@darkguardace/fluentreports
v1.1.35
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A simple, Fluent API for creating PDF Reports
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Fluent Reports
See: http://www.fluentreports.com for more information.
Fluent Reports - Data Driven PDF Reporting Engine for Node.js
Install
npm install fluentreports
Documentation
Please read the commands.md file for a overview of all the commands. The files in the docs/
folder are generated from the source code via jsdocs, so they might be more up to date.
Features:
- Completely Data Driven. You pass in the data; you tell it easily how to print the data, and it generates the PDF report.
- Data agnostic, can be arrays, and/or objects; whatever you prefer.
- Headers, Footers, Title Headers, Summary Footers - Both built-in and totally customizable
- Grouping, nested grouping, and yes even more nested groupings...
- Auto-Summing (and other automatic totals like max/min/count)
- Sane defaults, and the ability to easily override not only the defaults but pretty much every aspect of the report generation.
- Images, Gradients, Text, Fonts, Lines, and many other PDF features supported.
- Data can come from anywhere and the report engine even support Pageable data loading and related(or sub-query) data loading.
- Sub-Reports, Sub-Sub-Reports, etc...
- Bands (Tables/Grids) & Suppressed Bands (w/ column wrapping or column clipping)
- Free Flow Text
- Ability to override each part of the report for total customization of your report
- Fluent API
- Ability to put data over images; gradients, etc.
- Quickly generate complex reports with minimal lines of code.
- Colorization, Font & other changes of text per cell in Bands
- Synchronous and Asynchronous support. If your report doesn't need to do anything Async, you can just code it without any callbacks.
- Group Headers can be (re)printed on every new page, always, and only once.
- Page Numbers and total number of pages
- Text rotation
- Cancelling of report
See the simple & stupid examples for a overview on how to generate a somewhat complex report. In these reports I tried to throw in a chunk of the features to try and give you and idea how powerful the engine is and how to use certain features.
Examples
Currently has 6 example reports showing:
- Simple Grid Report with Grouping
- Simple Account Summary Report (w/ color & grid for account balances)
- Simple Fax Cover Sheet (w/ image)
- Grid Report showing off Sub-Reports with auto-queries, cell colorization and url links.
- More complex invoice/proposal with grouping, headers, footers.
- The Grocery Report Example done in stages to see from simple to complex reporting.
Please note these following reports are using the simplest report methods; to show how quickly you can create a simple report.
You have the ability to EASILY FULLY override any and all of the Headers, Footers, and Detail bands.
Really Simple Report:
// Our Simple Data in Object format:
var data = [{name: 'Elijah', age: 18}, {name: 'Abraham', age: 22}, {name: 'Gavin', age: 28}];
// Create a Report
var rpt = new Report("Report.pdf")
.pageHeader( ["Employee Ages"] ) // Add a simple (optional) page Header...
.data( data ) // Add some Data (This is required)
.detail( [['name', 200],['age', 50]]) // Layout the report in a Grid of 200px & 50px
.render(); // Render the Report (required if you want output...)
The same report in Array format:
// Our Simple Data in Array format:
var data = [['Elijah', 18], ['Abraham', 22], ['Gavin', 28]];
// Create a Report
var rpt = new Report("Report.pdf")
.pageHeader( ["Employee Ages"] ) // Add a simple (optional) page Header...
.detail( [[0, 200],[1, 50]]) // Layout the report in a grid of 200px & 50px
.render(); // Render the report
And one other sample report using a list type output:
var data = [
{item: 'Bread', count: 5, unit: 'loaf'},
{item: 'Egg', count: 3, unit: 'dozen'},
{item: 'Sugar', count: 32, unit: 'gram'},
{item: 'Carrot', count: 2, unit: 'kilo'},
{item: 'Apple', count: 3, unit: 'kilo'},
{item: 'Peanut Butter', count: 1, unit: 'jar'}
];
var rpt = new Report("grocery1.pdf")
.data( data ) // Add our Data
.pageHeader( ["My Grocery List"] ) // Add a simple header
.detail("{{count}} {{unit}} of {{item}}") // Put how we want to print out the data line.
.render(); // Render the Report (required if you want output...)
Tutorial
Data Driven reporting is done in basically a couple steps:
- Get your initial data. So in the above example we are setting the data to grocery items; this data can come from databases, data stores, files, web services, anywhere ever you store your data.
- Then you are defining the report/page overall structure. So do you want headers or footers on all pages; are you grouping, totalling, or just printing raw data. So in the above example; we are setting a fixed page header that prints on every page that uses the reporting engine defaults and puts "My Grocery List" in the center of the top.
- Then we choose how we want to display each detail record; again you can decide to use the simpler built in system like I did in the three above reports or you can use a function that will allow you to control it entirely.
So, now looking at the above simple grocery list report; and lets spruce it up a bit.
First lets change from the default header to make a look a bit nicer for a Grocery List; so we need to create a function that will control how the header looks.
var headerFunction = function(Report) {
Report.print("My Grocery List", {fontSize: 22, bold: true, underline:true, align: "center"});
Report.newLine(2);
};
This function changes the font size to 22 point, bolds and underlines the text and centers the words "My Grocery List" on the page. Then we add 2 new blank lines to space the header from the detail records. This looks so much cleaner.
Next, I think I actually do want to continue to have the date and page number printed. But I think I would prefer them on the bottom of the page, so lets add a footer for these items. Here is our footer function that also will be printed on every page, just like the header function above.
var footerFunction = function(Report) {
Report.line(Report.currentX(), Report.maxY()-18, Report.maxX(), Report.maxY()-18);
Report.pageNumber({text: "Page {0} of {1}", footer: true, align: "right"});
Report.print("Printed: "+(new Date().toLocaleDateString()), {y: Report.maxY()-14, align: "left"});
};
Now in this function we print a line across the bottom of the page; then we use the "pageNumber" helper function to print the current page number and total number of page, then we print the current date. A couple things to point out; Report.maxY and maxX are the largest location that can be printed to before entering the margins. If you attempt to create your footer beyond the maxY coordinate; it WILL let you; but it WILL send a error to the Report.error system stating that you exceeded the margin by however many pixels so that you can fix your report.
So our new report is:
var data = [
{item: 'Bread', count: 5, unit: 'loaf'},
{item: 'Egg', count: 3, unit: 'dozen'},
{item: 'Sugar', count: 32, unit: 'gram'},
{item: 'Carrot', count: 2, unit: 'kilo'},
{item: 'Apple', count: 3, unit: 'kilo'},
{item: 'Peanut Butter', count: 1, unit: 'jar'}
];
var headerFunction = function(Report) {
Report.print("My Grocery List", {fontSize: 22, bold: true, underline:true, align: "center"});
Report.newLine(2);
};
var footerFunction = function(Report) {
Report.line(Report.currentX(), Report.maxY()-18, Report.maxX(), Report.maxY()-18);
Report.pageNumber({text: "Page {0} of {1}", footer: true, align: "right"});
Report.print("Printed: "+(new Date().toLocaleDateString()), {y: Report.maxY()-14, align: "left"});
};
var rpt = new Report("grocery2.pdf")
.margins(20) // Change the Margins to 20 pixels
.data(data) // Add our Data
.pageHeader(headerFunction) // Add a header
.pageFooter(footerFunction) // Add a footer
.detail("{{count}} {{unit}} of {{item}}") // Put how we want to print out the data line.
.render(); // Render it out
Wow, this report looks a lot cleaner and sharper. However, I think we can spruce it up a still bit more...
var detailFunction = function(Report, Data) {
if (Data.count !== 1) {
Data.item = pluralize(Data.item);
Data.unit = pluralize(Data.unit);
}
Report.box(Report.currentX()-1, Report.currentY()-1, 10, 10, {});
Report.print(numberToText(Data.count) + ' ' + Data.unit + ' of ' + Data.item, {addX: 12});
};
This is our new Detail function. I first uses a simple pluralizer to make any singular words plural if they need be. The next thing it does is draw a box for your check marks. Then it spits out your detail line with changes. Now since I can have a really large grocery list; I can make this two or three columns, so we lets modify the code to make it three columns like so:
var detailFunction = function(Report, Data) {
if (Data.count !== 1) {
Data.item = pluralize(Data.item);
Data.unit = pluralize(Data.unit);
}
var x = 0, y = 0;
if (columnCounter % 3 === 1) {
x += 200;
y = (Report.heightOfString() + 1);
} else if (columnCounter % 3 === 2) {
x += 400;
y = (Report.heightOfString() + 1);
}
Report.box(Report.currentX()+x , Report.currentY()-y, 10, 10, {});
Report.print(numberToText(Data.count) + ' ' + Data.unit + ' of ' + Data.item, {addX: x+12, addY: -(y-1)});
columnCounter++;
};
Basically it is the same functions as the prior version but we are changing the X and Y coordinates for column 2 & 3 to make them end up on the same line just in a different column. So the finished report looks this. example\demo6.js contains this report in its three different iterations.