usually can be found as the first child of the parent
 
          gi_tr       => 'iterate',
      
        # the model data to be pushed into the table
 
          table_data  => $o->load_data,
 
        # the way to take the model data and obtain one row
        # if the table data were a hashref, we would do:
        # my $key = (keys %$data)[0]; my $val = $data->{$key}; delete $data->{$key}
 
          tr_data     => sub { my ($self, $data) = @_;
                              shift(@{$data}) ;
                            },
 
        # the way to take a row of data and fill the | tags
 
          td_data     => sub { my ($tr_node, $tr_data) = @_;
                              $tr_node->content_handler($_ => $tr_data->{$_})
                                for qw(name age weight) }
 
       );
 
     print $seamstress->as_HTML;
   Looping over Multiple Sample Rows
    * HTML 
 
         * Only one change to last API call.
    This:
            gi_tr       => 'iterate',
    becomes this:
            gi_tr       => ['iterate1', 'iterate2']
   $tree->table2() : New API Call to Unroll a Table
    After 2 or 3 years with "table()", I began to develop production
    websites with it and decided it needed a cleaner interface, particularly
    in the area of handling the fact that "id" tags will be the same after
    cloning a table row.
    First, I will give a dry listing of the function's argument parameters.
    This will not be educational most likely. A better way to understand how
    to use the function is to read through the incremental unrolling of the
    function's interface given in conversational style after the dry
    listing. But take your pick. It's the same information given in two
    different ways.
   Dry/technical parameter documentation
    "$tree->table2(%param)" takes the following arguments:
    * "table_ld => $look_down" : optional
        How to find the "table" element in $tree. If $look_down is an
        arrayref, then use "look_down". If it is a CODE ref, then call it,
        passing it $tree.
        Defaults to "['_tag' => 'table']" if not passed in.
    * "table_data => $tabular_data" : required
        The data to fill the table with. *Must* be passed in.
    * "table_proc => $code_ref" : not implemented
        A subroutine to do something to the table once it is found. Not
        currently implemented. Not obviously necessary. Just created because
        there is a "tr_proc" and "td_proc".
    * "tr_ld => $look_down" : optional
        Same as "table_ld" but for finding the table row elements. Please
        note that the "tr_ld" is done on the table node that was found below
        *instead* of the whole HTML tree. This makes sense. The "tr"s that
        you want exist below the table that was just found.
    * "tr_data => $code_ref" : optional
        How to take the "table_data" and return a row. Defaults to:
         sub { my ($self, $data) = @_;
              shift(@{$data}) ;
         }
                                
    * "tr_proc => $code_ref" : optional
        Something to do to the table row we are about to add to the table we
        are making. Defaults to a routine which makes the "id" attribute
        unique:
         sub { 
                my ($self, $tr, $tr_data, $row_count, $root_id) = @_;
                $tr->attr(id => sprintf "%s_%d", $root_id, $row_count);
         }
    * "td_proc => $code_ref" : required
        This coderef will take the row of data and operate on the "td" cells
        that are children of the "tr". See "t/table2.t" for several usage
        examples.
   Conversational parameter documentation
        The first thing you need is a table. So we need a look down for
        that. If you don't give one, it defaults to
          ['_tag' => 'table']
        What good is a table to display in without data to display?! So you
        must supply a scalar representing your tabular data source. This
        scalar might be an array reference, a "next"able iterator, a DBI
        statement handle. Whatever it is, it can be iterated through to
        build up rows of table data. These two required fields (the way to
        find the table and the data to display in the table) are "table_ld"
        and "table_data" respectively. A little more on "table_ld". If this
        happens to be a CODE ref, then execution of the code ref is presumed
        to return the "HTML::Element" representing the table in the HTML
        tree.
        Next, we get the row or rows which serve as sample "tr" elements by
        doing a "look_down" from the "table_elem". While normally one sample
        row is enough to unroll a table, consider when you have alternating
        table rows. This API call would need one of each row so that it can
        cycle through the sample rows as it loops through the data.
        Alternatively, you could always just use one row and make the
        necessary changes to the single "tr" row by mutating the element in
        "tr_proc", discussed below. The default "tr_ld" is "['_tag' =>
        'tr']" but you can overwrite it. Note well, if you overwrite it with
        a subroutine, then it is expected that the subroutine will return
        the "HTML::Element"(s) which are "tr" element(s). The reason a
        subroutine might be preferred is in the case that the HTML designers
        gave you 8 sample "tr" rows but only one prototype row is needed. So
        you can write a subroutine, to splice out the 7 rows you don't need
        and leave the one sample row remaining so that this API call can
        clone it and supply it to the "tr_proc" and "td_proc" calls.
        Now, as we move through the table rows with table data, we need to
        do two different things on each table row:
        * get one row of data from the "table_data" via "tr_data"
            The default procedure assumes the "table_data" is an array
            reference and shifts a row off of it:
               sub { my ($self, $data) = @_;
                     shift(@{$data}) ;
                   }
            Your function MUST return undef when there is no more rows to
            lay out.
        * take the "tr" element and mutate it via "tr_proc"
            The default procedure simply makes the id of the table row
            unique:
              sub { my ($self, $tr, $tr_data, $row_count, $root_id) = @_;
                    $tr->attr(id => sprintf "%s_%d", $root_id, $row_count);
                  }
        Now that we have our row of data, we call "td_proc" so that it can
        take the data and the "td" cells in this "tr" and process them. This
        function *must* be supplied.
   Whither a Table with No Rows
        Often when a table has no rows, we want to display a message
        indicating this to the view. Use conditional processing to decide
        what to display:  | name | age | weight |  
 
             | NATURE BOY RIC FLAIR | 35 | 220 |  
 
             | NATURE BOY RIC FLAIR | 35 | 220 |  
 
             SEE ALSO
        * HTML::Tree
            A perl package for creating and manipulating HTML trees
        * HTML::ElementTable
            An HTML::Tree - based module which allows for manipulation of
            HTML trees using cartesian coordinations.
        * HTML::Seamstress
            An HTML::Tree - based module inspired by XMLC
            (), allowing for dynamic HTML
            generation via tree rewriting.
AUTHOR
            Terrence Brannon, 
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
            Copyright (C) 2004 by Terrence Brannon
            This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
            modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl
            version 5.8.4 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5
            you may have available.  | name | age | weight |  
 
                 | NATURE BOY RIC FLAIR | 35 | 220 |  |