1Perl::Tidy(3)         User Contributed Perl Documentation        Perl::Tidy(3)
2
3
4

NAME

6       Perl::Tidy - Parses and beautifies perl source
7

SYNOPSIS

9           use Perl::Tidy;
10
11           my $error_flag = Perl::Tidy::perltidy(
12               source            => $source,
13               destination       => $destination,
14               stderr            => $stderr,
15               argv              => $argv,
16               perltidyrc        => $perltidyrc,
17               logfile           => $logfile,
18               errorfile         => $errorfile,
19               teefile           => $teefile,
20               debugfile         => $debugfile,
21               formatter         => $formatter,           # callback object (see below)
22               dump_options      => $dump_options,
23               dump_options_type => $dump_options_type,
24               prefilter         => $prefilter_coderef,
25               postfilter        => $postfilter_coderef,
26           );
27

DESCRIPTION

29       This module makes the functionality of the perltidy utility available
30       to perl scripts.  Any or all of the input parameters may be omitted, in
31       which case the @ARGV array will be used to provide input parameters as
32       described in the perltidy(1) man page.
33
34       For example, the perltidy script is basically just this:
35
36           use Perl::Tidy;
37           Perl::Tidy::perltidy();
38
39       The call to perltidy returns a scalar $error_flag which is TRUE if an
40       error caused premature termination, and FALSE if the process ran to
41       normal completion.  Additional discuss of errors is contained below in
42       the ERROR HANDLING section.
43
44       The module accepts input and output streams by a variety of methods.
45       The following list of parameters may be any of the following: a
46       filename, an ARRAY reference, a SCALAR reference, or an object with
47       either a getline or print method, as appropriate.
48
49               source            - the source of the script to be formatted
50               destination       - the destination of the formatted output
51               stderr            - standard error output
52               perltidyrc        - the .perltidyrc file
53               logfile           - the .LOG file stream, if any
54               errorfile         - the .ERR file stream, if any
55               dump_options      - ref to a hash to receive parameters (see below),
56               dump_options_type - controls contents of dump_options
57               dump_getopt_flags - ref to a hash to receive Getopt flags
58               dump_options_category - ref to a hash giving category of options
59               dump_abbreviations    - ref to a hash giving all abbreviations
60
61       The following chart illustrates the logic used to decide how to treat a
62       parameter.
63
64          ref($param)  $param is assumed to be:
65          -----------  ---------------------
66          undef        a filename
67          SCALAR       ref to string
68          ARRAY        ref to array
69          (other)      object with getline (if source) or print method
70
71       If the parameter is an object, and the object has a close method, that
72       close method will be called at the end of the stream.
73
74       source
75           If the source parameter is given, it defines the source of the
76           input stream.  If an input stream is defined with the source
77           parameter then no other source filenames may be specified in the
78           @ARGV array or argv parameter.
79
80       destination
81           If the destination parameter is given, it will be used to define
82           the file or memory location to receive output of perltidy.
83
84           Important note if destination is a string or array reference.  Perl
85           strings of characters which are decoded as utf8 by Perl::Tidy can
86           be returned in either of two possible states, decoded or encoded,
87           and it is important that the calling program and Perl::Tidy are in
88           agreement regarding the state to be returned.  A flag
89           --encode-output-strings, or simply -eos, was added in versions of
90           Perl::Tidy after 20220101 for this purpose. This flag should be
91           added to the end of the argv paremeter (described below) if
92           Perl::Tidy will be decoding utf8 text.  The options are as follows.
93
94           •   Use -eos if Perl::Tidy should encode any string which it
95               decodes.  This is probably most convenient for most programs.
96               But do not use this setting if the calling program will encode
97               the data too, because double encoding will corrupt data.
98
99           •   Use -neos if a string should remain decoded if it was decoded
100               by Perl::Tidy.  This is appropriate if the calling program will
101               handle any needed encoding before outputting the string.
102
103           •   The current default is -neos, but the default could change in a
104               future version, so -neos should still be set, if appropriate,
105               to allow for the possibility of a future change in the default.
106
107           For example, to set -eos the following could be used
108
109                   $argv .= " -eos" if ( $Perl::Tidy::VERSION > 20220101 );
110
111                   $error_flag = Perl::Tidy::perltidy(
112                       argv        => $argv,
113                       source      => \$source,
114                       destination => \$destination,
115                       stderr      => \$stderr,
116                       errorfile   => \$errorfile
117                   );
118
119           The test on version allows older versions of Perl::Tidy to still be
120           used.
121
122           For some background information see
123           <https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy/issues/83> and
124           <https://github.com/houseabsolute/perl-code-tidyall/issues/84>.
125
126       stderr
127           The stderr parameter allows the calling program to redirect the
128           stream that would otherwise go to the standard error output device
129           to any of the stream types listed above.  This stream contains
130           important warnings and errors related to the parameters passed to
131           perltidy.
132
133       perltidyrc
134           If the perltidyrc file is given, it will be used instead of any
135           .perltidyrc configuration file that would otherwise be used.
136
137       errorfile
138           The errorfile parameter allows the calling program to capture the
139           stream that would otherwise go to either a .ERR file.  This stream
140           contains warnings or errors related to the contents of one source
141           file or stream.
142
143           The reason that this is different from the stderr stream is that
144           when perltidy is called to process multiple files there will be up
145           to one .ERR file created for each file and it would be very
146           confusing if they were combined.
147
148           However if perltidy is called to process just a single perl script
149           then it may be more convenient to combine the errorfile stream with
150           the stderr stream.  This can be done by setting the -se parameter,
151           in which case this parameter is ignored.
152
153       logfile
154           The logfile parameter allows the calling program to capture the log
155           stream.  This stream is only created if requested with a -g
156           parameter.  It contains detailed diagnostic information about a
157           script which may be useful for debugging.
158
159       teefile
160           The teefile parameter allows the calling program to capture the tee
161           stream.  This stream is only created if requested with one of the
162           'tee' parameters, a --tee-pod , --tee-block-comments,
163           --tee-side-commnts, or --tee-all-comments.
164
165       debugfile
166           The debugfile parameter allows the calling program to capture the
167           stream produced by the --DEBUG parameter.  This parameter is mainly
168           used for debugging perltidy itself.
169
170       argv
171           If the argv parameter is given, it will be used instead of the
172           @ARGV array.  The argv parameter may be a string, a reference to a
173           string, or a reference to an array.  If it is a string or reference
174           to a string, it will be parsed into an array of items just as if it
175           were a command line string.
176
177       dump_options
178           If the dump_options parameter is given, it must be the reference to
179           a hash.  In this case, the parameters contained in any perltidyrc
180           configuration file will be placed in this hash and perltidy will
181           return immediately.  This is equivalent to running perltidy with
182           --dump-options, except that the parameters are returned in a hash
183           rather than dumped to standard output.  Also, by default only the
184           parameters in the perltidyrc file are returned, but this can be
185           changed (see the next parameter).  This parameter provides a
186           convenient method for external programs to read a perltidyrc file.
187           An example program using this feature, perltidyrc_dump.pl, is
188           included in the distribution.
189
190           Any combination of the dump_ parameters may be used together.
191
192       dump_options_type
193           This parameter is a string which can be used to control the
194           parameters placed in the hash reference supplied by dump_options.
195           The possible values are 'perltidyrc' (default) and 'full'.  The
196           'full' parameter causes both the default options plus any options
197           found in a perltidyrc file to be returned.
198
199       dump_getopt_flags
200           If the dump_getopt_flags parameter is given, it must be the
201           reference to a hash.  This hash will receive all of the parameters
202           that perltidy understands and flags that are passed to
203           Getopt::Long.  This parameter may be used alone or with the
204           dump_options flag.  Perltidy will exit immediately after filling
205           this hash.  See the demo program perltidyrc_dump.pl for example
206           usage.
207
208       dump_options_category
209           If the dump_options_category parameter is given, it must be the
210           reference to a hash.  This hash will receive a hash with keys equal
211           to all long parameter names and values equal to the title of the
212           corresponding section of the perltidy manual.  See the demo program
213           perltidyrc_dump.pl for example usage.
214
215       dump_abbreviations
216           If the dump_abbreviations parameter is given, it must be the
217           reference to a hash.  This hash will receive all abbreviations used
218           by Perl::Tidy.  See the demo program perltidyrc_dump.pl for example
219           usage.
220
221       prefilter
222           A code reference that will be applied to the source before tidying.
223           It is expected to take the full content as a string in its input,
224           and output the transformed content.
225
226       postfilter
227           A code reference that will be applied to the tidied result before
228           outputting.  It is expected to take the full content as a string in
229           its input, and output the transformed content.
230
231           Note: A convenient way to check the function of your custom
232           prefilter and postfilter code is to use the --notidy option, first
233           with just the prefilter and then with both the prefilter and
234           postfilter.  See also the file filter_example.pl in the perltidy
235           distribution.
236

ERROR HANDLING

238       An exit value of 0, 1, or 2 is returned by perltidy to indicate the
239       status of the result.
240
241       A exit value of 0 indicates that perltidy ran to completion with no
242       error messages.
243
244       An exit value of 1 indicates that the process had to be terminated
245       early due to errors in the input parameters.  This can happen for
246       example if a parameter is misspelled or given an invalid value.  The
247       calling program should check for this flag because if it is set the
248       destination stream will be empty or incomplete and should be ignored.
249       Error messages in the stderr stream will indicate the cause of any
250       problem.
251
252       An exit value of 2 indicates that perltidy ran to completion but there
253       there are warning messages in the stderr stream related to parameter
254       errors or conflicts and/or warning messages in the errorfile stream
255       relating to possible syntax errors in the source code being tidied.
256
257       In the event of a catastrophic error for which recovery is not possible
258       perltidy terminates by making calls to croak or confess to help the
259       programmer localize the problem.  These should normally only occur
260       during program development.
261

NOTES ON FORMATTING PARAMETERS

263       Parameters which control formatting may be passed in several ways: in a
264       .perltidyrc configuration file, in the perltidyrc parameter, and in the
265       argv parameter.
266
267       The -syn (--check-syntax) flag may be used with all source and
268       destination streams except for standard input and output.  However data
269       streams which are not associated with a filename will be copied to a
270       temporary file before being passed to Perl.  This use of temporary
271       files can cause somewhat confusing output from Perl.
272
273       If the -pbp style is used it will typically be necessary to also
274       specify a -nst flag.  This is necessary to turn off the -st flag
275       contained in the -pbp parameter set which otherwise would direct the
276       output stream to the standard output.
277

EXAMPLES

279       The following example uses string references to hold the input and
280       output code and error streams, and illustrates checking for errors.
281
282         use Perl::Tidy;
283
284         my $source_string = <<'EOT';
285         my$error=Perl::Tidy::perltidy(argv=>$argv,source=>\$source_string,
286           destination=>\$dest_string,stderr=>\$stderr_string,
287         errorfile=>\$errorfile_string,);
288         EOT
289
290         my $dest_string;
291         my $stderr_string;
292         my $errorfile_string;
293         my $argv = "-npro";   # Ignore any .perltidyrc at this site
294         $argv .= " -pbp";     # Format according to perl best practices
295         $argv .= " -nst";     # Must turn off -st in case -pbp is specified
296         $argv .= " -se";      # -se appends the errorfile to stderr
297         ## $argv .= " --spell-check";  # uncomment to trigger an error
298
299         print "<<RAW SOURCE>>\n$source_string\n";
300
301         my $error = Perl::Tidy::perltidy(
302             argv        => $argv,
303             source      => \$source_string,
304             destination => \$dest_string,
305             stderr      => \$stderr_string,
306             errorfile   => \$errorfile_string,    # ignored when -se flag is set
307             ##phasers   => 'stun',                # uncomment to trigger an error
308         );
309
310         if ($error) {
311
312             # serious error in input parameters, no tidied output
313             print "<<STDERR>>\n$stderr_string\n";
314             die "Exiting because of serious errors\n";
315         }
316
317         if ($dest_string)      { print "<<TIDIED SOURCE>>\n$dest_string\n" }
318         if ($stderr_string)    { print "<<STDERR>>\n$stderr_string\n" }
319         if ($errorfile_string) { print "<<.ERR file>>\n$errorfile_string\n" }
320
321       Additional examples are given in examples section of the perltidy
322       distribution.
323

Using the formatter Callback Object

325       The formatter parameter is an optional callback object which allows the
326       calling program to receive tokenized lines directly from perltidy for
327       further specialized processing.  When this parameter is used, the two
328       formatting options which are built into perltidy (beautification or
329       html) are ignored.  The following diagram illustrates the logical flow:
330
331                           |-- (normal route)   -> code beautification
332         caller->perltidy->|-- (-html flag )    -> create html
333                           |-- (formatter given)-> callback to write_line
334
335       This can be useful for processing perl scripts in some way.  The
336       parameter $formatter in the perltidy call,
337
338               formatter   => $formatter,
339
340       is an object created by the caller with a "write_line" method which
341       will accept and process tokenized lines, one line per call.  Here is a
342       simple example of a "write_line" which merely prints the line number,
343       the line type (as determined by perltidy), and the text of the line:
344
345        sub write_line {
346
347            # This is called from perltidy line-by-line
348            my $self              = shift;
349            my $line_of_tokens    = shift;
350            my $line_type         = $line_of_tokens->{_line_type};
351            my $input_line_number = $line_of_tokens->{_line_number};
352            my $input_line        = $line_of_tokens->{_line_text};
353            print "$input_line_number:$line_type:$input_line";
354        }
355
356       The complete program, perllinetype, is contained in the examples
357       section of the source distribution.  As this example shows, the
358       callback method receives a parameter $line_of_tokens, which is a
359       reference to a hash of other useful information.  This example uses
360       these hash entries:
361
362        $line_of_tokens->{_line_number} - the line number (1,2,...)
363        $line_of_tokens->{_line_text}   - the text of the line
364        $line_of_tokens->{_line_type}   - the type of the line, one of:
365
366           SYSTEM         - system-specific code before hash-bang line
367           CODE           - line of perl code (including comments)
368           POD_START      - line starting pod, such as '=head'
369           POD            - pod documentation text
370           POD_END        - last line of pod section, '=cut'
371           HERE           - text of here-document
372           HERE_END       - last line of here-doc (target word)
373           FORMAT         - format section
374           FORMAT_END     - last line of format section, '.'
375           DATA_START     - __DATA__ line
376           DATA           - unidentified text following __DATA__
377           END_START      - __END__ line
378           END            - unidentified text following __END__
379           ERROR          - we are in big trouble, probably not a perl script
380
381       Most applications will be only interested in lines of type CODE.  For
382       another example, let's write a program which checks for one of the so-
383       called naughty matching variables "&`", $&, and "$'", which can slow
384       down processing.  Here is a write_line, from the example program
385       find_naughty.pl, which does that:
386
387        sub write_line {
388
389            # This is called back from perltidy line-by-line
390            # We're looking for $`, $&, and $'
391            my ( $self, $line_of_tokens ) = @_;
392
393            # pull out some stuff we might need
394            my $line_type         = $line_of_tokens->{_line_type};
395            my $input_line_number = $line_of_tokens->{_line_number};
396            my $input_line        = $line_of_tokens->{_line_text};
397            my $rtoken_type       = $line_of_tokens->{_rtoken_type};
398            my $rtokens           = $line_of_tokens->{_rtokens};
399            chomp $input_line;
400
401            # skip comments, pod, etc
402            return if ( $line_type ne 'CODE' );
403
404            # loop over tokens looking for $`, $&, and $'
405            for ( my $j = 0 ; $j < @$rtoken_type ; $j++ ) {
406
407                # we only want to examine token types 'i' (identifier)
408                next unless $$rtoken_type[$j] eq 'i';
409
410                # pull out the actual token text
411                my $token = $$rtokens[$j];
412
413                # and check it
414                if ( $token =~ /^\$[\`\&\']$/ ) {
415                    print STDERR
416                      "$input_line_number: $token\n";
417                }
418            }
419        }
420
421       This example pulls out these tokenization variables from the
422       $line_of_tokens hash reference:
423
424            $rtoken_type = $line_of_tokens->{_rtoken_type};
425            $rtokens     = $line_of_tokens->{_rtokens};
426
427       The variable $rtoken_type is a reference to an array of token type
428       codes, and $rtokens is a reference to a corresponding array of token
429       text.  These are obviously only defined for lines of type CODE.
430       Perltidy classifies tokens into types, and has a brief code for each
431       type.  You can get a complete list at any time by running perltidy from
432       the command line with
433
434            perltidy --dump-token-types
435
436       In the present example, we are only looking for tokens of type i
437       (identifiers), so the for loop skips past all other types.  When an
438       identifier is found, its actual text is checked to see if it is one
439       being sought.  If so, the above write_line prints the token and its
440       line number.
441
442       The formatter feature is relatively new in perltidy, and further
443       documentation needs to be written to complete its description.
444       However, several example programs have been written and can be found in
445       the examples section of the source distribution.  Probably the best way
446       to get started is to find one of the examples which most closely
447       matches your application and start modifying it.
448
449       For help with perltidy's peculiar way of breaking lines into tokens,
450       you might run, from the command line,
451
452        perltidy -D filename
453
454       where filename is a short script of interest.  This will produce
455       filename.DEBUG with interleaved lines of text and their token types.
456       The -D flag has been in perltidy from the beginning for this purpose.
457       If you want to see the code which creates this file, it is
458       "write_debug_entry" in Tidy.pm.
459

EXPORT

461         &perltidy
462

INSTALLATION

464       The module 'Perl::Tidy' comes with a binary 'perltidy' which is
465       installed when the module is installed.  The module name is case-
466       sensitive.  For example, the basic command for installing with cpanm is
467       'cpanm Perl::Tidy'.
468

VERSION

470       This man page documents Perl::Tidy version 20220217
471

LICENSE

473       This package is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
474       under the terms of the "GNU General Public License".
475
476       Please refer to the file "COPYING" for details.
477

BUG REPORTS

479       A list of current bugs and issues can be found at the CPAN site
480       <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Perl-Tidy>
481
482       To report a new bug or problem, use the link on this page.
483
484       The source code repository is at
485       <https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy>.
486

SEE ALSO

488       The perltidy(1) man page describes all of the features of perltidy.  It
489       can be found at http://perltidy.sourceforge.net.
490
491
492
493perl v5.34.0                      2022-02-15                     Perl::Tidy(3)
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