a non-ancestor (often necessary for templates with co-dependent parameters). Yet, repeated breaks in call chains to set local variables for several nodes of the same branch can look choppy if not confusing for nodes many generations removed from its declaration statement.[note २६]

Templates with several conditionally-appended nodes with similar, but not identical, parts may present another conundrum for coders who must decide between having awkward call chain interruptions to store potentially repeated components as local variables or constructing a somewhat redundant module that is more susceptible to maintenance errors by future editors who may patch one code segment but miss the sibling buried within a convoluted nesting of आकृति:Luaref.

This module's global functions and added syntactic sugar for the _G object were formulated to simplify such node trees with multi-conditional or repeating structures by providing concise in-chain variable declaration. The extension is enabled by passing your global table to the moduleआकृति:--either in the initial call to require'Module:Buffer' (more instructions in that section) or to आकृति:Luaself which forwards arguments to Module:Buffer.[note २७]

आकृति:Luaself आकृति:Distinguish2

Pass name and save to assign the object passed as save to a global variable via आकृति:Luaref.[note २८]

Pass only name and this substitutes self for save to assign the Buffer object to _G[name] instead. Give an explicit nil as save to unset a global. This returns the Buffer object as well as any argument given after name.

This is a no-op when name is nil or a boolean, or, when save (eventually) evaluates true and आकृति:Luaref also returns true.

If the named global already exists, this "backs up" the old value by moving it to the meta __index of the global table, setting a new metatable if none exists.[note २९] Retrieving the old value requires unsetting the new one via आकृति:Luaself (more details in that section). If overwritten a third time, the first value is discarded and the second takes its place in the back up.

If a metaglobal variable exists but the global is nil, this sets the global without unsetting the metaglobal (i.e. does not back up a nil global). An exception is when this is given an explicit nil as save and only the metaglobal exists; thus, passing nil twice for the same name, unsets the key in both the global table and its metaindex.

आकृति:Luaself

This आकृति:Luaref with the global table as the first argument and name and save as the second and third, respectively, returning the Buffer object for call chaining.[example १] This is a no-op if name is nil or a boolean.

आकृति:See Note that Buffer methods use a local variable new_G as a proxy for the global table _G; though not a global index, the string 'new_G' is a "magic word" that changes the destination for future save for this and Buffer:_G.

Pass a table as var (same place as save) to set as the new new_G. Any table such that var._G == _G is treated as a (former) new_G object. This आकृति:Luaref of former proxies and आकृति:Luaref with the आकृति:Luaself __call method on non-new_G tables. Then, this, if third parameter metaindex equals:

To omit or to pass nil/false as var has the same effect as आकृति:Luaself. Pass true instead and this treats it as though passed as metaindex, creating a new proxy without backing up the incumbent.

आकृति:Luaself

This returns the value indexed at key name in the global table. If it does not exist, this forwards both arguments to आकृति:Luaself and returns the saved value (which may be itself).

In other words, आकृति:Luaself is roughly equivalent to _G[name] = _G[name] or save or save==nil and Buffer.

The string 'new_G' will return the Module:Buffer local variable new_G, used as a proxy for the global variable _G. Given more than one argument, this forwards arguments to आकृति:Luaself to assign another proxy global before returning the (newly-deposed) proxy. This then sets new_G._G to the original _G object for call chaining. (See § chain call in _G object).

आकृति:Luaself

Takes only one argument and returns that argument.

Assuming the only X declared is आकृति:Luaref and new_G equals _G, then आकृति:Luaself and आकृति:Luaself are equivalent.[note ३०]

When passed a variable that does not exist, this returns the Buffer nil object:

आकृति:Luaself
आकृति:Luaself

The Buffer-nil object is unique. Calling this as a function returns nothing (in contrast, calling an empty Buffer object returns an empty string). This does however have the Module:Buffer __concat metamethod, which treats this the same way as any invalid object (i.e. ignores it).

Appending this via आकृति:Luaref or आकृति:Luaself has the same effect as appending nil. Passing this to आकृति:Luaref returns nil instead of the string 'nil'.

The only real Buffer method in its meta __index is आकृति:Luaself, however, any non-numerical key string retrieves a function that only returns the Buffer nil object for call chaining. In a sense, you can think of Buffer:_B(var):... as an if var~=nil then var:... block around the following chain that ends in the next :_B().

If आकृति:Luaref, the clone will be a normal Buffer object.

The first _G variable passed to this module is given a __call metamethod that self-आकृति:Luarefs and returns in a manner that depends on whether it was called directly or from a chain.[example २] This module conserves any pre-existing metatable and alters no metamethod other than __call.

_G( k, v )
_G'string'

When called, the _G object self-sets any string passed as k with whatever is passed as v. This returns v, or nil if omitted (unlike with rawset, an explicit nil is not necessary to unset a variable with direct calls).

Note that k must be a string to declare or unset a global in this op. Tables passed as the first argument are treated as though this were executed via a call chain (discussed shortly). Passing k which is not one of those two types will throw an error.

chained-object:_G( k, v )
chained-object:_G'string'

आकृति:Distinguish2

When used in a call chain, this rawsets the key-value pair in the chained object and returns that object. The _G object may chain itself when returning _G is desired for another op instead of v.

In contrast to the direct op, the in-chain op will index non-string k values. Moreover, this only unsets object[k] when passed an explicitly nil v.

If v is omitted in-chain, this uses the chained object as the missing argument; thus, (chained) object:_G'string' has identical effect and return to _G('string', object).

The same __call method is given to new_G objects created by Buffer:_R, however the direct call only works if its metaindex is the _G object. Any table such that table._G points to the _G object may chain save to itself regardless of metaindex.

Though the behavior of the chain op when v is omitted may be a dead ringer to that of Buffer:_G when save is omitted and new_G is the chained object, mind that the Buffer object function sets keys in new_G variable rather than the chained (Buffer) object; in other words, this is unaffected by Buffer:_R reassigning new_G to another table. Also, this does not have the back up behavior of Buffer:_G.

Buffer-variable object

सम्पादन करी

आकृति:Luaself

Raw appends a Buffer-variable object, which may appear as a different value each time the object (or its container) is converted to a string.[example ३]

Initialize a Buffer-variable object by passing as var a:

  • number - which, when strung the first time, appears as that number and reappears as var + change the next time it is strung.
  • string - that transforms into the next ASCII character via आकृति:Luaref.
  • table - to return the first (non-nil) item, then the second, and so on as determined by आकृति:Luaref, looping back to the first item after reaching the last. (Note the change argument does not apply to table-based Buffer-variables.)
  • custom function - to be set as the _build and __tostring method of a variable-object, though instructions for coding such functions are beyond the scope of this manual.

Re-append the same variable object by passing true as the only argument. For non-table-based variables, you may specify change to append a sister object which transforms the value at the rate specified. Changes are cumulative. Thus, if the original is re-strung after a sister, its value will differ from that of its last appearance by the sum of the original and sister rates and vice versa.

Apply a change without appending a new variable object to the Buffer by passing false. The shift is effective immediately and may affect previously appended variable objects not yet finalized. Pass only false (i.e., omit change) to produce the same effect as stringing the original once. Note that the false-change is the only change table-based Buffer variables will honor.[note ३१]

Pass nothing to append a version which simply repeats the result of the last stringing. While generally identical in effect to the object generated by :_var(true, 0), the Buffer-variable will return nothing if strung before any of its sisters.

If passed an explicit nil as the first argument, this is no-op. If passed a boolean before any Buffer-variable has been initialized, this is also a no-op. Note that any op disables future caching at आकृति:Luaself for all Buffer objects in your module (and in any module which may require it).

String, mw.ustring, and mw.text libraries

सम्पादन करी

Buffer:functionName( ... )

You may directly chain any function from the following libraries on Buffer objects:

आकृति:Collist

Functions from these libraries added to the Module:Buffer metatable on-demand and placed within a wrapper method that strings the Buffer object for the first argument and then forwards the remaining arguments.

Thus, the following are equivalent: Buffer:nowiki( ... ) and आकृति:Luaref

If a name exists in both the string and mw.ustring libraries, the string version takes precedence. You may prefix the letter u on any mw.ustring functionआकृति:--e.g. Buffer:ulen returns the number of unicode characters and Buffer:len returns the number of bytes.

Buffer:gsub and Buffer:ugsub have a slightly different wrapper which substitutes the repl argument of आकृति:Luaref and आकृति:Luaref when it evaluates false or is omitted with an empty string (otherwise the originals would throw an error). This saves a few keystrokes when removing characters via Buffer:gsub'[pattern]' as opposed to Buffer:gsub( '[pattern]', '' ). All other arguments are handled the same as with the other on-demand methods.

Library functions which take a non-string as the first argument are not supported.

Empty Buffer interface

सम्पादन करी

आकृति:Luaself

To obtain the first return value as a Buffer object (as opposed to whatever type the original normally returns), simply chain the imported method immediately after creating the new Buffer via Buffer:_in. Only empty Buffer objects which have a parent object will append the result of their parent in this manner.

This syntactic sugar allows two things:

  • For appending additional objects after the op via Buffer object methods.
  • For chaining multiple आकृति:Luaref methods not chainable to stringsआकृति:--e.g., this: Buffer:_in():uformat( ... ):_in():toNFD():encode'[<>#]':match'^(.-)==='
vs. the following which has the same order of operations albeit harder to see: mw.text.encode( mw.ustring.toNFD( Buffer:uformat( ... ) ), '[<>#]' ):match'^(.-)==='
Special case: Element-Buffer
सम्पादन करी

emptyElementBuffer:functionName( ... )
ElementBuffer:_in():functionName( ... )

The 'empty' behavior is different when chained to empty Element-Buffer or an empty child Buffer of an Element-Buffer.

Library methods chained to an empty Buffer which parent is an Element-Buffer object will instead string the grandparent Buffer-HTML object for use as the first argument before appending the result to the new Buffer. This interface is provided because Buffer-HTML objects, which are not true Buffer objects, are unable to load these functions, making this the only chainable option for Scribunto methods that includes the outer tag of non-empty Element-Buffers.

Chained on an empty Element-Buffer, these methods will string the Buffer object which created its HTML tree via आकृति:Luaself[note ३२] and append the result to the Element-Buffer.[example ४]

All "true" Buffer objectsआकृति:--e.g., the regular, stream, and element varietiesआकृति:--share the same आकृति:Luaref. Some Buffer-like classes, namely आकृति:Luaselfs and the आकृति:Luaself, also have this same metamethod.

The extended आकृति:Luaref operator does not append to Buffer objects. In other words, Buffers generally remain the same as before the op excepting those effects that apply whenever Buffers are strung (See आकृति:Luaself, आकृति:Luaself, and आकृति:Luaself).

Buffer .. value
value .. Buffer

Any non-table value may be joined a Buffer object with the concatenation operator .. without error.

With the exception of Element-Buffers (which are a special case), the op passes each object, ordered left-to-right, to आकृति:Luaself which inserts validated items in a new table, which this returns through आकृति:Luaref.

Concatenating an invalid value and a Buffer has generally the same effect as आकृति:Luaref unless such involves:

Buffer .. table
table .. Buffer

The same general operation applies for tables as with non-tablesआकृति:--i.e., validated values are inserted left-to-right into a new table to be joined by table.concat. In fact, tables which have a metatable (including Buffer objects which are not an Element-Buffer) are forwarded to Buffer:_ and processed the same way as non-tables.

Given a table for which आकृति:Luaref returns nil or false, this instead forwards the table to आकृति:Luaself, which iterates every value indexed at a number key in sequential order, inserting those which are valid in the new table.

As a reminder, Buffer:_ validates tables with metatables that lack a __tostring method through table.concat, which throws an error on sequences containing one or more value that is neither a string nor a number. Such accounts for nearly all cases of breaking errors involving this op.

Note that the valKey parameter of Buffer:_all is not triggered.

Element-Buffer .. value
value .. Element-Buffer
Element-Buffer .. Element-Buffer

To recap and expand upon § Element-Buffer-object, the behavior of this op depends on whether its parent Buffer-HTML is आकृति:Luaref or if the other value is also an Element-Buffer. Also, the final result always includes the outer HTML object (i.e., the tag) in some manner.

For Element-Buffers of "open" tags, this op creates a table with a metaindex that references the parent of the Element-Buffer. The table is then effectively a "mirror" of the parent Buffer-HTML object except that it contains an empty table at table.nodesआकृति:-- the index of the Element-Buffer within its parent. This then populates the mirror's inner table with the string of the Element-Buffer and the other value, validated left-to-right, in a manner not unlike what this does with the temporary table it creates when concatenating non-element Buffers to another value. This then returns the mirror table through the __tostring metamethod of the mw.html library, yielding a string which resembles that of the parent tag but with value inserted in front of or behind the original inner text depending on whether value was to the left or right of the .. operator, respectively.

When the selfClosing property of the parent evaluates true, this operates on the parent instead of the Element-Bufferआकृति:--i.e., the resulting string will have value on the outside as opposed to within the tag (placing it inside would be pointless since selfClosing tags do not show inner contents).

If both operated objects are Element-Buffers, this mirrors the parent of the first. The inner table of the mirror is then populated by inserting the string of the first Element-Buffer followed by the string the parent Buffer-HMTL of the second. The resulting string would be as though the parent of the second were the last node of the first parent. Note that this Element-to-Element rule does not apply when the first Buffer belongs to a selfClosing tag (in which case, this behaves as though the selfClosing parent were to the left of the operator, returning a string with the selfClosing tag inside the tag of the second Element-Buffer in front the latter's inner contents.)

Finally, this combines an Element-Buffer and a table value which has no metatable by passing the table as args for आकृति:Luaself with the mirror of the Element-Buffer as the "self". This avoids permanently changing the parent Buffer-HTML by setting a new table at table.attributes or table.styles in the mirror the first time methods such as आकृति:Luaref, आकृति:Luaref, आकृति:Luaref, etc. attempt to access those tables, copying the original's via the recursive form of आकृति:Luaself. Note however that permanent changes may be made to other objects whenever methods such as via आकृति:Luaself or आकृति:Luaself are keyed to navigate beyond the mirror or "sandbox".

require'Module:Buffer'.__pairs

सम्पादन करी

require'Module:Buffer'.__pairs( table, flag, ext )

Returns two values: an iterator function and the table. This is intended for use in the आकृति:Luaref for.

One distinctive feature of this pairs method is that it splits keys into two groups: आकृति:Luarefs and non-numbers. This indexes each group of keys in its own "map" object, traversed by its own iterator functionआकृति:--i.e, iterating both sets of keys requires two separate for loops. Numeric keys are served in an orderly fashion as with आकृति:Luaref except that those which are negative, non-consecutive, and non-integer may be included. Moreover, this can find some keys paired with explicitly nil values.[example ५]

The flag argument selects the iterator method returned for that loop. When flag is an explicit nil or omitted, this returns an iterator for number keys. If given any non-nil flag (i.e., false or any value that evaluates true), this returns a method for looping non-numeric keys. Because both sets are mapped at the same time, you may avoid a redundant mapping op in a subsequent loop by passing an explicit nil or false as flagआकृति:--i.e., omitting flag or passing true indicate that re-mapping is desired.

This automatically selects certain tables for "mapless" iteration. Typically, mapless differs from mapped only in that it uses fewer server resources, though, as explained in the next section on mapping, it may "miss" keys in some cases.

Mapping behavior may be modified or extended by ext. To disable mapless iteration for the table, you may pass false as ext. If not nil or false, ext must be a pairs method that takes the table as its only argument and returns a function that may iterate its keys for mapping purposes. Note that re-mapping avoidance via flag does not apply if ext is explicitly given, though a nil ext does not disqualify a table from mapless iteration.

Tables are mapped in two stages.

The initial stage is a आकृति:Luaref which inserts integers between 1 and #table in the number key map. Because nothing is checked in this step, this may map keys which the numeric map iterator would pair with nil values or with values from the table's आकृति:Luaref.

The second stage explores the table's keys with an आकृति:Luaref and आकृति:Luaref as the default expression-list, or, if ext evaluates true, the expression returned by ext( table ). This ignores keys already mapped in the first stage and checks if any unmapped key is a number before indexing it in the appropriate map group. Upon completion, if any new number key were found in the second stage, this runs the numeric map through आकृति:Luaref. No order is imposed on the non-numeric map.

Alternatively, a table may qualify for "mapless" iteration if आकृति:Luaref is not nil, and आकृति:Luaref returns nil. If either flag or ext are not nil, or if the table was previously mapped, such permanently disqualifies a table for mapless processing.[note ३३]

As a side note, if mapless numeric iteration occurs, this returns iterator, table, nil. In other words, you may use आकृति:Luaref to confirm that the table qualifies for mapless iteration when it has a third explicit return (for debugging).

आकृति:Luaself

One of four functions may be provided in the आकृति:Luaref returned by this pairs method, depending on which group of keys (numeric or non-numeric) and which iteration process (map-based or mapless) is indicated.

When key is nil or unspecified, map iterators will return the key object referenced by the first index of the relevant map along with the value it indexes. If passed the first mapped key, these iterators then return the second index mapped, which if passed in turn may retrieve the third and so on until the last mapped key has been served.

For numeric iteration, the mapless method returns 1, table[1] when key is unspecified. If a key is given, it returns key + 1, table[ key + 1 ] unless key is greater or equal to the length of the table, upon which it returns nil. For non-numeric keys, the mapless "iterator" is actually a no-op (empty) function which takes nothing, does nothing, and returns nothingआकृति:--provided only to prevent an error when the for loop expects a function.

As mentioned (using different words), key-value pairs are served independently of whether or not table[key] exists and retrieved without using आकृति:Luaref.

For example, take a look at table x as declared in the following statement: {{{1}}}. Table x has a length equal to 8. With ipairs, the for loop stops after the first pair. In contrast, this module's __pairs method will loop all 8 keys declaredआकृति:--i.e., (1, 1), (2, nil), ... (7, nil), (8, 8). That said, this only iterates two keys if table x were declared as {{{1}}} instead even though such is indistinguishable to Finally, the loop would continue to include any keys set to nil after the mapping process.</ref>

You may assign these iterators to a local variable to use them directly. If an unmapped table is given to a map iterator, it will forward the table to this pairs method for immediate mapping. Though no map table is produced for the mapless iteration, the pairs method does cache the length of the table at a map reference, which the iterator compares against key to determine when to stop. Unlike the map methods, the mapless iterator does not call the pairs method when such has been bypassed and instead compares key to the value returned by the आकृति:Luaref, which may be unstable if the loop includes code that sets or unsets indicies within the table. Also, the mapless method will throw an error if given a table that has been mapped (when it attempts to compare key to a map object).

Tips and style recommendations

सम्पादन करी

आकृति:Incomplete

For आकृति:Luaself

  • Treat :_ as though it were a .. op. Wrapping strings with unnecessary () is akin to ( 'string1' ) .. ( 'string2' ) .. ( 'string3' ).
  • Most uses of raw can be avoided through careful planning with the pos argument. That said, the performance decrease from raw is unlikely to be significant for modules transcluded on less 100,000 pages. In short, reduction in server load from avoiding raw may not be worth it if such makes the code harder to maintain.
  • To insert an empty string as a placeholder for a separator without setting raw, pass a table containing only an empty string, like so: आकृति:Luaself.
  • Raw appending a non-table is pointless since no other Scribunto type can tostring differently afterwards. However, this developer believes you are smart enough that raw and type(v)=='table' is a waste of server resources. (Such checks are why आकृति:Luaref takes twice as much time to append a list of strings as आकृति:Luaself despite their near-identical roles in an Element-Stream-Buffer).

For आकृति:Luaself and आकृति:Luaself

  • Something like Buffer_str(2, false, A, false, {C, B}) will use variable A as the parent's separator, or B instead if A is nil, or C if both A and B are nil.

For आकृति:Luaself

  • Appending values in multiple locations is one of the primary reasons why the nanKeys argument exists. While passing a boolean directly will cause an error, you can do something like...
this: Buffer:_all({condition and {_nil={'0', 'replacement'},Front=1,getParent='from child'}}}, true)
versus: Buffer:_nil('0', condition and 'replacement' or false):_(condition and 'Front', 1):getParent(condition and 'from child'):_B(child).

For आकृति:Luaself

  • If the table reference passed as clear was appended raw in multiple positions, this is akin to performing आकृति:Luaself at all positions simultaneously. (May be easier than trying to come up with a आकृति:Luaref pattern)
  • Inserting a named empty table is raw as a placeholder to be populated later via this function may be easier than calculating pos argument of आकृति:Luaself.

For आकृति:Luaself

  • When appending simple HTML structures, something like आकृति:Luaself is roughly 6 times more efficient than आकृति:Luaself'br':_out(), at least in terms of server CPU usage. (Though Buffer:_'<br />' is 25 and 4 times more efficient than both examples, respectively.)
Buffer:_inHTML is slower on the first run due to initialization. After the first run, the efficiency of Buffer:_inHTML improves by a factor of 4 (though not quite as fast as the other two).



  1. The following demonstates how, by combining Buffer:_R and Buffer:_G, the global variable v can be declared, backed-up and replaced, replaced without back-up, restored from back-up, and removed completely:
    require'Module:Buffer'
       (_G,'v')           -- call module with global functions enabled and declare new buffer as v
       :_'A'              -- append 'A' to the returned buffer
       :_G('v', 1):_(v)   -- _G.v = 1, shift old value (the buffer) to metaglobal.__index
       :_R('v', 2):_(v)   -- _G.v = 2, discard old value (1) without back-up
       :_R'v':_(v)        -- unset _G.v, which now defaults to metaglobal.__index.v (the buffer)
       :_G('v', nil)", "  -- remove back-up and join the buffer with a separator
    ..' and '..tostring(v)-- returns 'A, 1, 2, A12 and nil'
    
  2. Saving a new_G object globally via a chain call can prevent conflict. The follow example has a hypothetical "Module:X" that may overwrite globals declared by your module or unwittingly discard your new_G when it passes _G to Module:Buffer (passing _G to this module resets new_G to the global table even when the global functions are already enabled):
    return require'Module:Buffer'(_G)--Return before require to show intent to return a Buffer object; chain cannot be broken
    	:_R(frame.args.title and     --store values outside global scope if invoked with title parameter
    		'new_G')
    	:_G'myBuff'                  --save current Buffer in new_G
    		:_2'new_G'               --retrieve new_G
    			:_G'my_G'            --save new_G as global my_G
    			:_G('t',             --save title object as my_G.t for later re-use
    				mw.title.new(frame.args.title or frame.args.page)
    			).myBuff             --go to my_G.myBuff (my_G lacks the Buffer:_2 method, but doesn't need it)
    	:stream(my_G.t.exists        --just arbitrary code to show how in-line storage may be used without breaking the chain
    			or warning(my_G.t),  --local function warning() declared before return
    		require'Module:X'.main(my_G.t),
    		my_G.t.isSubpage and subpage(my_G.t),
    		... )
    	:_R('new_G', my_G)           --set my_G as new_G again and have the new_G from Module:X as its metaindex
    	:_(frame.args.detail and 
    		my_G.info
    			:_(frame.args.detail)--append Buffer object from Module:X's new_G.info if args.details and it exists; append detail param to result
    		or my_G.summary)         --just append summary from Module:X if not invoked with detail param.
    	:_B(t and					 --use global t as a shorthand for "if not frame.args.title then" (t only declared a global in line 2 if no title given)
    		myBuff
    			:stream(frame.args.page,
    				frame.args.details2,
    				mw.html.create'br',
    				require'Module:Y'.main(frame))
    		or my_G.myBuff           --place results in a table if invoked with title param (alternative chain call branches within Buffer:_B)
    			:_inHTML'table'(_addArgs)
    			:_parent()
    	)
    
  3. The following contrived example demonstrates most features of आकृति:Luaself:
    local H, sep = require'Module:Buffer':_inHTML('div',{'Heading ',_var={nil,'odd','even'},color='blue',['text-decoration']='underline'})
    	:_out():_html(true):_html(true):_html(true)
    sep = H:_in'This is ':_var():_' - ':_var'A':_var(3,-1):_'\n'
    return H:_in(H(sep)):_(sep)
    	:_'math:':_var():_'+ 5 =':_var(true,5):_';':_var():_out(0,' '):_var(false):_' - 1 = ':_var()
    --[[ produces:
    <div style="color:blue;text-decoration:underline">Heading odd</div>This is odd - A3
    <div style="color:blue;text-decoration:underline">Heading even</div>This is even - B2
    <div style="color:blue;text-decoration:underline">Heading odd</div>This is odd - C1
    <div style="color:blue;text-decoration:underline">Heading even</div> This is even - D0
     math: 0 + 5 = 5 ; 5 - 1 = 4   --]]
    
  4. Compare the comment and source:
    --[[--= Result: ===>
    
    This is just a quick example to demonstrate a neat concept:
    <div>Notice how the same object is strung which allows you to recycle boilerplate text.
    <p>3 is 1 added to 2.</p>
    <span>Though this is not really realistic to be fair...
    Edit: not realistic at all</span>
    I hope such is much to your liking.</div>
    
    --]]--= Source: ===>
    require'Module:Buffer'
    	'%s is %s to %s.'--A
    	:_inHTML'div'():format('Notice how the same object', 'strung which allows you', 'recycle boilerplate text')
    		:tag'p'():format(3, '1 added', 2)
    		:done()
    		:tag'span'():format('Though this', 'not really realistic', 'be fair..')
    			:_in():sub(21, 29)
    				:_('\nEdit:', 1)
    				:_'istic at all'
    			:_out()
    		:done()
    		:_parent()--B
    	:_out'\n'
    	:format('This', 'just a quick example', 'demonstrate a neat trick',--A
    		'I hope such', 'much', 'your liking')--B
    	:gsub('trick.', 'concept:\n')
    
  5. Take a moment to look at the following tables X and Y:
    local X = { [5] = 5 }
    local Y = { nil, nil, nil, nil, 5 }
    

    These tables are indistinguishable to आकृति:Luaref and आकृति:Luaref (ipairs iterates nothing and pairs yields only one key-value pair for either table).

    While this module's __pairs method also gives only one pair for table X, it loops all five explicitly declared indicies for table Y, as shown in the console input below with Module:Buffer as p:

    for k, v in p.__pairs{ [5] = 5 } do mw.log(k, v) end
    5	5
    for k, v in p.__pairs{ nil, nil, nil, nil, 5 } do mw.log(k, v) end
    1	nil
    2	nil
    3	nil
    4	nil
    5	5
    

    Detecting nil values is actually a side effect of trying to improve performance by avoiding type checking on some keys when sorting them (see stage one of § Mapping process), but, if pressed for a practical use, let's just say this can be a means to force the inclusion of keys from the table's meta __index or to allow keys to be unset without excluding them from the iteration.

Non-literal interpretations of the source code (that is, more opinion than fact) are provided here to offer additional clarity. Overly technical details may be found here as well when including such caveats appears more likely to confuse than help those advanced-but-not-quite-fluent in Lua.

Though commentary was deemed unnecessary for the आकृति:Scribunto, Scribunto methods are "safe" for beginners and offer extensive in-code help in the form of आकृति:Luaref messages. In contrast, Module:Buffer methods, intended for intermediate-advanced coders, are built with "safeties off"आकृति:--i.e., minimal type filtering and custom error warningsआकृति:--to maximize performance (though the rare आकृति:Luaref may be found in methods which seldom need to be used more than once and where the default error message seemed exceptionally vague or difficult to trace).

  1. For instance, Module:Asbox is transcluded on about 2 million pages, which each have Asbox using Buffer functions on 10-30 variables, some of which may be strings generated by other Modules that may eventually use Module:Buffer several times. Finally, throw in the fact that many pages transclude Asbox multiple times, and you can see how a few microseconds per op could translate to hours for the job queue.
  2. For your convience, the self operator : and . are interchangeable when used on the Module directly, though the self-op is required for nearly all other interactions with objects created by the Module.
  3. Passing arguments after name is primary used when आकृति:Luaself is indirectly called by आकृति:Luaself or आकृति:Luaself. For example:
    require'Module:Buffer'(_G,'arg'):_all({'arg',arg and {' was saved:' ,_in={_G, 't', ' awesome'}}}, true):_(t and {t(), t..'r', t..'st'})
    produces: arg was saved: awesome awesomer awesomest
  4. ४.० ४.१ Appending a value "raw"आकृति:--i.e. without string type coercionआकृति:-- sets "raw mode", which incurs a performance penalty because future tostring ops would have to re-validate every value in the Buffer via आकृति:Luaself to insert them in a new table before passing that to table.concat (vs. passing itself directly). That said, re-stringing a raw Buffer is still usually several times faster than using the आकृति:Luaref op to join an equivalent number of strings. (See #Tips for ways to avoid using raw)
  5. Later sections may describe values as being numerical or numeric. Though perfect synonyms in normal usage, these adjectives are not interchangeable here. For the purposes of documenting Module:Buffer, numerical includes both actual number values and string values which आकृति:Luaref does not return nil (and often involves Buffer-style length relativity); numeric describes values of number type only.
  6. Using आकृति:Luaself prevents future caching on all Buffers, though Buffers which already unmodified Buffers will continue to return their cached version
  7. In other words, if args is a string or a table without [1] set, it will be passed as the only argument. Further note it is not possible to pass a functionName = args pair where args is numerical since such would be read as value = pos. Finally, passing a function type as args will throw an error message.
  8. ८.० ८.१ There is no 'getChild' method. If a child needed after returning to the parent, set it आकृति:Luaref or use आकृति:Luaself prior to returning or it may become irretrievable. (No, Codehydro did not get lazy. Rather, this allows आकृति:Luaref on children with no further purpose.)
  9. For #performance, the first arg is not type checked but read as ops only when multiple args are present (or if it is the number 0); i.e., Buffer:_out(2) uses 2 as a separator. To append to the Nth ancestor with no separator, use Buffer:_outs(N, nil).
  10. Empty strings would produce the same output as false, however, Lua string literals create objects that take up memory until garbage collected.
  11. For example, given {nil, 'string'} as copy, Buffer:_cc(clear, copy) makes #clear equal 2, whereas #mw.clone{nil, 'string'} equals 0 (as of March 2015). This replicates length by filling clear halfway to the length of copy (the minimum needed to 'trick' Lua) and then setting nil every key that would not trigger recalculation. As a result, keys that would resize clear when set nil are left as empty strings. Such should be fairly rare; given tables representing every possible way to position a single nil key for all lengths between 2 and 32 (inclusive), only 8.39 percent of such tables would have its nil copied as an empty string instead. Also note that tables returned from Buffer:_(0, copy) have length declared on creation instead, and thus won't have extra strings attached. The odds can be estimated using  , where   is the upper limit that an arbitrary nil key from copy of length ranging from 1 to   is imaged as an empty string.
  12. In other words, आकृति:Luaself is shorthand for आकृति:Luaself, however, आकृति:Luaself simply appends "match" to the parent. Note that you may still call आकृति:Luaself on a parent via आकृति:Luaself.
  13. This is no different than calling the Stream-Buffer object directly with each item in the आकृति:Luaref; however, after noting how numbers and variables (too shy to skinny dip without parenthesis) could look rather odd swimming fully clothed in a stream of naked strings, this was made for those whose aesthetics prefer आकृति:Luaself over StreamBuffer'A'(arg)'B'(arg2). As a side note, it is best practice to pass number strings instead of number literals (i.e. Buffer:stream'1' instead of Buffer:stream(1)) as such improves performance and is perhaps more aesthetically pleasing in this mode.
  14. If you want something like :wikitext('string1', varName, 'string2') such that varName is shorthand for an if statement that appends varName and 'string2' when the former is not nil, use :each('string1', {varName, 'string2'}) instead.
  15. That is, Element-Buffer:_inHTML'br' may be shorthand for :tag'br':done()() when planning to continue using Buffer object functions. This "auto-done and back" for selfClosing tags does not apply to non-element Buffers in order not to encourage the use of Buffer:_inHTML for simple tags as per #Tips and style recommendations.
  16. आकृति:Luaself serves a similar role, but appends Buffer objects rather than HTML objects. Also Buffer-HTML:_parent only appends the string form of its ancestor object(s).
  17. Buffer(-HTML) objects reference their parent differently from mw.html objects. Passing a normal mw.html object to Buffer:_inHTML as args.parent and then calling आकृति:Luaref the object created, followed by आकृति:Luaself on the adopted parent, may return the "child." This is a feature rather than a bug.
  18. आकृति:--the internal table which holds elements appended via आकृति:Luaref, आकृति:Luaref, and आकृति:Luaref
  19. Passing arguments for आकृति:Luaself via the args parameter of आकृति:Luaself and आकृति:Luaself during the creation of a new Buffer-HTML object is the only way to use most Buffer object functions on the new HTML object without converting its .nodes into an Element-Buffer.
  20. That is, Buffer:getHTML may be used to return to the child node, though the trade off is that you may still need to call mw.html:allDone before using these methods in order to append the full HTML tree via Buffer:_html.
  21. While Buffer-HTML objects may use #global functions, there is no separate Buffer-HTML version. In other words, the self-action of a global function on an Element-Buffer is not redirected.
  22. आकृति:Luaref is doubly wrapped for Element-Buffers, with the other wrapper setting a Buffer parent reference as described at आकृति:Luaself. Furthermore, आकृति:Luaself and आकृति:Luaself do not call their mw.html namesakes at all, as detailed in their respective sections.
  23. However, since the mw.html __tostring method never calls the Element-Buffer as a function, raw mode is not expected to reduce performance when appending the Buffer-HTML (or Element-Buffer via mw.html:node) to another object.
  24. However, some Buffer methods may not work properly after appending objects via mw.html functions to the pseudo-Buffer.
    For example, { tag = {'div', 'List:', foo1, foo2, foo3, _out = { 0, '\n*' } } } could produce a div with each foo as bulleted item. But, if foo1 were { tag = { 'b', 'text' } }, then आकृति:Luaself may fail when appending आकृति:Luaref with the non-string/number element. A workaround is to add the pair _ = {true, true} to set raw mode on the div's tag.nodes; another is to replace foo1 with mw.html.create'b':wikitext'text', which appends in string form.
  25. A caveat of this unconventional type checking is that pairing an args.globalFunction with a number value will throw an error (which shouldn't be a problem since numbers make poor names for global variables).
  26. i.e., does x, in the following, reference the TD or some other node hidden within an ellipsis?: local x = mw.html.create():tag ... :tag'td' ... :tag(arg and 'div' or 'p'):wikitext( ... ):tag'br':done():done()
  27. Global function are not enabled by default for various reasons:
    • Most templates are one-dimensional (i.e. contain few if any nested conditional statements) and thus would not benefit from these methods.
    • Loading them to the Module:Buffer meta index means more items that must be sifted through each time a specific function has to be retrieved.
    • Lua checks the global scope last; thus retrieving values from that scope takes longer than it would if they were stored in the local scope.
    • Excess use may clutter the global scope enough to slow access to basic Lua functions (e.g. आकृति:Luaref or आकृति:Luaref) even after Buffer methods are no longer used.
    It should be mentioned however that variable retrieval even even in a relatively cluttered global scope is fairly trivial. In fact, early versions of Module:Buffer used globals extensively (and actually had no locals declared before the final return, or rather the entire module was just one long return statement). In contrast, the current version nests many do ... end blocks to limit scope size. Yet, आकृति:Luaself, a core function which has changed little, is only a modest 10 percent faster than itself in the last unscoped version (not published); then again, perhaps the benefit of scope dieting has been masked by much greater total number of variables required by new features?
  28. Actually, the first argument to rawset is a local variable new_G which generally equals _G but not always, to be detailed in a later section.
  29. If the meta global has an __index which is a function (as is the case after requiring Module:No globals), the back-up op aborts without throwing an error.
  30. Dubbing this a "global function" is bit of a misnomer since this never retrieves anything from the global table. While designed for in-chain navigation to Buffer objects that were self-declared as globals, this returns any local reference or literal passed as well (allowing आकृति:Luaself to execute Buffer methods on non-Buffer objects args._B).
  31. False cycles tables based on आकृति:Luaref instead of आकृति:Luaref, which may diverge or error if the table contains nil items.
  32. Though this strings the same object returned by आकृति:Luaself, that function is not used to avoid setting a "lastHTML" reference.
  33. Mapless iteration is intended to improve performance for tables which were constructed sequentially and which have only numeric indicies (e.g., any Buffer-object built without using the pos argument of methods such as आकृति:Luaself; note that आकृति:Luaself may be temporarily uset when the Buffer is strung in a way that would involve this method to avoid disqualification from mapless iteration due to non-sequential indexing). Though "trick" tables have been made to qualify for but yet contain keys not covered by mapless iteration, such involved both intent and an exceptional understanding of lua table, making it difficult to imagine that mis-qualified tables may arrise accidentally.
  • Module:Escape, a lightweight metamodule for customized string character escaping