# frozen_string_literal: true # title: Export plugin example # description: Speak the most recent entry (macOS) # author: Brett Terpstra # url: https://brettterpstra.com # Example # # doing show -o sayit # # ## Configuration # # Change what the plugin says by generating a template with # `doing template --type say`, saving it to a file, and # putting the path to that file in `export_templates->say` in # .doingrc. # # export_templates: # say: /path/to/template.txt # # Use a different voice by adding a `say_voice` key to your # .doingrc. Use `say -v ?` to see available voices. # # say_voice: Zarvox module Doing ## ## @brief Plugin class ## class SayExport include Doing::Util #------------------------------------------------------- ## Plugin Settings. A plugin must have a self.settings ## method that returns a hash with plugin settings. ## ## trigger: (required) Regular expression to match ## FORMAT when used with `--output FORMAT`. Registered ## name of plugin must be able to match the trigger, but ## alternatives can be included ## ## templates: (optional) Array of templates this plugin ## can export (plugin must have :template method) ## ## Each template is a hash containing: ## - name: display name for template ## - trigger: regular expression for ## `template --type FORMAT` ## ## If a template is included, a config key will ## automatically be added for the user to override ## The config key will be available at: ## ## wwid.config['export_templates'][PLUGIN_NAME] ## ## config: (optional) A Hash which will be ## added to the main configuration in the plugins section. ## Options defined here are included when config file is ## created or updated with `config --update`. Use this to ## add new configuration keys, not to override existing ## ones. ## ## The configuration keys will be available at: ## ## wwid.config['plugins'][PLUGIN_NAME][KEY] ## ## @brief Method to return plugin settings (required) ## ## @return Hash of settings for this plugin ## def self.settings { trigger: 'say(?:it)?', templates: [ { name: 'say', trigger: 'say(?:it)?' } ], config: { 'say_voice' => 'Fiona' } } end #------------------------------------------------------- ## Output a template. Only required if template(s) are ## included in settings. The method should return a ## string (not output it to the STDOUT). ## ## @brief Method to return template (optional) ## ## @param trigger The trigger passed to the ## template function. When this ## method defines multiple ## templates, the trigger can be ## used to determine which one is ## output. ## ## @return (String) template contents ## def self.template(trigger) return unless trigger =~ /^say(it)?$/ 'On %date, you were %title, recorded in section %section%took' end ## ## @brief Render data received from an output ## command ## ## @param wwid The wwid object with config ## and public methods ## @param items An array of items to be output ## { date, title, ## section, note } ## @param variables Additional variables including ## flags passed to command ## (variables[:options]) ## ## @return (String) Rendered output ## def self.render(wwid, items, variables: {}) return if items.nil? || items.empty? # the :options key includes the flags passed to the # command that called the plugin use `puts # variables.inspect` to see properties and methods # when run opt = variables[:options] # This plugin just grabs the last item in the `items` # list (which could be the oldest or newest, depending # on the sort order of the command that called the # plugin). Most of the time you'll want to use :each # or :map to generate output. i = items[-1] # Format the item. Items are a hash with 3 keys: date, # title, and section (parent section) Start time is in # item.date. The wwid object has some methods for # calculation and formatting, including # wwid.item.end_date to convert the @done # timestamp to an end date. if opt[:times] interval = i.interval if interval took = '. You finished on ' finished_at = i.end_date took += finished_at.strftime('%A %B %e at %I:%M%p') d, h, m = wwid.fmt_time(interval) took += ' and it took' took += " #{d.to_i} days" if d.to_i.positive? took += " #{h.to_i} hours" if h.to_i.positive? took += " #{m.to_i} minutes" if m.to_i.positive? end end date = i.date.strftime('%A %B %e at %I:%M%p') title = i.title.gsub(/ @done\(.*?\)/, '').gsub(/@/, 'hashtag ') tpl = template('say') if wwid.config['export_templates'].key?('say') cfg_tpl = wwid.config['export_templates']['say'] tpl = cfg_tpl unless cfg_tpl.nil? || cfg_tpl.empty? end output = tpl.dup output.gsub!(/%date/, date) output.gsub!(/%title/, title) output.gsub!(/%section/, i.section) output.gsub!(/%took/, took || '') # Debugging output # warn "Saying: #{output}" # To provide results on the command line after the # command runs, add to the wwid.results array. Results # are provided on STDERR unless doing is run with # `--stdout` Doing.logger.info('Spoke the last entry. Did you hear it?') # This export runs a command for fun, most plugins won't voice = wwid.config['plugins']['say']['say_voice'] || 'Alex' `say -v "#{voice}" "#{output}"` # Return the result (don't output to terminal with puts or print) output end # Register the plugin with doing. # Doing::Plugins.register 'NAME', TYPE, Class # # Name should be lowercase, no spaces # # TYPE is :import or :export # # Class is the plugin class (e.g. Doing::SayExport), or # self if called within the class Doing::Plugins.register 'say', :export, self end end