1Pod::Simple(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Pod::Simple(3)
2
3
4
6 Pod::Simple - framework for parsing Pod
7
9 TODO
10
12 Pod::Simple is a Perl library for parsing text in the Pod ("plain old
13 documentation") markup language that is typically used for writing
14 documentation for Perl and for Perl modules. The Pod format is
15 explained in perlpod; the most common formatter is called "perldoc".
16
17 Be sure to read "ENCODING" if your Pod contains non-ASCII characters.
18
19 Pod formatters can use Pod::Simple to parse Pod documents and render
20 them into plain text, HTML, or any number of other formats. Typically,
21 such formatters will be subclasses of Pod::Simple, and so they will
22 inherit its methods, like "parse_file". But note that Pod::Simple
23 doesn't understand and properly parse Perl itself, so if you have a
24 file which contains a Perl program that has a multi-line quoted string
25 which has lines that look like pod, Pod::Simple will treat them as pod.
26 This can be avoided if the file makes these into indented here
27 documents instead.
28
29 If you're reading this document just because you have a Pod-processing
30 subclass that you want to use, this document (plus the documentation
31 for the subclass) is probably all you need to read.
32
33 If you're reading this document because you want to write a formatter
34 subclass, continue reading it and then read Pod::Simple::Subclassing,
35 and then possibly even read perlpodspec (some of which is for parser-
36 writers, but much of which is notes to formatter-writers).
37
39 "$parser = SomeClass->new();"
40 This returns a new parser object, where "SomeClass" is a subclass
41 of Pod::Simple.
42
43 "$parser->output_fh( *OUT );"
44 This sets the filehandle that $parser's output will be written to.
45 You can pass *STDOUT or *STDERR, otherwise you should probably do
46 something like this:
47
48 my $outfile = "output.txt";
49 open TXTOUT, ">$outfile" or die "Can't write to $outfile: $!";
50 $parser->output_fh(*TXTOUT);
51
52 ...before you call one of the "$parser->parse_whatever" methods.
53
54 "$parser->output_string( \$somestring );"
55 This sets the string that $parser's output will be sent to, instead
56 of any filehandle.
57
58 "$parser->parse_file( $some_filename );"
59 "$parser->parse_file( *INPUT_FH );"
60 This reads the Pod content of the file (or filehandle) that you
61 specify, and processes it with that $parser object, according to
62 however $parser's class works, and according to whatever parser
63 options you have set up for this $parser object.
64
65 "$parser->parse_string_document( $all_content );"
66 This works just like "parse_file" except that it reads the Pod
67 content not from a file, but from a string that you have already in
68 memory.
69
70 "$parser->parse_lines( ...@lines..., undef );"
71 This processes the lines in @lines (where each list item must be a
72 defined value, and must contain exactly one line of content -- so
73 no items like "foo\nbar" are allowed). The final "undef" is used
74 to indicate the end of document being parsed.
75
76 The other "parser_whatever" methods are meant to be called only
77 once per $parser object; but "parse_lines" can be called as many
78 times per $parser object as you want, as long as the last call (and
79 only the last call) ends with an "undef" value.
80
81 "$parser->content_seen"
82 This returns true only if there has been any real content seen for
83 this document. Returns false in cases where the document contains
84 content, but does not make use of any Pod markup.
85
86 "SomeClass->filter( $filename );"
87 "SomeClass->filter( *INPUT_FH );"
88 "SomeClass->filter( \$document_content );"
89 This is a shortcut method for creating a new parser object, setting
90 the output handle to STDOUT, and then processing the specified file
91 (or filehandle, or in-memory document). This is handy for one-
92 liners like this:
93
94 perl -MPod::Simple::Text -e "Pod::Simple::Text->filter('thingy.pod')"
95
97 Some of these methods might be of interest to general users, as well as
98 of interest to formatter-writers.
99
100 Note that the general pattern here is that the accessor-methods read
101 the attribute's value with "$value = $parser->attribute" and set the
102 attribute's value with "$parser->attribute(newvalue)". For each
103 accessor, I typically only mention one syntax or another, based on
104 which I think you are actually most likely to use.
105
106 "$parser->parse_characters( SOMEVALUE )"
107 The Pod parser normally expects to read octets and to convert those
108 octets to characters based on the "=encoding" declaration in the
109 Pod source. Set this option to a true value to indicate that the
110 Pod source is already a Perl character stream. This tells the
111 parser to ignore any "=encoding" command and to skip all the code
112 paths involving decoding octets.
113
114 "$parser->no_whining( SOMEVALUE )"
115 If you set this attribute to a true value, you will suppress the
116 parser's complaints about irregularities in the Pod coding. By
117 default, this attribute's value is false, meaning that
118 irregularities will be reported.
119
120 Note that turning this attribute to true won't suppress one or two
121 kinds of complaints about rarely occurring unrecoverable errors.
122
123 "$parser->no_errata_section( SOMEVALUE )"
124 If you set this attribute to a true value, you will stop the parser
125 from generating a "POD ERRORS" section at the end of the document.
126 By default, this attribute's value is false, meaning that an errata
127 section will be generated, as necessary.
128
129 "$parser->complain_stderr( SOMEVALUE )"
130 If you set this attribute to a true value, it will send reports of
131 parsing errors to STDERR. By default, this attribute's value is
132 false, meaning that no output is sent to STDERR.
133
134 Setting "complain_stderr" also sets "no_errata_section".
135
136 "$parser->source_filename"
137 This returns the filename that this parser object was set to read
138 from.
139
140 "$parser->doc_has_started"
141 This returns true if $parser has read from a source, and has seen
142 Pod content in it.
143
144 "$parser->source_dead"
145 This returns true if $parser has read from a source, and come to
146 the end of that source.
147
148 "$parser->strip_verbatim_indent( SOMEVALUE )"
149 The perlpod spec for a Verbatim paragraph is "It should be
150 reproduced exactly...", which means that the whitespace you've used
151 to indent your verbatim blocks will be preserved in the output.
152 This can be annoying for outputs such as HTML, where that
153 whitespace will remain in front of every line. It's an unfortunate
154 case where syntax is turned into semantics.
155
156 If the POD you're parsing adheres to a consistent indentation
157 policy, you can have such indentation stripped from the beginning
158 of every line of your verbatim blocks. This method tells
159 Pod::Simple what to strip. For two-space indents, you'd use:
160
161 $parser->strip_verbatim_indent(' ');
162
163 For tab indents, you'd use a tab character:
164
165 $parser->strip_verbatim_indent("\t");
166
167 If the POD is inconsistent about the indentation of verbatim
168 blocks, but you have figured out a heuristic to determine how much
169 a particular verbatim block is indented, you can pass a code
170 reference instead. The code reference will be executed with one
171 argument, an array reference of all the lines in the verbatim
172 block, and should return the value to be stripped from each line.
173 For example, if you decide that you're fine to use the first line
174 of the verbatim block to set the standard for indentation of the
175 rest of the block, you can look at the first line and return the
176 appropriate value, like so:
177
178 $new->strip_verbatim_indent(sub {
179 my $lines = shift;
180 (my $indent = $lines->[0]) =~ s/\S.*//;
181 return $indent;
182 });
183
184 If you'd rather treat each line individually, you can do that, too,
185 by just transforming them in-place in the code reference and
186 returning "undef". Say that you don't want any lines indented. You
187 can do something like this:
188
189 $new->strip_verbatim_indent(sub {
190 my $lines = shift;
191 sub { s/^\s+// for @{ $lines },
192 return undef;
193 });
194
196 "$parser->abandon_output_fh()"
197 Cancel output to the file handle. Any POD read by the $parser is
198 not effected.
199
200 "$parser->abandon_output_string()"
201 Cancel output to the output string. Any POD read by the $parser is
202 not effected.
203
204 "$parser->accept_code( @codes )"
205 Alias for accept_codes.
206
207 "$parser->accept_codes( @codes )"
208 Allows $parser to accept a list of "Formatting Codes" in perlpod.
209 This can be used to implement user-defined codes.
210
211 "$parser->accept_directive_as_data( @directives )"
212 Allows $parser to accept a list of directives for data paragraphs.
213 A directive is the label of a "Command Paragraph" in perlpod. A
214 data paragraph is one delimited by "=begin/=for/=end" directives.
215 This can be used to implement user-defined directives.
216
217 "$parser->accept_directive_as_processed( @directives )"
218 Allows $parser to accept a list of directives for processed
219 paragraphs. A directive is the label of a "Command Paragraph" in
220 perlpod. A processed paragraph is also known as "Ordinary
221 Paragraph" in perlpod. This can be used to implement user-defined
222 directives.
223
224 "$parser->accept_directive_as_verbatim( @directives )"
225 Allows $parser to accept a list of directives for "Verbatim
226 Paragraph" in perlpod. A directive is the label of a "Command
227 Paragraph" in perlpod. This can be used to implement user-defined
228 directives.
229
230 "$parser->accept_target( @targets )"
231 Alias for accept_targets.
232
233 "$parser->accept_target_as_text( @targets )"
234 Alias for accept_targets_as_text.
235
236 "$parser->accept_targets( @targets )"
237 Accepts targets for "=begin/=for/=end" sections of the POD.
238
239 "$parser->accept_targets_as_text( @targets )"
240 Accepts targets for "=begin/=for/=end" sections that should be
241 parsed as POD. For details, see "About Data Paragraphs" in
242 perlpodspec.
243
244 "$parser->any_errata_seen()"
245 Used to check if any errata was seen.
246
247 Example:
248
249 die "too many errors\n" if $parser->any_errata_seen();
250
251 "$parser->errata_seen()"
252 Returns a hash reference of all errata seen, both whines and
253 screams. The hash reference's keys are the line number and the
254 value is an array reference of the errors for that line.
255
256 Example:
257
258 if ( $parser->any_errata_seen() ) {
259 $logger->log( $parser->errata_seen() );
260 }
261
262 "$parser->detected_encoding()"
263 Return the encoding corresponding to "=encoding", but only if the
264 encoding was recognized and handled.
265
266 "$parser->encoding()"
267 Return encoding of the document, even if the encoding is not
268 correctly handled.
269
270 "$parser->parse_from_file( $source, $to )"
271 Parses from $source file to $to file. Similar to "parse_from_file"
272 in Pod::Parser.
273
274 "$parser->scream( @error_messages )"
275 Log an error that can't be ignored.
276
277 "$parser->unaccept_code( @codes )"
278 Alias for unaccept_codes.
279
280 "$parser->unaccept_codes( @codes )"
281 Removes @codes as valid codes for the parse.
282
283 "$parser->unaccept_directive( @directives )"
284 Alias for unaccept_directives.
285
286 "$parser->unaccept_directives( @directives )"
287 Removes @directives as valid directives for the parse.
288
289 "$parser->unaccept_target( @targets )"
290 Alias for unaccept_targets.
291
292 "$parser->unaccept_targets( @targets )"
293 Removes @targets as valid targets for the parse.
294
295 "$parser->version_report()"
296 Returns a string describing the version.
297
298 "$parser->whine( @error_messages )"
299 Log an error unless "$parser->no_whining( TRUE );".
300
302 The Pod::Simple parser expects to read octets. The parser will decode
303 the octets into Perl's internal character string representation using
304 the value of the "=encoding" declaration in the POD source.
305
306 If the POD source does not include an "=encoding" declaration, the
307 parser will attempt to guess the encoding (selecting one of UTF-8 or CP
308 1252) by examining the first non-ASCII bytes and applying the heuristic
309 described in perlpodspec. (If the POD source contains only ASCII
310 bytes, the encoding is assumed to be ASCII.)
311
312 If you set the "parse_characters" option to a true value the parser
313 will expect characters rather than octets; will ignore any "=encoding";
314 and will make no attempt to decode the input.
315
317 Pod::Simple::Subclassing
318
319 perlpod
320
321 perlpodspec
322
323 Pod::Escapes
324
325 perldoc
326
328 Questions or discussion about POD and Pod::Simple should be sent to the
329 pod-people@perl.org mail list. Send an empty email to
330 pod-people-subscribe@perl.org to subscribe.
331
332 This module is managed in an open GitHub repository,
333 <https://github.com/perl-pod/pod-simple/>. Feel free to fork and
334 contribute, or to clone <git://github.com/perl-pod/pod-simple.git> and
335 send patches!
336
337 Please use <https://github.com/perl-pod/pod-simple/issues/new> to file
338 a bug report.
339
341 Copyright (c) 2002 Sean M. Burke.
342
343 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
344 under the same terms as Perl itself.
345
346 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
347 without any warranty; without even the implied warranty of
348 merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.
349
351 Pod::Simple was created by Sean M. Burke <sburke@cpan.org>. But don't
352 bother him, he's retired.
353
354 Pod::Simple is maintained by:
355
356 · Allison Randal "allison@perl.org"
357
358 · Hans Dieter Pearcey "hdp@cpan.org"
359
360 · David E. Wheeler "dwheeler@cpan.org"
361
362 · Karl Williamson "khw@cpan.org"
363
364 Documentation has been contributed by:
365
366 · Gabor Szabo "szabgab@gmail.com"
367
368 · Shawn H Corey "SHCOREY at cpan.org"
369
370
371
372perl v5.30.0 2019-07-26 Pod::Simple(3)