1App::PodLinkCheck::ParsUesLeirnkCso(n3t)ributed Perl DocAupmpe:n:tPaotdiLoinnkCheck::ParseLinks(3)
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6 App::PodLinkCheck::ParseLinks -- parse out POD L<> links
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9 use App::PodLinkCheck::ParseLinks;
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12 Pod::Simple
13 App::PodLinkCheck::ParseSections
14 App::PodLinkCheck::ParseLinks
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17 This is a POD parser used by "App::PodLinkCheck" to find "L<>" links
18 and section names in a document. Its behaviour is specific to
19 PodLinkCheck but might have other use.
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21 Section names are recorded as per the superclass
22 "App::PodLinkCheck::ParseSections". This subclass records "L<>" links
23 too.
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25 Links are recorded in an array (and sections in a hash) rather than
26 callbacks or similar because PodLinkCheck does its analysis at the end
27 of a document. This is since internal links will be satisfied by
28 section names which might be late in the document, and the full list of
29 section names is used to suggest likely candidates for a broken link.
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32 "$parser = App::PodLinkCheck::ParseLinks->new($options_hashref)"
33 Create and return a new parser object.
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35 (See superclass App::PodLinkCheck::ParseSections on POD whining
36 options.)
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38 "$parser->parse_file($filename)"
39 Parse the pod from $filename. All the various "Pod::Simple" parse
40 input styles can be used too.
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42 "$aref = $parser->links_arrayref()"
43 Return an arrayref of "L<>" links seen by $parser. Each array
44 element is a 5-element arrayref
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46 [ $type, # L<> attribute, eg. 'pod' or 'man'
47 $to, # L<> attribute, whitespace collapsed, or undef
48 $section, # L<> attribute or undef
49 $linenum, # integer, first line 1
50 $column # integer, first column 1
51 ]
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53 So for example
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55 my $links_arrayref = $parser->links_arrayref;
56 foreach my $link (@$links_arrayref) {
57 my ($type, $to, $section, $linenum, $column) = @$link;
58 ...
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60 $type, $to and $section are the "type", "to" and "section"
61 attributes from "Pod::Simple". An internal link has "$to = undef".
62 An external link with no section has "$section = undef".
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64 $to and $section are mildly normalized by collapsing whitespace to
65 a single space each and removing leading and trailing whitespace.
66 Believe that's mostly how the pod formatters end up treating target
67 names for linking purposes. (That sort of treatment being the
68 intention here.) Usually $to won't have any whitespace (being a
69 module name etc).
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71 $linenum and $column are the location of the "L<>" in the input
72 file. "Pod::Simple" normally only gives the paragraph start line.
73 Some gambits here give more resolution since it's helpful to show
74 the exact place in a paragraph with several links.
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76 The links accumulate everything seen by $parser. No attention is
77 paid to any "Document" start etc. Usually a new
78 "App::PodLinkCheck::ParseLinks" will be used for each file.
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80 The accuracy of $linenum and $column presently depend on seeing
81 "X<>" codes, so if subclassing or similar don't "nix_X_codes()".
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84 App::PodLinkCheck, App::PodLinkCheck::ParseSections
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87 http://user42.tuxfamily.org/podlinkcheck/index.html
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90 Copyright 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2016 Kevin Ryde
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92 PodLinkCheck is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
93 under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
94 Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any
95 later version.
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97 PodLinkCheck is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
98 WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
99 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
100 General Public License for more details.
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102 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
103 with PodLinkCheck. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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107perl v5.30.0 2019-07-26 App::PodLinkCheck::ParseLinks(3)