1Smart::Comments(3)    User Contributed Perl Documentation   Smart::Comments(3)
2
3
4

NAME

6       Smart::Comments - Comments that do more than just sit there
7

VERSION

9       This document describes Smart::Comments version 1.000005
10

SYNOPSIS

12           use Smart::Comments;
13
14           my $var = suspect_value();
15
16           ### $var
17
18           ### got: $var
19
20           ### Now computing value...
21
22           # and when looping:
23
24           for my $big_num (@big_nums) {  ### Factoring...      done
25               factor($big_num);
26           }
27
28           while ($error > $tolerance) {  ### Refining--->      done
29               refine_approximation()
30           }
31
32           for (my $i=0; $i<$MAX_INT; $i++) {   ### Working===[%]     done
33               do_something_expensive_with($i);
34           }
35

DESCRIPTION

37       Smart comments provide an easy way to insert debugging and tracking
38       code into a program. They can report the value of a variable, track the
39       progress of a loop, and verify that particular assertions are true.
40
41       Best of all, when you're finished debugging, you don't have to remove
42       them.  Simply commenting out the "use Smart::Comments" line turns them
43       back into regular comments. Leaving smart comments in your code is
44       smart because if you needed them once, you'll almost certainly need
45       them again later.
46

INTERFACE

48       All smart comments start with three (or more) "#" characters. That is,
49       they are regular "#"-introduced comments whose first two (or more)
50       characters are also "#"'s.
51
52   Using the Module
53       The module is loaded like any other:
54
55           use Smart::Comments;
56
57       When loaded it filters the remaining code up to the next:
58
59           no Smart::Comments;
60
61       directive, replacing any smart comments with smart code that implements
62       the comments behaviour.
63
64       If you're debugging an application you can also invoke it with the
65       module from the command-line:
66
67           perl -MSmart::Comments $application.pl
68
69       Of course, this only enables smart comments in the application file
70       itself, not in any modules that the application loads.
71
72       You can also specify particular levels of smartness, by including one
73       or more markers as arguments to the "use":
74
75           use Smart::Comments '###', '####';
76
77       These arguments tell the module to filter only those comments that
78       start with the same number of "#"'s. So the above "use" statement would
79       "activate" any smart comments of the form:
80
81           ###   Smart...
82
83           ####  Smarter...
84
85       but not those of the form:
86
87           ##### Smartest...
88
89       This facility is useful for differentiating progress bars (see
90       "Progress Bars"), which should always be active, from debugging
91       comments (see "Debugging via Comments"), which should not:
92
93           #### Debugging here...
94
95           for (@values) {         ### Progress: 0...  100
96               do_stuff();
97           }
98
99       Note that, for simplicity, all smart comments described below will be
100       written with three "#"'s; in all such cases, any number of "#"'s
101       greater than three could be used instead.
102
103   Debugging via Comments
104       The simplest way to use smart comments is for debugging. The module
105       supports the following forms, all of which print to "STDERR":
106
107       "### LABEL : EXPRESSION"
108           The LABEL is any sequence of characters up to the first colon.  The
109           EXPRESSION is any valid Perl expression, including a simple
110           variable.  When active, the comment prints the label, followed by
111           the value of the expression. For example:
112
113               ### Expected: 2 * $prediction
114               ###      Got: $result
115
116           prints:
117
118               ### Expected: 42
119               ###      Got: 13
120
121       "### EXPRESSION"
122           The EXPRESSION is any valid Perl expression, including a simple
123           variable. When active, the comment prints the expression, followed
124           by the value of the expression. For example:
125
126               ### 2 * $prediction
127               ### $result
128
129           prints:
130
131               ### 2 * $prediction: 42
132               ### $result: 13
133
134       "### TEXT..."
135           The TEXT is any sequence of characters that end in three dots.
136           When active, the comment just prints the text, including the dots.
137           For example:
138
139               ### Acquiring data...
140
141               $data = get_data();
142
143               ### Verifying data...
144
145               verify_data($data);
146
147               ### Assimilating data...
148
149               assimilate_data($data);
150
151               ### Tired now, having a little lie down...
152
153               sleep 900;
154
155           would print:
156
157               ### Acquiring data...
158
159               ### Verifying data...
160
161               ### Assimilating data...
162
163               ### Tired now, having a little lie down...
164
165           as each phase commenced. This is particularly useful for tracking
166           down precisely where a bug is occurring. It is also useful in non-
167           debugging situations, especially when batch processing, as a simple
168           progress feedback mechanism.
169
170           Within a textual smart comment you can use the special sequence
171           "<now>" (or "<time>" or "<when>") which is replaced with a
172           timestamp. For example:
173
174               ### [<now>] Acquiring data...
175
176           would produce something like:
177
178               ### [Fri Nov 18 15:11:15 EST 2005] Acquiring data...
179
180           There are also "spacestamps": "<here>" (or "<loc>" or "<place>" or
181           "<where>"):
182
183               ### Acquiring data at <loc>...
184
185           to produce something like:
186
187               ### Acquiring data at "demo.pl", line 7...
188
189           You can also request just the filename ("<file>") or just the line
190           number ("<line>") to get finer control over formatting:
191
192               ### Acquiring data at <file>[<line>]...
193
194           and produce something like:
195
196               ### Acquiring data at demo.pl[7]...
197
198           You can, of course, use any combination of stamps in the one
199           comment.
200
201   Checks and Assertions via Comments
202       "### require: BOOLEAN_EXPR"
203       "### assert:  BOOLEAN_EXPR"
204       "### ensure:  BOOLEAN_EXPR"
205       "### insist:  BOOLEAN_EXPR"
206           These four are synonyms for the same behaviour. The comment
207           evaluates the expression in a boolean context. If the result is
208           true, nothing more is done. If the result is false, the comment
209           throws an exception listing the expression, the fact that it
210           failed, and the values of any variables used in the expression.
211
212           For example, given the following assertion:
213
214               ### require: $min < $result && $result < $max
215
216           if the expression evaluated false, the comment would die with the
217           following message:
218
219               ### $min < $result && $result < $max was not true at demo.pl line 86.
220               ###     $min was: 7
221               ###     $result was: 1000004
222               ###     $max was: 99
223
224       "### check:   BOOLEAN_EXPR"
225       "### confirm: BOOLEAN_EXPR"
226       "### verify:  BOOLEAN_EXPR"
227           These three are synonyms for the same behaviour. The comment
228           evaluates the expression in a boolean context. If the result is
229           true, nothing more is done. If the result is false, the comment
230           prints a warning message listing the expression, the fact that it
231           failed, and the values of any variables used in the expression.
232
233           The effect is identical to that of the four assertions listed
234           earlier, except that "warn" is used instead of "die".
235
236   Progress Bars
237       You can put a smart comment on the same line as any of the following
238       types of Perl loop:
239
240           foreach my VAR ( LIST ) {       ### Progressing...   done
241
242           for my VAR ( LIST ) {           ### Progressing...   done
243
244           foreach ( LIST ) {              ### Progressing...   done
245
246           for ( LIST ) {                  ### Progressing...   done
247
248           while (CONDITION) {             ### Progressing...   done
249
250           until (CONDITION) {             ### Progressing...   done
251
252           for (INIT; CONDITION; INCR) {   ### Progressing...   done
253
254       In each case, the module animates the comment, causing the dots to
255       extend from the left text, reaching the right text on the last
256       iteration. For "open ended" loops (like "while" and C-style "for"
257       loops), the dots will never reach the right text and their progress
258       slows down as the number of iterations increases.
259
260       For example, a smart comment like:
261
262           for (@candidates) {       ### Evaluating...     done
263
264       would be animated is the following sequence (which would appear
265       sequentially on a single line, rather than on consecutive lines):
266
267           Evaluating                          done
268
269           Evaluating......                    done
270
271           Evaluating.............             done
272
273           Evaluating...................       done
274
275           Evaluating..........................done
276
277       The module animates the first sequence of three identical characters in
278       the comment, provided those characters are followed by a gap of at
279       least two whitespace characters. So you can specify different types of
280       progress bars. For example:
281
282           for (@candidates) {       ### Evaluating:::     done
283
284       or:
285
286           for (@candidates) {       ### Evaluating===     done
287
288       or:
289
290           for (@candidates) {       ### Evaluating|||     done
291
292       If the characters to be animated are immediately followed by other non-
293       whitespace characters before the gap, then those other non-whitespace
294       characters are used as an "arrow head" or "leader" and are pushed right
295       by the growing progress bar. For example:
296
297           for (@candidates) {       ### Evaluating===|    done
298
299       would animate like so:
300
301           Evaluating|                         done
302
303           Evaluating=====|                    done
304
305           Evaluating============|             done
306
307           Evaluating==================|       done
308
309           Evaluating==========================done
310
311       If a percentage character ("%") appears anywhere in the comment, it is
312       replaced by the percentage completion. For example:
313
314           for (@candidates) {       ### Evaluating [===|    ] % done
315
316       animates like so:
317
318           Evaluating [|                ]   0% done
319
320           Evaluating [===|             ]  25% done
321
322           Evaluating [========|        ]  50% done
323
324           Evaluating [============|    ]  75% done
325
326           Evaluating [=================] 100% done
327
328       If the "%" is in the "arrow head" it moves with the progress bar. For
329       example:
330
331           for (@candidates) {       ### Evaluating |===[%]    |
332
333       would be animated like so:
334
335           Evaluating |[0%]                       |
336
337           Evaluating |=[25%]                     |
338
339           Evaluating |========[50%]              |
340
341           Evaluating |===============[75%]       |
342
343           Evaluating |===========================|
344
345       For "open-ended" loops, the percentage completion is unknown, so the
346       module replaces each "%" with the current iteration count. For example:
347
348           while ($next ne $target) {       ### Evaluating |===[%]    |
349
350       would animate like so:
351
352           Evaluating |[0]                        |
353
354           Evaluating |=[2]                       |
355
356           Evaluating |==[3]                      |
357
358           Evaluating |===[5]                     |
359
360           Evaluating |====[7]                    |
361
362           Evaluating |=====[8]                   |
363
364           Evaluating |======[11]                 |
365
366       Note that the non-sequential numbering in the above example is a result
367       of the "hurry up and slow down" algorithm that prevents open-ended
368       loops from ever reaching the right-hand side.
369
370       As a special case, if the progress bar is drawn as two pairs of
371       identical brackets:
372
373           for (@candidates) {       ### Evaluating: [][]
374
375           for (@candidates) {       ### Evaluating: {}{}
376
377           for (@candidates) {       ### Evaluating: ()()
378
379           for (@candidates) {       ### Evaluating: <><>
380
381       Then the bar grows by repeating bracket pairs:
382
383           Evaluating: [
384
385           Evaluating: []
386
387           Evaluating: [][
388
389           Evaluating: [][]
390
391           Evaluating: [][][
392
393       etc.
394
395       Finally, progress bars don't have to have an animated component. They
396       can just report the loop's progress numerically:
397
398           for (@candidates) {       ### Evaluating (% done)
399
400       which would animate (all of the same line):
401
402           Evaluating (0% done)
403
404           Evaluating (25% done)
405
406           Evaluating (50% done)
407
408           Evaluating (75% done)
409
410           Evaluating (100% done)
411
412   Time-Remaining Estimates
413       When a progress bar is used with a "for" loop, the module tracks how
414       long each iteration is taking and makes an estimate of how much time
415       will be required to complete the entire loop.
416
417       Normally this estimate is not shown, unless the estimate becomes large
418       enough to warrant informing the user. Specifically, the estimate will
419       be shown if, after five seconds, the time remaining exceeds ten
420       seconds.  In other words, a time-remaining estimate is shown if the
421       module detects a "for" loop that is likely to take more than 15 seconds
422       in total. For example:
423
424           for (@seven_samurai) {      ### Fighting: [|||    ]
425               fight();
426               sleep 5;
427           }
428
429       would be animated like so:
430
431           Fighting: [                           ]
432
433           Fighting: [||||                       ]
434
435           Fighting: [|||||||||                  ]  (about 20 seconds remaining)
436
437           Fighting: [||||||||||||||             ]  (about 20 seconds remaining)
438
439           Fighting: [||||||||||||||||||         ]  (about 10 seconds remaining)
440
441           Fighting: [|||||||||||||||||||||||    ]  (less than 10 seconds remaining)
442
443           Fighting: [|||||||||||||||||||||||||||]
444
445       The precision of the reported time-remaining estimate is deliberately
446       vague, mainly to prevent it being annoyingly wrong.
447

DIAGNOSTICS

449       In a sense, everything this module does is a diagnostic. All comments
450       that print anything, print it to "STDERR".
451
452       However, the module itself has only one diagnostic:
453
454       "Incomprehensible arguments: %s in call to 'use Smart::Comments"
455           You loaded the module and passed it an argument that wasn't
456           three-or- more "#"'s. Arguments like '###', '####', '#####', etc.
457           are the only ones that the module accepts.
458

CONFIGURATION AND ENVIRONMENT

460       Smart::Comments can make use of an environment variable from your
461       shell: "Smart_Comments". This variable can be specified either with a
462       true/false value (i.e. 1 or 0) or with the same arguments as may be
463       passed on the "use" line when loading the module (see "INTERFACE").
464       The following table summarizes the behaviour:
465
466                Value of
467           $ENV{Smart_Comments}          Equivalent Perl
468
469                   1                     use Smart::Comments;
470                   0                      no Smart::Comments;
471               '###:####'                use Smart::Comments qw(### ####);
472               '### ####'                use Smart::Comments qw(### ####);
473
474       To enable the "Smart_Comments" environment variable, you need to load
475       the module with the "-ENV" flag:
476
477           use Smart::Comments -ENV;
478
479       Note that you can still specify other arguments in the "use" statement:
480
481           use Smart::Comments -ENV, qw(### #####);
482
483       In this case, the contents of the environment variable replace the
484       "-ENV" in the argument list.
485

DEPENDENCIES

487       The module requires the following modules:
488
489       ·   Filter::Simple
490
491       ·   version
492
493       ·   List::Util
494
495       ·   Data::Dumper
496
497       ·   Text::Balanced
498

INCOMPATIBILITIES

500       None reported. This module is probably even relatively safe with other
501       Filter::Simple modules since it is very specific and limited in what it
502       filters.
503

BUGS AND LIMITATIONS

505       No bugs have been reported.
506
507       This module has the usual limitations of source filters (i.e. it looks
508       smarter than it is).
509
510       Please report any bugs or feature requests to
511       "bug-smart-comments@rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at
512       <http://rt.cpan.org>.
513

REPOSITORY

515       <https://github.com/neilb/Smart-Comments>
516

AUTHOR

518       Damian Conway  "<DCONWAY@cpan.org>"
519
521       Copyright (c) 2005, Damian Conway "<DCONWAY@cpan.org>". All rights
522       reserved.
523
524       This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
525       under the same terms as Perl itself.
526

DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY

528       BECAUSE THIS SOFTWARE IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
529       FOR THE SOFTWARE, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT
530       WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER
531       PARTIES PROVIDE THE SOFTWARE "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
532       EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
533       WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE
534       ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE SOFTWARE IS WITH
535       YOU. SHOULD THE SOFTWARE PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL
536       NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR, OR CORRECTION.
537
538       IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
539       WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
540       REDISTRIBUTE THE SOFTWARE AS PERMITTED BY THE ABOVE LICENCE, BE LIABLE
541       TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR
542       CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE
543       SOFTWARE (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING
544       RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A
545       FAILURE OF THE SOFTWARE TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER SOFTWARE), EVEN IF
546       SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
547       DAMAGES.
548
549
550
551perl v5.28.1                      2015-10-24                Smart::Comments(3)
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