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# Convert POD data to formatted text. | |
# | |
# This module converts POD to formatted text. It replaces the old Pod::Text | |
# module that came with versions of Perl prior to 5.6.0 and attempts to match | |
# its output except for some specific circumstances where other decisions | |
# seemed to produce better output. It uses Pod::Parser and is designed to be | |
# very easy to subclass. | |
# | |
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-1.0-or-later OR Artistic-1.0-Perl | |
############################################################################## | |
# Modules and declarations | |
############################################################################## | |
package Pod::Text; | |
use 5.008; | |
use strict; | |
use warnings; | |
use vars qw(@ISA @EXPORT %ESCAPES $VERSION); | |
use Carp qw(carp croak); | |
use Encode qw(encode); | |
use Exporter (); | |
use Pod::Simple (); | |
@ISA = qw(Pod::Simple Exporter); | |
# We have to export pod2text for backward compatibility. | |
@EXPORT = qw(pod2text); | |
$VERSION = '4.14'; | |
# Ensure that $Pod::Simple::nbsp and $Pod::Simple::shy are available. Code | |
# taken from Pod::Simple 3.32, but was only added in 3.30. | |
my ($NBSP, $SHY); | |
if ($Pod::Simple::VERSION ge 3.30) { | |
$NBSP = $Pod::Simple::nbsp; | |
$SHY = $Pod::Simple::shy; | |
} else { | |
$NBSP = chr utf8::unicode_to_native(0xA0); | |
$SHY = chr utf8::unicode_to_native(0xAD); | |
} | |
############################################################################## | |
# Initialization | |
############################################################################## | |
# This function handles code blocks. It's registered as a callback to | |
# Pod::Simple and therefore doesn't work as a regular method call, but all it | |
# does is call output_code with the line. | |
sub handle_code { | |
my ($line, $number, $parser) = @_; | |
$parser->output_code ($line . "\n"); | |
} | |
# Initialize the object and set various Pod::Simple options that we need. | |
# Here, we also process any additional options passed to the constructor or | |
# set up defaults if none were given. Note that all internal object keys are | |
# in all-caps, reserving all lower-case object keys for Pod::Simple and user | |
# arguments. | |
sub new { | |
my $class = shift; | |
my $self = $class->SUPER::new; | |
# Tell Pod::Simple to handle S<> by automatically inserting . | |
$self->nbsp_for_S (1); | |
# Tell Pod::Simple to keep whitespace whenever possible. | |
if ($self->can ('preserve_whitespace')) { | |
$self->preserve_whitespace (1); | |
} else { | |
$self->fullstop_space_harden (1); | |
} | |
# The =for and =begin targets that we accept. | |
$self->accept_targets (qw/text TEXT/); | |
# Ensure that contiguous blocks of code are merged together. Otherwise, | |
# some of the guesswork heuristics don't work right. | |
$self->merge_text (1); | |
# Pod::Simple doesn't do anything useful with our arguments, but we want | |
# to put them in our object as hash keys and values. This could cause | |
# problems if we ever clash with Pod::Simple's own internal class | |
# variables. | |
my %opts = @_; | |
my @opts = map { ("opt_$_", $opts{$_}) } keys %opts; | |
%$self = (%$self, @opts); | |
# Send errors to stderr if requested. | |
if ($$self{opt_stderr} and not $$self{opt_errors}) { | |
$$self{opt_errors} = 'stderr'; | |
} | |
delete $$self{opt_stderr}; | |
# Validate the errors parameter and act on it. | |
if (not defined $$self{opt_errors}) { | |
$$self{opt_errors} = 'pod'; | |
} | |
if ($$self{opt_errors} eq 'stderr' || $$self{opt_errors} eq 'die') { | |
$self->no_errata_section (1); | |
$self->complain_stderr (1); | |
if ($$self{opt_errors} eq 'die') { | |
$$self{complain_die} = 1; | |
} | |
} elsif ($$self{opt_errors} eq 'pod') { | |
$self->no_errata_section (0); | |
$self->complain_stderr (0); | |
} elsif ($$self{opt_errors} eq 'none') { | |
$self->no_errata_section (1); | |
$self->no_whining (1); | |
} else { | |
croak (qq(Invalid errors setting: "$$self{errors}")); | |
} | |
delete $$self{errors}; | |
# Initialize various things from our parameters. | |
$$self{opt_alt} = 0 unless defined $$self{opt_alt}; | |
$$self{opt_indent} = 4 unless defined $$self{opt_indent}; | |
$$self{opt_margin} = 0 unless defined $$self{opt_margin}; | |
$$self{opt_loose} = 0 unless defined $$self{opt_loose}; | |
$$self{opt_sentence} = 0 unless defined $$self{opt_sentence}; | |
$$self{opt_width} = 76 unless defined $$self{opt_width}; | |
# Figure out what quotes we'll be using for C<> text. | |
$$self{opt_quotes} ||= '"'; | |
if ($$self{opt_quotes} eq 'none') { | |
$$self{LQUOTE} = $$self{RQUOTE} = ''; | |
} elsif (length ($$self{opt_quotes}) == 1) { | |
$$self{LQUOTE} = $$self{RQUOTE} = $$self{opt_quotes}; | |
} elsif (length ($$self{opt_quotes}) % 2 == 0) { | |
my $length = length ($$self{opt_quotes}) / 2; | |
$$self{LQUOTE} = substr ($$self{opt_quotes}, 0, $length); | |
$$self{RQUOTE} = substr ($$self{opt_quotes}, $length); | |
} else { | |
croak qq(Invalid quote specification "$$self{opt_quotes}"); | |
} | |
# If requested, do something with the non-POD text. | |
$self->code_handler (\&handle_code) if $$self{opt_code}; | |
# Return the created object. | |
return $self; | |
} | |
############################################################################## | |
# Core parsing | |
############################################################################## | |
# This is the glue that connects the code below with Pod::Simple itself. The | |
# goal is to convert the event stream coming from the POD parser into method | |
# calls to handlers once the complete content of a tag has been seen. Each | |
# paragraph or POD command will have textual content associated with it, and | |
# as soon as all of a paragraph or POD command has been seen, that content | |
# will be passed in to the corresponding method for handling that type of | |
# object. The exceptions are handlers for lists, which have opening tag | |
# handlers and closing tag handlers that will be called right away. | |
# | |
# The internal hash key PENDING is used to store the contents of a tag until | |
# all of it has been seen. It holds a stack of open tags, each one | |
# represented by a tuple of the attributes hash for the tag and the contents | |
# of the tag. | |
# Add a block of text to the contents of the current node, formatting it | |
# according to the current formatting instructions as we do. | |
sub _handle_text { | |
my ($self, $text) = @_; | |
my $tag = $$self{PENDING}[-1]; | |
$$tag[1] .= $text; | |
} | |
# Given an element name, get the corresponding method name. | |
sub method_for_element { | |
my ($self, $element) = @_; | |
$element =~ tr/-/_/; | |
$element =~ tr/A-Z/a-z/; | |
$element =~ tr/_a-z0-9//cd; | |
return $element; | |
} | |
# Handle the start of a new element. If cmd_element is defined, assume that | |
# we need to collect the entire tree for this element before passing it to the | |
# element method, and create a new tree into which we'll collect blocks of | |
# text and nested elements. Otherwise, if start_element is defined, call it. | |
sub _handle_element_start { | |
my ($self, $element, $attrs) = @_; | |
my $method = $self->method_for_element ($element); | |
# If we have a command handler, we need to accumulate the contents of the | |
# tag before calling it. | |
if ($self->can ("cmd_$method")) { | |
push (@{ $$self{PENDING} }, [ $attrs, '' ]); | |
} elsif ($self->can ("start_$method")) { | |
my $method = 'start_' . $method; | |
$self->$method ($attrs, ''); | |
} | |
} | |
# Handle the end of an element. If we had a cmd_ method for this element, | |
# this is where we pass along the text that we've accumulated. Otherwise, if | |
# we have an end_ method for the element, call that. | |
sub _handle_element_end { | |
my ($self, $element) = @_; | |
my $method = $self->method_for_element ($element); | |
# If we have a command handler, pull off the pending text and pass it to | |
# the handler along with the saved attribute hash. | |
if ($self->can ("cmd_$method")) { | |
my $tag = pop @{ $$self{PENDING} }; | |
my $method = 'cmd_' . $method; | |
my $text = $self->$method (@$tag); | |
if (defined $text) { | |
if (@{ $$self{PENDING} } > 1) { | |
$$self{PENDING}[-1][1] .= $text; | |
} else { | |
$self->output ($text); | |
} | |
} | |
} elsif ($self->can ("end_$method")) { | |
my $method = 'end_' . $method; | |
$self->$method (); | |
} | |
} | |
############################################################################## | |
# Output formatting | |
############################################################################## | |
# Wrap a line, indenting by the current left margin. We can't use Text::Wrap | |
# because it plays games with tabs. We can't use formline, even though we'd | |
# really like to, because it screws up non-printing characters. So we have to | |
# do the wrapping ourselves. | |
sub wrap { | |
my $self = shift; | |
local $_ = shift; | |
my $output = ''; | |
my $spaces = ' ' x $$self{MARGIN}; | |
my $width = $$self{opt_width} - $$self{MARGIN}; | |
while (length > $width) { | |
if (s/^([^\n]{0,$width})[ \t\n]+// || s/^([^\n]{$width})//) { | |
$output .= $spaces . $1 . "\n"; | |
} else { | |
last; | |
} | |
} | |
$output .= $spaces . $_; | |
$output =~ s/\s+$/\n\n/; | |
return $output; | |
} | |
# Reformat a paragraph of text for the current margin. Takes the text to | |
# reformat and returns the formatted text. | |
sub reformat { | |
my $self = shift; | |
local $_ = shift; | |
# If we're trying to preserve two spaces after sentences, do some munging | |
# to support that. Otherwise, smash all repeated whitespace. Be careful | |
# not to use \s here, which in Unicode input may match non-breaking spaces | |
# that we don't want to smash. | |
if ($$self{opt_sentence}) { | |
s/ +$//mg; | |
s/\.\n/. \n/g; | |
s/\n/ /g; | |
s/ +/ /g; | |
} else { | |
s/[ \t\n]+/ /g; | |
} | |
return $self->wrap ($_); | |
} | |
# Output text to the output device. Replace non-breaking spaces with spaces | |
# and soft hyphens with nothing, and then try to fix the output encoding if | |
# necessary to match the input encoding unless UTF-8 output is forced. This | |
# preserves the traditional pass-through behavior of Pod::Text. | |
sub output { | |
my ($self, @text) = @_; | |
my $text = join ('', @text); | |
if ($NBSP) { | |
$text =~ s/$NBSP/ /g; | |
} | |
if ($SHY) { | |
$text =~ s/$SHY//g; | |
} | |
unless ($$self{opt_utf8}) { | |
my $encoding = $$self{encoding} || ''; | |
if ($encoding && $encoding ne $$self{ENCODING}) { | |
$$self{ENCODING} = $encoding; | |
eval { binmode ($$self{output_fh}, ":encoding($encoding)") }; | |
} | |
} | |
if ($$self{ENCODE}) { | |
print { $$self{output_fh} } encode ('UTF-8', $text); | |
} else { | |
print { $$self{output_fh} } $text; | |
} | |
} | |
# Output a block of code (something that isn't part of the POD text). Called | |
# by preprocess_paragraph only if we were given the code option. Exists here | |
# only so that it can be overridden by subclasses. | |
sub output_code { $_[0]->output ($_[1]) } | |
############################################################################## | |
# Document initialization | |
############################################################################## | |
# Set up various things that have to be initialized on a per-document basis. | |
sub start_document { | |
my ($self, $attrs) = @_; | |
if ($$attrs{contentless} && !$$self{ALWAYS_EMIT_SOMETHING}) { | |
$$self{CONTENTLESS} = 1; | |
} else { | |
delete $$self{CONTENTLESS}; | |
} | |
my $margin = $$self{opt_indent} + $$self{opt_margin}; | |
# Initialize a few per-document variables. | |
$$self{INDENTS} = []; # Stack of indentations. | |
$$self{MARGIN} = $margin; # Default left margin. | |
$$self{PENDING} = [[]]; # Pending output. | |
# We have to redo encoding handling for each document. | |
$$self{ENCODING} = ''; | |
# When UTF-8 output is set, check whether our output file handle already | |
# has a PerlIO encoding layer set. If it does not, we'll need to encode | |
# our output before printing it (handled in the output() sub). | |
$$self{ENCODE} = 0; | |
if ($$self{opt_utf8}) { | |
$$self{ENCODE} = 1; | |
eval { | |
my @options = (output => 1, details => 1); | |
my $flag = (PerlIO::get_layers ($$self{output_fh}, @options))[-1]; | |
if ($flag && ($flag & PerlIO::F_UTF8 ())) { | |
$$self{ENCODE} = 0; | |
$$self{ENCODING} = 'UTF-8'; | |
} | |
}; | |
} | |
return ''; | |
} | |
# Handle the end of the document. The only thing we do is handle dying on POD | |
# errors, since Pod::Parser currently doesn't. | |
sub end_document { | |
my ($self) = @_; | |
if ($$self{complain_die} && $self->errors_seen) { | |
croak ("POD document had syntax errors"); | |
} | |
} | |
############################################################################## | |
# Text blocks | |
############################################################################## | |
# Intended for subclasses to override, this method returns text with any | |
# non-printing formatting codes stripped out so that length() correctly | |
# returns the length of the text. For basic Pod::Text, it does nothing. | |
sub strip_format { | |
my ($self, $string) = @_; | |
return $string; | |
} | |
# This method is called whenever an =item command is complete (in other words, | |
# we've seen its associated paragraph or know for certain that it doesn't have | |
# one). It gets the paragraph associated with the item as an argument. If | |
# that argument is empty, just output the item tag; if it contains a newline, | |
# output the item tag followed by the newline. Otherwise, see if there's | |
# enough room for us to output the item tag in the margin of the text or if we | |
# have to put it on a separate line. | |
sub item { | |
my ($self, $text) = @_; | |
my $tag = $$self{ITEM}; | |
unless (defined $tag) { | |
carp "Item called without tag"; | |
return; | |
} | |
undef $$self{ITEM}; | |
# Calculate the indentation and margin. $fits is set to true if the tag | |
# will fit into the margin of the paragraph given our indentation level. | |
my $indent = $$self{INDENTS}[-1]; | |
$indent = $$self{opt_indent} unless defined $indent; | |
my $margin = ' ' x $$self{opt_margin}; | |
my $tag_length = length ($self->strip_format ($tag)); | |
my $fits = ($$self{MARGIN} - $indent >= $tag_length + 1); | |
# If the tag doesn't fit, or if we have no associated text, print out the | |
# tag separately. Otherwise, put the tag in the margin of the paragraph. | |
if (!$text || $text =~ /^\s+$/ || !$fits) { | |
my $realindent = $$self{MARGIN}; | |
$$self{MARGIN} = $indent; | |
my $output = $self->reformat ($tag); | |
$output =~ s/^$margin /$margin:/ if ($$self{opt_alt} && $indent > 0); | |
$output =~ s/\n*$/\n/; | |
# If the text is just whitespace, we have an empty item paragraph; | |
# this can result from =over/=item/=back without any intermixed | |
# paragraphs. Insert some whitespace to keep the =item from merging | |
# into the next paragraph. | |
$output .= "\n" if $text && $text =~ /^\s*$/; | |
$self->output ($output); | |
$$self{MARGIN} = $realindent; | |
$self->output ($self->reformat ($text)) if ($text && $text =~ /\S/); | |
} else { | |
my $space = ' ' x $indent; | |
$space =~ s/^$margin /$margin:/ if $$self{opt_alt}; | |
$text = $self->reformat ($text); | |
$text =~ s/^$margin /$margin:/ if ($$self{opt_alt} && $indent > 0); | |
my $tagspace = ' ' x $tag_length; | |
$text =~ s/^($space)$tagspace/$1$tag/ or warn "Bizarre space in item"; | |
$self->output ($text); | |
} | |
} | |
# Handle a basic block of text. The only tricky thing here is that if there | |
# is a pending item tag, we need to format this as an item paragraph. | |
sub cmd_para { | |
my ($self, $attrs, $text) = @_; | |
$text =~ s/\s+$/\n/; | |
if (defined $$self{ITEM}) { | |
$self->item ($text . "\n"); | |
} else { | |
$self->output ($self->reformat ($text . "\n")); | |
} | |
return ''; | |
} | |
# Handle a verbatim paragraph. Just print it out, but indent it according to | |
# our margin. | |
sub cmd_verbatim { | |
my ($self, $attrs, $text) = @_; | |
$self->item if defined $$self{ITEM}; | |
return if $text =~ /^\s*$/; | |
$text =~ s/^(\n*)([ \t]*\S+)/$1 . (' ' x $$self{MARGIN}) . $2/gme; | |
$text =~ s/\s*$/\n\n/; | |
$self->output ($text); | |
return ''; | |
} | |
# Handle literal text (produced by =for and similar constructs). Just output | |
# it with the minimum of changes. | |
sub cmd_data { | |
my ($self, $attrs, $text) = @_; | |
$text =~ s/^\n+//; | |
$text =~ s/\n{0,2}$/\n/; | |
$self->output ($text); | |
return ''; | |
} | |
############################################################################## | |
# Headings | |
############################################################################## | |
# The common code for handling all headers. Takes the header text, the | |
# indentation, and the surrounding marker for the alt formatting method. | |
sub heading { | |
my ($self, $text, $indent, $marker) = @_; | |
$self->item ("\n\n") if defined $$self{ITEM}; | |
$text =~ s/\s+$//; | |
if ($$self{opt_alt}) { | |
my $closemark = reverse (split (//, $marker)); | |
my $margin = ' ' x $$self{opt_margin}; | |
$self->output ("\n" . "$margin$marker $text $closemark" . "\n\n"); | |
} else { | |
$text .= "\n" if $$self{opt_loose}; | |
my $margin = ' ' x ($$self{opt_margin} + $indent); | |
$self->output ($margin . $text . "\n"); | |
} | |
return ''; | |
} | |
# First level heading. | |
sub cmd_head1 { | |
my ($self, $attrs, $text) = @_; | |
$self->heading ($text, 0, '===='); | |
} | |
# Second level heading. | |
sub cmd_head2 { | |
my ($self, $attrs, $text) = @_; | |
$self->heading ($text, $$self{opt_indent} / 2, '== '); | |
} | |
# Third level heading. | |
sub cmd_head3 { | |
my ($self, $attrs, $text) = @_; | |
$self->heading ($text, $$self{opt_indent} * 2 / 3 + 0.5, '= '); | |
} | |
# Fourth level heading. | |
sub cmd_head4 { | |
my ($self, $attrs, $text) = @_; | |
$self->heading ($text, $$self{opt_indent} * 3 / 4 + 0.5, '- '); | |
} | |
############################################################################## | |
# List handling | |
############################################################################## | |
# Handle the beginning of an =over block. Takes the type of the block as the | |
# first argument, and then the attr hash. This is called by the handlers for | |
# the four different types of lists (bullet, number, text, and block). | |
sub over_common_start { | |
my ($self, $attrs) = @_; | |
$self->item ("\n\n") if defined $$self{ITEM}; | |
# Find the indentation level. | |
my $indent = $$attrs{indent}; | |
unless (defined ($indent) && $indent =~ /^\s*[-+]?\d{1,4}\s*$/) { | |
$indent = $$self{opt_indent}; | |
} | |
# Add this to our stack of indents and increase our current margin. | |
push (@{ $$self{INDENTS} }, $$self{MARGIN}); | |
$$self{MARGIN} += ($indent + 0); | |
return ''; | |
} | |
# End an =over block. Takes no options other than the class pointer. Output | |
# any pending items and then pop one level of indentation. | |
sub over_common_end { | |
my ($self) = @_; | |
$self->item ("\n\n") if defined $$self{ITEM}; | |
$$self{MARGIN} = pop @{ $$self{INDENTS} }; | |
return ''; | |
} | |
# Dispatch the start and end calls as appropriate. | |
sub start_over_bullet { $_[0]->over_common_start ($_[1]) } | |
sub start_over_number { $_[0]->over_common_start ($_[1]) } | |
sub start_over_text { $_[0]->over_common_start ($_[1]) } | |
sub start_over_block { $_[0]->over_common_start ($_[1]) } | |
sub end_over_bullet { $_[0]->over_common_end } | |
sub end_over_number { $_[0]->over_common_end } | |
sub end_over_text { $_[0]->over_common_end } | |
sub end_over_block { $_[0]->over_common_end } | |
# The common handler for all item commands. Takes the type of the item, the | |
# attributes, and then the text of the item. | |
sub item_common { | |
my ($self, $type, $attrs, $text) = @_; | |
$self->item if defined $$self{ITEM}; | |
# Clean up the text. We want to end up with two variables, one ($text) | |
# which contains any body text after taking out the item portion, and | |
# another ($item) which contains the actual item text. Note the use of | |
# the internal Pod::Simple attribute here; that's a potential land mine. | |
$text =~ s/\s+$//; | |
my ($item, $index); | |
if ($type eq 'bullet') { | |
$item = '*'; | |
} elsif ($type eq 'number') { | |
$item = $$attrs{'~orig_content'}; | |
} else { | |
$item = $text; | |
$item =~ s/\s*\n\s*/ /g; | |
$text = ''; | |
} | |
$$self{ITEM} = $item; | |
# If body text for this item was included, go ahead and output that now. | |
if ($text) { | |
$text =~ s/\s*$/\n/; | |
$self->item ($text); | |
} | |
return ''; | |
} | |
# Dispatch the item commands to the appropriate place. | |
sub cmd_item_bullet { my $self = shift; $self->item_common ('bullet', @_) } | |
sub cmd_item_number { my $self = shift; $self->item_common ('number', @_) } | |
sub cmd_item_text { my $self = shift; $self->item_common ('text', @_) } | |
sub cmd_item_block { my $self = shift; $self->item_common ('block', @_) } | |
############################################################################## | |
# Formatting codes | |
############################################################################## | |
# The simple ones. | |
sub cmd_b { return $_[0]{alt} ? "``$_[2]''" : $_[2] } | |
sub cmd_f { return $_[0]{alt} ? "\"$_[2]\"" : $_[2] } | |
sub cmd_i { return '*' . $_[2] . '*' } | |
sub cmd_x { return '' } | |
# Apply a whole bunch of messy heuristics to not quote things that don't | |
# benefit from being quoted. These originally come from Barrie Slaymaker and | |
# largely duplicate code in Pod::Man. | |
sub cmd_c { | |
my ($self, $attrs, $text) = @_; | |
# A regex that matches the portion of a variable reference that's the | |
# array or hash index, separated out just because we want to use it in | |
# several places in the following regex. | |
my $index = '(?: \[.*\] | \{.*\} )?'; | |
# Check for things that we don't want to quote, and if we find any of | |
# them, return the string with just a font change and no quoting. | |
$text =~ m{ | |
^\s* | |
(?: | |
( [\'\`\"] ) .* \1 # already quoted | |
| \` .* \' # `quoted' | |
| \$+ [\#^]? \S $index # special ($^Foo, $") | |
| [\$\@%&*]+ \#? [:\'\w]+ $index # plain var or func | |
| [\$\@%&*]* [:\'\w]+ (?: -> )? \(\s*[^\s,]\s*\) # 0/1-arg func call | |
| [+-]? ( \d[\d.]* | \.\d+ ) (?: [eE][+-]?\d+ )? # a number | |
| 0x [a-fA-F\d]+ # a hex constant | |
) | |
\s*\z | |
}xo && return $text; | |
# If we didn't return, go ahead and quote the text. | |
return $$self{opt_alt} | |
? "``$text''" | |
: "$$self{LQUOTE}$text$$self{RQUOTE}"; | |
} | |
# Links reduce to the text that we're given, wrapped in angle brackets if it's | |
# a URL. | |
sub cmd_l { | |
my ($self, $attrs, $text) = @_; | |
if ($$attrs{type} eq 'url') { | |
if (not defined($$attrs{to}) or $$attrs{to} eq $text) { | |
return "<$text>"; | |
} elsif ($$self{opt_nourls}) { | |
return $text; | |
} else { | |
return "$text <$$attrs{to}>"; | |
} | |
} else { | |
return $text; | |
} | |
} | |
############################################################################## | |
# Backwards compatibility | |
############################################################################## | |
# The old Pod::Text module did everything in a pod2text() function. This | |
# tries to provide the same interface for legacy applications. | |
sub pod2text { | |
my @args; | |
# This is really ugly; I hate doing option parsing in the middle of a | |
# module. But the old Pod::Text module supported passing flags to its | |
# entry function, so handle -a and -<number>. | |
while ($_[0] =~ /^-/) { | |
my $flag = shift; | |
if ($flag eq '-a') { push (@args, alt => 1) } | |
elsif ($flag =~ /^-(\d+)$/) { push (@args, width => $1) } | |
else { | |
unshift (@_, $flag); | |
last; | |
} | |
} | |
# Now that we know what arguments we're using, create the parser. | |
my $parser = Pod::Text->new (@args); | |
# If two arguments were given, the second argument is going to be a file | |
# handle. That means we want to call parse_from_filehandle(), which means | |
# we need to turn the first argument into a file handle. Magic open will | |
# handle the <&STDIN case automagically. | |
if (defined $_[1]) { | |
my @fhs = @_; | |
local *IN; | |
unless (open (IN, $fhs[0])) { | |
croak ("Can't open $fhs[0] for reading: $!\n"); | |
return; | |
} | |
$fhs[0] = \*IN; | |
$parser->output_fh ($fhs[1]); | |
my $retval = $parser->parse_file ($fhs[0]); | |
my $fh = $parser->output_fh (); | |
close $fh; | |
return $retval; | |
} else { | |
$parser->output_fh (\*STDOUT); | |
return $parser->parse_file (@_); | |
} | |
} | |
# Reset the underlying Pod::Simple object between calls to parse_from_file so | |
# that the same object can be reused to convert multiple pages. | |
sub parse_from_file { | |
my $self = shift; | |
$self->reinit; | |
# Fake the old cutting option to Pod::Parser. This fiddles with internal | |
# Pod::Simple state and is quite ugly; we need a better approach. | |
if (ref ($_[0]) eq 'HASH') { | |
my $opts = shift @_; | |
if (defined ($$opts{-cutting}) && !$$opts{-cutting}) { | |
$$self{in_pod} = 1; | |
$$self{last_was_blank} = 1; | |
} | |
} | |
# Do the work. | |
my $retval = $self->Pod::Simple::parse_from_file (@_); | |
# Flush output, since Pod::Simple doesn't do this. Ideally we should also | |
# close the file descriptor if we had to open one, but we can't easily | |
# figure this out. | |
my $fh = $self->output_fh (); | |
my $oldfh = select $fh; | |
my $oldflush = $|; | |
$| = 1; | |
print $fh ''; | |
$| = $oldflush; | |
select $oldfh; | |
return $retval; | |
} | |
# Pod::Simple failed to provide this backward compatibility function, so | |
# implement it ourselves. File handles are one of the inputs that | |
# parse_from_file supports. | |
sub parse_from_filehandle { | |
my $self = shift; | |
$self->parse_from_file (@_); | |
} | |
# Pod::Simple's parse_file doesn't set output_fh. Wrap the call and do so | |
# ourself unless it was already set by the caller, since our documentation has | |
# always said that this should work. | |
sub parse_file { | |
my ($self, $in) = @_; | |
unless (defined $$self{output_fh}) { | |
$self->output_fh (\*STDOUT); | |
} | |
return $self->SUPER::parse_file ($in); | |
} | |
# Do the same for parse_lines, just to be polite. Pod::Simple's man page | |
# implies that the caller is responsible for setting this, but I don't see any | |
# reason not to set a default. | |
sub parse_lines { | |
my ($self, @lines) = @_; | |
unless (defined $$self{output_fh}) { | |
$self->output_fh (\*STDOUT); | |
} | |
return $self->SUPER::parse_lines (@lines); | |
} | |
# Likewise for parse_string_document. | |
sub parse_string_document { | |
my ($self, $doc) = @_; | |
unless (defined $$self{output_fh}) { | |
$self->output_fh (\*STDOUT); | |
} | |
return $self->SUPER::parse_string_document ($doc); | |
} | |
############################################################################## | |
# Module return value and documentation | |
############################################################################## | |
1; | |
__END__ | |
=for stopwords | |
alt stderr Allbery Sean Burke's Christiansen UTF-8 pre-Unicode utf8 nourls | |
parsers | |
=head1 NAME | |
Pod::Text - Convert POD data to formatted text | |
=head1 SYNOPSIS | |
use Pod::Text; | |
my $parser = Pod::Text->new (sentence => 1, width => 78); | |
# Read POD from STDIN and write to STDOUT. | |
$parser->parse_from_filehandle; | |
# Read POD from file.pod and write to file.txt. | |
$parser->parse_from_file ('file.pod', 'file.txt'); | |
=head1 DESCRIPTION | |
Pod::Text is a module that can convert documentation in the POD format | |
(the preferred language for documenting Perl) into formatted text. It | |
uses no special formatting controls or codes whatsoever, and its output is | |
therefore suitable for nearly any device. | |
As a derived class from Pod::Simple, Pod::Text supports the same methods and | |
interfaces. See L<Pod::Simple> for all the details; briefly, one creates a | |
new parser with C<< Pod::Text->new() >> and then normally calls parse_file(). | |
new() can take options, in the form of key/value pairs, that control the | |
behavior of the parser. The currently recognized options are: | |
=over 4 | |
=item alt | |
If set to a true value, selects an alternate output format that, among other | |
things, uses a different heading style and marks C<=item> entries with a | |
colon in the left margin. Defaults to false. | |
=item code | |
If set to a true value, the non-POD parts of the input file will be included | |
in the output. Useful for viewing code documented with POD blocks with the | |
POD rendered and the code left intact. | |
=item errors | |
How to report errors. C<die> says to throw an exception on any POD | |
formatting error. C<stderr> says to report errors on standard error, but | |
not to throw an exception. C<pod> says to include a POD ERRORS section | |
in the resulting documentation summarizing the errors. C<none> ignores | |
POD errors entirely, as much as possible. | |
The default is C<pod>. | |
=item indent | |
The number of spaces to indent regular text, and the default indentation for | |
C<=over> blocks. Defaults to 4. | |
=item loose | |
If set to a true value, a blank line is printed after a C<=head1> heading. | |
If set to false (the default), no blank line is printed after C<=head1>, | |
although one is still printed after C<=head2>. This is the default because | |
it's the expected formatting for manual pages; if you're formatting | |
arbitrary text documents, setting this to true may result in more pleasing | |
output. | |
=item margin | |
The width of the left margin in spaces. Defaults to 0. This is the margin | |
for all text, including headings, not the amount by which regular text is | |
indented; for the latter, see the I<indent> option. To set the right | |
margin, see the I<width> option. | |
=item nourls | |
Normally, LZ<><> formatting codes with a URL but anchor text are formatted | |
to show both the anchor text and the URL. In other words: | |
L<foo|http://example.com/> | |
is formatted as: | |
foo <http://example.com/> | |
This option, if set to a true value, suppresses the URL when anchor text | |
is given, so this example would be formatted as just C<foo>. This can | |
produce less cluttered output in cases where the URLs are not particularly | |
important. | |
=item quotes | |
Sets the quote marks used to surround CE<lt>> text. If the value is a | |
single character, it is used as both the left and right quote. Otherwise, | |
it is split in half, and the first half of the string is used as the left | |
quote and the second is used as the right quote. | |
This may also be set to the special value C<none>, in which case no quote | |
marks are added around CE<lt>> text. | |
=item sentence | |
If set to a true value, Pod::Text will assume that each sentence ends in two | |
spaces, and will try to preserve that spacing. If set to false, all | |
consecutive whitespace in non-verbatim paragraphs is compressed into a | |
single space. Defaults to false. | |
=item stderr | |
Send error messages about invalid POD to standard error instead of | |
appending a POD ERRORS section to the generated output. This is | |
equivalent to setting C<errors> to C<stderr> if C<errors> is not already | |
set. It is supported for backward compatibility. | |
=item utf8 | |
By default, Pod::Text uses the same output encoding as the input encoding | |
of the POD source (provided that Perl was built with PerlIO; otherwise, it | |
doesn't encode its output). If this option is given, the output encoding | |
is forced to UTF-8. | |
Be aware that, when using this option, the input encoding of your POD | |
source should be properly declared unless it's US-ASCII. Pod::Simple will | |
attempt to guess the encoding and may be successful if it's Latin-1 or | |
UTF-8, but it will produce warnings. Use the C<=encoding> command to | |
declare the encoding. See L<perlpod(1)> for more information. | |
=item width | |
The column at which to wrap text on the right-hand side. Defaults to 76. | |
=back | |
The standard Pod::Simple method parse_file() takes one argument naming the | |
POD file to read from. By default, the output is sent to C<STDOUT>, but | |
this can be changed with the output_fh() method. | |
The standard Pod::Simple method parse_from_file() takes up to two | |
arguments, the first being the input file to read POD from and the second | |
being the file to write the formatted output to. | |
You can also call parse_lines() to parse an array of lines or | |
parse_string_document() to parse a document already in memory. As with | |
parse_file(), parse_lines() and parse_string_document() default to sending | |
their output to C<STDOUT> unless changed with the output_fh() method. Be | |
aware that parse_lines() and parse_string_document() both expect raw bytes, | |
not decoded characters. | |
To put the output from any parse method into a string instead of a file | |
handle, call the output_string() method instead of output_fh(). | |
See L<Pod::Simple> for more specific details on the methods available to | |
all derived parsers. | |
=head1 DIAGNOSTICS | |
=over 4 | |
=item Bizarre space in item | |
=item Item called without tag | |
(W) Something has gone wrong in internal C<=item> processing. These | |
messages indicate a bug in Pod::Text; you should never see them. | |
=item Can't open %s for reading: %s | |
(F) Pod::Text was invoked via the compatibility mode pod2text() interface | |
and the input file it was given could not be opened. | |
=item Invalid errors setting "%s" | |
(F) The C<errors> parameter to the constructor was set to an unknown value. | |
=item Invalid quote specification "%s" | |
(F) The quote specification given (the C<quotes> option to the | |
constructor) was invalid. A quote specification must be either one | |
character long or an even number (greater than one) characters long. | |
=item POD document had syntax errors | |
(F) The POD document being formatted had syntax errors and the C<errors> | |
option was set to C<die>. | |
=back | |
=head1 BUGS | |
Encoding handling assumes that PerlIO is available and does not work | |
properly if it isn't. The C<utf8> option is therefore not supported | |
unless Perl is built with PerlIO support. | |
=head1 CAVEATS | |
If Pod::Text is given the C<utf8> option, the encoding of its output file | |
handle will be forced to UTF-8 if possible, overriding any existing | |
encoding. This will be done even if the file handle is not created by | |
Pod::Text and was passed in from outside. This maintains consistency | |
regardless of PERL_UNICODE and other settings. | |
If the C<utf8> option is not given, the encoding of its output file handle | |
will be forced to the detected encoding of the input POD, which preserves | |
whatever the input text is. This ensures backward compatibility with | |
earlier, pre-Unicode versions of this module, without large numbers of | |
Perl warnings. | |
This is not ideal, but it seems to be the best compromise. If it doesn't | |
work for you, please let me know the details of how it broke. | |
=head1 NOTES | |
This is a replacement for an earlier Pod::Text module written by Tom | |
Christiansen. It has a revamped interface, since it now uses Pod::Simple, | |
but an interface roughly compatible with the old Pod::Text::pod2text() | |
function is still available. Please change to the new calling convention, | |
though. | |
The original Pod::Text contained code to do formatting via termcap | |
sequences, although it wasn't turned on by default and it was problematic to | |
get it to work at all. This rewrite doesn't even try to do that, but a | |
subclass of it does. Look for L<Pod::Text::Termcap>. | |
=head1 AUTHOR | |
Russ Allbery <[email protected]>, based I<very> heavily on the original | |
Pod::Text by Tom Christiansen <[email protected]> and its conversion to | |
Pod::Parser by Brad Appleton <[email protected]>. Sean Burke's initial | |
conversion of Pod::Man to use Pod::Simple provided much-needed guidance on | |
how to use Pod::Simple. | |
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE | |
Copyright 1999-2002, 2004, 2006, 2008-2009, 2012-2016, 2018-2019 Russ Allbery | |
<[email protected]> | |
This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it | |
under the same terms as Perl itself. | |
=head1 SEE ALSO | |
L<Pod::Simple>, L<Pod::Text::Termcap>, L<perlpod(1)>, L<pod2text(1)> | |
The current version of this module is always available from its web site at | |
L<https://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/software/podlators/>. It is also part of the | |
Perl core distribution as of 5.6.0. | |
=cut | |
# Local Variables: | |
# copyright-at-end-flag: t | |
# End: | |