package SQL::Translator::Producer::Latex; =pod =head1 NAME SQL::Translator::Producer::Latex - Produces latex formatted tables ready for import from schema. =head1 SYNOPSIS use SQL::Translator; my $translator = SQL::Translator->new( from => 'MySQL', filename => 'foo_schema.sql', to => 'Latex', ); print $translator->translate; =head1 DESCRIPTION Currently you will get one class (with the a table stereotype) generated per table in the schema. The fields are added as attributes of the classes and their datatypes set. It doesn't currently set any of the relationships. It doesn't do any layout, all the classses are in one big stack. However it is still useful as you can use the layout tools in Dia to automatically arrange them horizontally or vertically. =head2 Producer Args =over 4 =back =cut use strict; use warnings; our @EXPORT_OK; our $VERSION = '1.59'; use SQL::Translator::Utils 'debug'; sub produce { my $translator = shift; my $schema = $translator->schema; my $o = ''; for my $table ( $schema->get_tables ) { my $table_name = $table->name or next; my $n = latex($table_name); $o .= sprintf ' \subsubsection{%s} %s \begin{table}[htb] \caption{%s} \label{tab:%s} \center { \small \begin{tabular}{l l p{8cm}} Column & Datatype & Description \\\\ \hline ', $n, latex($table->comments), $n, $table_name; foreach my $f ($table->get_fields) { $o .= sprintf '%s & %s & %s \\\\', map {latex($_)} ($f->name, $f->data_type, $f->comments || ''); $o .= "\n"; } $o .= sprintf ' \end{tabular} } \end{table} \clearpage '; } return $o; } sub latex { my $s = shift; return '' unless defined $s; $s =~ s/([\&\_\$\{\#])/\\$1/g; return $s; } 1; =pod =head1 AUTHOR Chris Mungall =head1 SEE ALSO SQL::Translator. =cut