Provided by: libdbd-xbase-perl_1.08-2_all bug

NAME

       XBase - Perl module for reading and writing the dbf files

SYNOPSIS

         use XBase;
         my $table = new XBase "dbase.dbf" or die XBase->errstr;
         for (0 .. $table->last_record) {
               my ($deleted, $id, $msg)
                       = $table->get_record($_, "ID", "MSG");
               print "$id:\t$msg\n" unless $deleted;
         }

DESCRIPTION

       This module can read and write XBase database files, known as dbf in dBase and FoxPro world. It also
       reads memo fields from the dbt and fpt files, if needed. An alpha code of reading index support for ndx,
       ntx, mdx, idx and cdx is available for testing -- see the DBD::Index(3) man page. Module XBase provides
       simple native interface to XBase files.  For DBI compliant database access, see the DBD::XBase and DBI
       modules and their man pages.

       The following methods are supported by XBase module:

   General methods
       new Creates  the  XBase  object,  loads  the  info about the table form the dbf file. The first parameter
           should be the name of existing dbf file (table, in fact) to read. A suffix .dbf will be  appended  if
           needed.  This method creates and initializes new object, will also check for memo file, if needed.

           The  parameters  can  also  be  specified  in the form of hash: value of name is then the name of the
           table, other flags supported are:

           memofile specifies non standard name for the associated memo file.  By default it's the name  of  the
           dbf file, with extension dbt or fpt.

           ignorememo  ignore  memo  file at all. This is useful if you've lost the dbt file and you do not need
           it. Default is false.

           memosep separator of memo records in the dBase  III  dbt  files.  The  standard  says  it  should  be
           "\x1a\x1a".  There  are  however implamentations that only put in one "\x1a". XBase.pm tries to guess
           which is valid for your dbt but if it fails, you can tell it yourself.

           nolongchars prevents XBase to treat the decimal value of character fields as high byte of the  length
           -- there are some broken products around producing character fields with decimal values set.

               my $table = new XBase "table.dbf" or die XBase->errstr;

               my $table = new XBase "name" => "table.dbf",
                                                   "ignorememo" => 1;

           recompute_lastrecno  forces XBase.pm to disbelieve the information about the number of records in the
           header of the dbf file and recompute the number of records. Use this only if you know that some other
           software of yours produces incorrect headers.

       close
           Closes the object/file, no arguments.

       create
           Creates new database file on disk and initializes it with 0 records.  A dbt (memo) file will be  also
           created if the table contains some memo fields. Parameters to create are passed as hash.

           You  can call this method as method of another XBase object and then you only need to pass name value
           of the hash; the structure (fields) of the new file will be the same as of the original object.

           If you call create using class name (XBase), you have to (besides name)  also  specify  another  four
           values,  each  being a reference to list: field_names, field_types, field_lengths and field_decimals.
           The field types are specified by one letter strings (C, N, L, D, ...).  If  you  set  some  value  as
           undefined, create will make it into some reasonable default.

               my $newtable = $table->create("name" => "copy.dbf");

               my $newtable = XBase->create("name" => "copy.dbf",
                           "field_names" => [ "ID", "MSG" ],
                           "field_types" => [ "N", "C" ],
                           "field_lengths" => [ 6, 40 ],
                           "field_decimals" => [ 0, undef ]);

           Other  attributes are memofile for non standard memo file location, codepage to set the codepage flag
           in the dbf header (it does not affect how XBase.pm reads or writes the  data  though,  just  to  make
           FoxPro  happy),  and  version  to  force  different version of the dbt (dbt) file. The default is the
           version of the object from which you create the new one, or 3  if  you  call  this  as  class  method
           (XBase->create).

           The  new file mustn't exist yet -- XBase will not allow you to overwrite existing table. Use drop (or
           unlink) to delete it first.

       drop
           This method closes the table and deletes it on disk (including associated  memo  file,  if  there  is
           any).

       last_record
           Returns number of the last record in the file. The lines deleted but present in the file are included
           in this number.

       last_field
           Returns number of the last field in the file, number of fields minus 1.

       field_names, field_types, field_lengths, field_decimals
           Return list of field names and so on for the dbf file.

       field_type, field_length, field_decimal
           For  a  field  name,  returns  the appropriate value. Returns undef if the field doesn't exist in the
           table.

   Reading the data one by one
       When dealing with the records one by one, reading or writing (the following six  methods),  you  have  to
       specify   the   number  of  the  record  in  the  file  as  the  first  argument.  The  range  is  "0  ..
       $table->last_record".

       get_record
           Returns a list of data (field values) from the specified  record  (line  of  the  table).  The  first
           parameter  in  the  call is the number of the record. If you do not specify any other parameters, all
           fields are returned in the same order as they appear in the file. You can  also  put  list  of  field
           names  after  the record number and then only those will be returned. The first value of the returned
           list is always the 1/0 "_DELETED" value saying whether the record is deleted or not, so  on  success,
           get_record never returns empty list.

       get_record_nf
           Instead if the names of the fields, you can pass list of numbers of the fields to read.

       get_record_as_hash
           Returns  hash  (in  list  context)  or  reference to hash (in scalar context) containing field values
           indexed by field names. The name of the deleted flag is "_DELETED". The only parameter in the call is
           the record number. The field names are returned as uppercase.

   Writing the data
       All three writing methods always undelete the record. On success they return true --  the  record  number
       actually written.

       set_record
           As  parameters,  takes  the  number of the record and the list of values of the fields. It writes the
           record to the file. Unspecified fields (if you pass less than you should) are set to undef/empty.

       set_record_hash
           Takes number of the record and hash as parameters, sets the fields, unspecified are undefed/emptied.

       update_record_hash
           Like set_record_hash but fields that do not have value specified in the hash retain their value.

       To explicitly delete/undelete a record, use methods delete_record or undelete_record with  record  number
       as a parameter.

       Assorted examples of reading and writing:

           my @data = $table->get_record(3, "jezek", "krtek");
           my $hashref = $table->get_record_as_hash(38);
           $table->set_record_hash(8, "jezek" => "jezecek",
                                               "krtek" => 5);
           $table->undelete_record(4);

       This is a code to update field MSG in record where ID is 123.

           use XBase;
           my $table = new XBase "test.dbf" or die XBase->errstr;
           for (0 .. $table->last_record) {
               my ($deleted, $id) = $table->get_record($_, "ID")
               die $table->errstr unless defined $deleted;
               next if $deleted;
               $table->update_record_hash($_, "MSG" => "New message")
                                                       if $id == 123;
           }

   Sequentially reading the file
       If you plan to sequentially walk through the file, you can create a cursor first and then repeatedly call
       fetch to get next record.

       prepare_select
           As  parameters, pass list of field names to return, if no parameters, the following fetch will return
           all fields.

       prepare_select_with_index
           The first parameter is the file name of the index file, the rest is as above. For  index  types  that
           can  hold  more  index structures in on file, use arrayref instead of the file name and in that array
           include file name and the tag name, and optionally the  index  type.   The  fetch  will  then  return
           records in the ascending order, according to the index.

       Prepare will return object cursor, the following method are methods of the cursor, not of the table.

       fetch
           Returns  the  fields  of  the  next  available  undeleted  record.  The list thus doesn't contain the
           "_DELETED" flag since you are guaranteed that the record is not deleted.

       fetch_hashref
           Returns a hash reference of fields for the next non deleted record.

       last_fetched
           Returns the number of the record last fetched.

       find_eq
           This only works with cursor created via prepare_select_with_index.  Will roll  to  the  first  record
           what  is  equal  to specified argument, or to the first greater if there is none equal. The following
           fetches then continue normally.

       Examples of using cursors:

           my $table = new XBase "names.dbf" or die XBase->errstr;
           my $cursor = $table->prepare_select("ID", "NAME", "STREET");
           while (my @data = $cursor->fetch) {
               ### do something here, like print "@data\n";
           }

           my $table = new XBase "employ.dbf";
           my $cur = $table->prepare_select_with_index("empid.ndx");
           ## my $cur = $table->prepare_select_with_index(
                       ["empid.cdx", "ADDRES", "char"], "id", "address");
           $cur->find_eq(1097);
           while (my $hashref = $cur->fetch_hashref
                               and $hashref->{"ID"} == 1097) {
               ### do something here with $hashref
           }

       The second example shows that after you have done find_eq, the fetches continue  until  the  end  of  the
       index,  so you have to check whether you are still on records with given value. And if there is no record
       with value 1097 in the indexed field, you will just get the next record in the order.

       The updating example can be rewritten to:

           use XBase;
           my $table = new XBase "test.dbf" or die XBase->errstr;
           my $cursor = $table->prepare_select("ID")
           while (my ($id) = $cursor->fetch) {
               $table->update_record_hash($cursor->last_fetched,
                               "MSG" => "New message") if $id == 123
           }

   Dumping the content of the file
       A method get_all_records returns reference to an array containing array  of  values  for  each  undeleted
       record at once. As parameters, pass list of fields to return for each record.

       To  print  the content of the file in a readable form, use method dump_records. It prints all not deleted
       records from the file. By default, all fields are printed, separated by colons, one record on a row.  The
       method can have parameters in a form of a hash with the following keys:

       rs  Record separator, string, newline by default.

       fs  Field separator, string, one colon by default.

       fields
           Reference to a list of names of the fields to print. By default it's undef, meaning all fields.

       undef
           What to print for undefined (NULL) values, empty string by default.

       Example of use is

           use XBase;
           my $table = new XBase "table" or die XBase->errstr;
           $table->dump_records("fs" => " | ", "rs" => " <-+\n",
                               "fields" => [ "id", "msg" ]);'

       Also note that there is a script dbf_dump(1) that does the printing.

   Errors and debugging
       If  the  method fails (returns false or null list), the error message can be retrieved via errstr method.
       If the new or create method fails, you have no object so you get the error  message  using  class  syntax
       "XBase->errstr()".

       The method header_info returns (not prints) string with information about the file and about the fields.

       Module  XBase::Base(3)  defines  some basic functions that are inherited by both XBase and XBase::Memo(3)
       module.

DATA TYPES

       The character fields are returned "as is". No charset or other  translation  is  done.  The  numbers  are
       converted  to Perl numbers. The date fields are returned as 8 character string of the 'YYYYMMDD' form and
       when inserting the date, you again have to provide it in this form. No checking for the validity  of  the
       date is done. The datetime field is returned in the number of (possibly negative) seconds since 1970/1/1,
       possibly  with decimal part (since it allows precision up to 1/1000 s). To get the fields, use the gmtime
       (or similar) Perl function.

       If there is a memo field in the dbf file, the module tries to open file with the same name but  extension
       dbt,  fpt  or  smt.  It  uses  module  XBase::Memo(3)  for  this.  It  reads  and  writes this memo field
       transparently (you do not know about it) and returns the data as single scalar.

INDEX, LOCKS

       New: A support for ndx, ntx, mdx, idx and cdx index formats is available with alpha status  for  testing.
       Some  of  the  formats  are already rather stable (ndx). Please read the XBase::Index(3) man page and the
       eg/use_index file in the distribution for examples and ideas.  Send me examples of your  data  files  and
       suggestions for interface if you need indexes.

       General  locking  methods  are locksh, lockex and unlock for shared lock, exclusive lock and unlock. They
       call flock but you can redefine then in XBase::Base package.

INFORMATION SOURCE

       This module is built using information from and article XBase File Format Description by  Erik  Bachmann,
       URL

               http://www.clicketyclick.dk/databases/xbase/format/

       Thanks a lot.

VERSION

       1.08

AVAILABLE FROM

       http://www.adelton.com/perl/DBD-XBase/

AUTHOR

       (c) 1997--2017 Jan Pazdziora.

       All  rights  reserved.  This package is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
       same terms as Perl itself.

       Contact the author at jpx dash perl at adelton dot com.

THANKS

       Many people have provided information, test files, test results and patches. This project would not be so
       great without them. See the Changes file for (I hope) complete list. Thank you all, guys!

       Special thanks go to Erik Bachmann for his great page about the  file  structures;  to  Frans  van  Loon,
       William  McKee,  Randy  Kobes and Dan Albertsson for longtime cooperation and many emails we've exchanged
       when fixing and polishing the modules' behaviour; and to Dan Albertsson for  providing  support  for  the
       project.

SEE ALSO

       perl(1); XBase::FAQ(3); DBD::XBase(3) and DBI(3) for DBI interface; dbf_dump(1)

perl v5.34.0                                       2022-06-13                                         XBase(3pm)