@table(treelike)

Returns a basic tabular representation of the keys and values in the indicated tree.

If the tree is flat — that is, has only a single level of keys and values — the table will have two columns listing those.

$ ori greetings.yaml
Alice: Hello, Alice.
Bob: Hello, Bob.
Carol: Hello, Carol.
$ ori table greetings.yaml
Key     Value
Alice   Hello, Alice.
Bob     Hello, Bob.
Carol   Hello, Carol.

If the tree has two levels, the row headings will contain the top-level keys, and the column headings will be the second-level keys. (The first subtree in the tree will be taken as representative of the remaining subtrees.)

$ ori languages.json
{
  "english": {
    "a": "Hello, a.",
    "b": "Hello, b.",
    "c": "Hello, c."
  },
  "french": {
    "a": "Bonjour, a.",
    "b": "Bonjour, b.",
    "c": "Bonjour, c."
  },
  "spanish": {
    "a": "Hola, a.",
    "b": "Hola, b.",
    "c": "Hola, c."
  }
}
$ ori @table languages.json | column -t -s$'\t'
         a            b            c
english  Hello, a.    Hello, b.    Hello, c.
french   Bonjour, a.  Bonjour, b.  Bonjour, c.
spanish  Hola, a.     Hola, b.     Hola, c.

table separates columns with TAB characters. To ensure visual column alignment requires using other shell tools (such as column, above).