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1 | # Pod::Man -- Convert POD data to formatted *roff input. |
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2 | # $Id: Man.pm,v 1.37 2003/03/30 22:34:11 eagle Exp $ |
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3 | # |
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4 | # Copyright 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 by Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu> |
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5 | # |
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6 | # This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it |
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7 | # under the same terms as Perl itself. |
8 | # |
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9 | # This module translates POD documentation into *roff markup using the man |
10 | # macro set, and is intended for converting POD documents written as Unix |
11 | # manual pages to manual pages that can be read by the man(1) command. It is |
12 | # a replacement for the pod2man command distributed with versions of Perl |
13 | # prior to 5.6. |
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14 | # |
15 | # Perl core hackers, please note that this module is also separately |
16 | # maintained outside of the Perl core as part of the podlators. Please send |
17 | # me any patches at the address above in addition to sending them to the |
18 | # standard Perl mailing lists. |
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19 | |
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20 | ############################################################################## |
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21 | # Modules and declarations |
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22 | ############################################################################## |
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23 | |
24 | package Pod::Man; |
25 | |
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26 | require 5.005; |
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27 | |
28 | use Carp qw(carp croak); |
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29 | use Pod::ParseLink qw(parselink); |
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30 | use Pod::Parser (); |
31 | |
32 | use strict; |
33 | use subs qw(makespace); |
34 | use vars qw(@ISA %ESCAPES $PREAMBLE $VERSION); |
35 | |
36 | @ISA = qw(Pod::Parser); |
37 | |
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38 | # Don't use the CVS revision as the version, since this module is also in Perl |
39 | # core and too many things could munge CVS magic revision strings. This |
40 | # number should ideally be the same as the CVS revision in podlators, however. |
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41 | $VERSION = 1.37; |
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42 | |
43 | |
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44 | ############################################################################## |
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45 | # Preamble and *roff output tables |
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46 | ############################################################################## |
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47 | |
48 | # The following is the static preamble which starts all *roff output we |
49 | # generate. It's completely static except for the font to use as a |
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50 | # fixed-width font, which is designed by @CFONT@, and the left and right |
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51 | # quotes to use for C<> text, designated by @LQOUTE@ and @RQUOTE@. $PREAMBLE |
52 | # should therefore be run through s/\@CFONT\@/<font>/g before output. |
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53 | $PREAMBLE = <<'----END OF PREAMBLE----'; |
54 | .de Sh \" Subsection heading |
55 | .br |
56 | .if t .Sp |
57 | .ne 5 |
58 | .PP |
59 | \fB\\$1\fR |
60 | .PP |
61 | .. |
62 | .de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) |
63 | .if t .sp .5v |
64 | .if n .sp |
65 | .. |
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66 | .de Vb \" Begin verbatim text |
67 | .ft @CFONT@ |
68 | .nf |
69 | .ne \\$1 |
70 | .. |
71 | .de Ve \" End verbatim text |
72 | .ft R |
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73 | .fi |
74 | .. |
75 | .\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will |
76 | .\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left |
77 | .\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a |
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78 | .\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to |
79 | .\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' |
80 | .\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. |
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81 | .tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr |
82 | .ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' |
83 | .ie n \{\ |
84 | . ds -- \(*W- |
85 | . ds PI pi |
86 | . if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch |
87 | . if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch |
88 | . ds L" "" |
89 | . ds R" "" |
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90 | . ds C` @LQUOTE@ |
91 | . ds C' @RQUOTE@ |
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92 | 'br\} |
93 | .el\{\ |
94 | . ds -- \|\(em\| |
95 | . ds PI \(*p |
96 | . ds L" `` |
97 | . ds R" '' |
98 | 'br\} |
99 | .\" |
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100 | .\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for |
101 | .\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index |
102 | .\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the |
103 | .\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. |
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104 | .if \nF \{\ |
105 | . de IX |
106 | . tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" |
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107 | .. |
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108 | . nr % 0 |
109 | . rr F |
110 | .\} |
111 | .\" |
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112 | .\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes |
113 | .\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. |
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114 | .hy 0 |
115 | .if n .na |
116 | .\" |
117 | .\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). |
118 | .\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. |
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119 | . \" fudge factors for nroff and troff |
120 | .if n \{\ |
121 | . ds #H 0 |
122 | . ds #V .8m |
123 | . ds #F .3m |
124 | . ds #[ \f1 |
125 | . ds #] \fP |
126 | .\} |
127 | .if t \{\ |
128 | . ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) |
129 | . ds #V .6m |
130 | . ds #F 0 |
131 | . ds #[ \& |
132 | . ds #] \& |
133 | .\} |
134 | . \" simple accents for nroff and troff |
135 | .if n \{\ |
136 | . ds ' \& |
137 | . ds ` \& |
138 | . ds ^ \& |
139 | . ds , \& |
140 | . ds ~ ~ |
141 | . ds / |
142 | .\} |
143 | .if t \{\ |
144 | . ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" |
145 | . ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' |
146 | . ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' |
147 | . ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' |
148 | . ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' |
149 | . ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' |
150 | .\} |
151 | . \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents |
152 | .ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' |
153 | .ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' |
154 | .ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] |
155 | .ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' |
156 | .ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' |
157 | .ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] |
158 | .ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] |
159 | .ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e |
160 | .ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E |
161 | . \" corrections for vroff |
162 | .if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' |
163 | .if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' |
164 | . \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) |
165 | .if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ |
166 | \{\ |
167 | . ds : e |
168 | . ds 8 ss |
169 | . ds o a |
170 | . ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga |
171 | . ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy |
172 | . ds th \o'bp' |
173 | . ds Th \o'LP' |
174 | . ds ae ae |
175 | . ds Ae AE |
176 | .\} |
177 | .rm #[ #] #H #V #F C |
178 | ----END OF PREAMBLE---- |
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179 | #`# for cperl-mode |
180 | |
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181 | # This table is taken nearly verbatim from Tom Christiansen's pod2man. It |
182 | # assumes that the standard preamble has already been printed, since that's |
183 | # what defines all of the accent marks. Note that some of these are quoted |
184 | # with double quotes since they contain embedded single quotes, so use \\ |
185 | # uniformly for backslash for readability. |
186 | %ESCAPES = ( |
187 | 'amp' => '&', # ampersand |
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188 | 'apos' => "'", # apostrophe |
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189 | 'lt' => '<', # left chevron, less-than |
190 | 'gt' => '>', # right chevron, greater-than |
191 | 'quot' => '"', # double quote |
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192 | 'sol' => '/', # solidus (forward slash) |
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193 | 'verbar' => '|', # vertical bar |
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194 | |
195 | 'Aacute' => "A\\*'", # capital A, acute accent |
196 | 'aacute' => "a\\*'", # small a, acute accent |
197 | 'Acirc' => 'A\\*^', # capital A, circumflex accent |
198 | 'acirc' => 'a\\*^', # small a, circumflex accent |
199 | 'AElig' => '\*(AE', # capital AE diphthong (ligature) |
200 | 'aelig' => '\*(ae', # small ae diphthong (ligature) |
201 | 'Agrave' => "A\\*`", # capital A, grave accent |
202 | 'agrave' => "A\\*`", # small a, grave accent |
203 | 'Aring' => 'A\\*o', # capital A, ring |
204 | 'aring' => 'a\\*o', # small a, ring |
205 | 'Atilde' => 'A\\*~', # capital A, tilde |
206 | 'atilde' => 'a\\*~', # small a, tilde |
207 | 'Auml' => 'A\\*:', # capital A, dieresis or umlaut mark |
208 | 'auml' => 'a\\*:', # small a, dieresis or umlaut mark |
209 | 'Ccedil' => 'C\\*,', # capital C, cedilla |
210 | 'ccedil' => 'c\\*,', # small c, cedilla |
211 | 'Eacute' => "E\\*'", # capital E, acute accent |
212 | 'eacute' => "e\\*'", # small e, acute accent |
213 | 'Ecirc' => 'E\\*^', # capital E, circumflex accent |
214 | 'ecirc' => 'e\\*^', # small e, circumflex accent |
215 | 'Egrave' => 'E\\*`', # capital E, grave accent |
216 | 'egrave' => 'e\\*`', # small e, grave accent |
217 | 'ETH' => '\\*(D-', # capital Eth, Icelandic |
218 | 'eth' => '\\*(d-', # small eth, Icelandic |
219 | 'Euml' => 'E\\*:', # capital E, dieresis or umlaut mark |
220 | 'euml' => 'e\\*:', # small e, dieresis or umlaut mark |
221 | 'Iacute' => "I\\*'", # capital I, acute accent |
222 | 'iacute' => "i\\*'", # small i, acute accent |
223 | 'Icirc' => 'I\\*^', # capital I, circumflex accent |
224 | 'icirc' => 'i\\*^', # small i, circumflex accent |
225 | 'Igrave' => 'I\\*`', # capital I, grave accent |
226 | 'igrave' => 'i\\*`', # small i, grave accent |
227 | 'Iuml' => 'I\\*:', # capital I, dieresis or umlaut mark |
228 | 'iuml' => 'i\\*:', # small i, dieresis or umlaut mark |
229 | 'Ntilde' => 'N\*~', # capital N, tilde |
230 | 'ntilde' => 'n\*~', # small n, tilde |
231 | 'Oacute' => "O\\*'", # capital O, acute accent |
232 | 'oacute' => "o\\*'", # small o, acute accent |
233 | 'Ocirc' => 'O\\*^', # capital O, circumflex accent |
234 | 'ocirc' => 'o\\*^', # small o, circumflex accent |
235 | 'Ograve' => 'O\\*`', # capital O, grave accent |
236 | 'ograve' => 'o\\*`', # small o, grave accent |
237 | 'Oslash' => 'O\\*/', # capital O, slash |
238 | 'oslash' => 'o\\*/', # small o, slash |
239 | 'Otilde' => 'O\\*~', # capital O, tilde |
240 | 'otilde' => 'o\\*~', # small o, tilde |
241 | 'Ouml' => 'O\\*:', # capital O, dieresis or umlaut mark |
242 | 'ouml' => 'o\\*:', # small o, dieresis or umlaut mark |
243 | 'szlig' => '\*8', # small sharp s, German (sz ligature) |
244 | 'THORN' => '\\*(Th', # capital THORN, Icelandic |
245 | 'thorn' => '\\*(th', # small thorn, Icelandic |
246 | 'Uacute' => "U\\*'", # capital U, acute accent |
247 | 'uacute' => "u\\*'", # small u, acute accent |
248 | 'Ucirc' => 'U\\*^', # capital U, circumflex accent |
249 | 'ucirc' => 'u\\*^', # small u, circumflex accent |
250 | 'Ugrave' => 'U\\*`', # capital U, grave accent |
251 | 'ugrave' => 'u\\*`', # small u, grave accent |
252 | 'Uuml' => 'U\\*:', # capital U, dieresis or umlaut mark |
253 | 'uuml' => 'u\\*:', # small u, dieresis or umlaut mark |
254 | 'Yacute' => "Y\\*'", # capital Y, acute accent |
255 | 'yacute' => "y\\*'", # small y, acute accent |
256 | 'yuml' => 'y\\*:', # small y, dieresis or umlaut mark |
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257 | |
258 | 'nbsp' => '\\ ', # non-breaking space |
259 | 'shy' => '', # soft (discretionary) hyphen |
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260 | ); |
261 | |
262 | |
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263 | ############################################################################## |
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264 | # Static helper functions |
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265 | ############################################################################## |
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266 | |
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267 | # Protect leading quotes and periods against interpretation as commands. Also |
268 | # protect anything starting with a backslash, since it could expand or hide |
269 | # something that *roff would interpret as a command. This is overkill, but |
270 | # it's much simpler than trying to parse *roff here. |
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271 | sub protect { |
272 | local $_ = shift; |
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273 | s/^([.\'\\])/\\&$1/mg; |
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274 | $_; |
275 | } |
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276 | |
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277 | # Translate a font string into an escape. |
278 | sub toescape { (length ($_[0]) > 1 ? '\f(' : '\f') . $_[0] } |
279 | |
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280 | |
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281 | ############################################################################## |
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282 | # Initialization |
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283 | ############################################################################## |
284 | |
285 | # Initialize the object. Here, we also process any additional options passed |
286 | # to the constructor or set up defaults if none were given. center is the |
287 | # centered title, release is the version number, and date is the date for the |
288 | # documentation. Note that we can't know what file name we're processing due |
289 | # to the architecture of Pod::Parser, so that *has* to either be passed to the |
290 | # constructor or set separately with Pod::Man::name(). |
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291 | sub initialize { |
292 | my $self = shift; |
293 | |
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294 | # Figure out the fixed-width font. If user-supplied, make sure that they |
295 | # are the right length. |
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296 | for (qw/fixed fixedbold fixeditalic fixedbolditalic/) { |
297 | if (defined $$self{$_}) { |
298 | if (length ($$self{$_}) < 1 || length ($$self{$_}) > 2) { |
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299 | croak qq(roff font should be 1 or 2 chars,) |
300 | . qq( not "$$self{$_}"); |
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301 | } |
302 | } else { |
303 | $$self{$_} = ''; |
304 | } |
305 | } |
306 | |
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307 | # Set the default fonts. We can't be sure what fixed bold-italic is going |
308 | # to be called, so default to just bold. |
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309 | $$self{fixed} ||= 'CW'; |
310 | $$self{fixedbold} ||= 'CB'; |
311 | $$self{fixeditalic} ||= 'CI'; |
312 | $$self{fixedbolditalic} ||= 'CB'; |
313 | |
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314 | # Set up a table of font escapes. First number is fixed-width, second is |
315 | # bold, third is italic. |
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316 | $$self{FONTS} = { '000' => '\fR', '001' => '\fI', |
317 | '010' => '\fB', '011' => '\f(BI', |
318 | '100' => toescape ($$self{fixed}), |
319 | '101' => toescape ($$self{fixeditalic}), |
320 | '110' => toescape ($$self{fixedbold}), |
321 | '111' => toescape ($$self{fixedbolditalic})}; |
322 | |
323 | # Extra stuff for page titles. |
324 | $$self{center} = 'User Contributed Perl Documentation' |
325 | unless defined $$self{center}; |
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326 | $$self{indent} = 4 unless defined $$self{indent}; |
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327 | |
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328 | # We used to try first to get the version number from a local binary, but |
329 | # we shouldn't need that any more. Get the version from the running Perl. |
330 | # Work a little magic to handle subversions correctly under both the |
331 | # pre-5.6 and the post-5.6 version numbering schemes. |
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332 | if (!defined $$self{release}) { |
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333 | my @version = ($] =~ /^(\d+)\.(\d{3})(\d{0,3})$/); |
334 | $version[2] ||= 0; |
335 | $version[2] *= 10 ** (3 - length $version[2]); |
336 | for (@version) { $_ += 0 } |
337 | $$self{release} = 'perl v' . join ('.', @version); |
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338 | } |
339 | |
340 | # Double quotes in things that will be quoted. |
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341 | for (qw/center date release/) { |
342 | $$self{$_} =~ s/\"/\"\"/g if $$self{$_}; |
343 | } |
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344 | |
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345 | # Figure out what quotes we'll be using for C<> text. |
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346 | $$self{quotes} ||= '"'; |
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347 | if ($$self{quotes} eq 'none') { |
348 | $$self{LQUOTE} = $$self{RQUOTE} = ''; |
349 | } elsif (length ($$self{quotes}) == 1) { |
350 | $$self{LQUOTE} = $$self{RQUOTE} = $$self{quotes}; |
351 | } elsif ($$self{quotes} =~ /^(.)(.)$/ |
352 | || $$self{quotes} =~ /^(..)(..)$/) { |
353 | $$self{LQUOTE} = $1; |
354 | $$self{RQUOTE} = $2; |
355 | } else { |
356 | croak qq(Invalid quote specification "$$self{quotes}"); |
357 | } |
358 | |
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359 | # Double the first quote; note that this should not be s///g as two double |
360 | # quotes is represented in *roff as three double quotes, not four. Weird, |
361 | # I know. |
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362 | $$self{LQUOTE} =~ s/\"/\"\"/; |
363 | $$self{RQUOTE} =~ s/\"/\"\"/; |
364 | |
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365 | $self->SUPER::initialize; |
366 | } |
367 | |
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368 | # For each document we process, output the preamble first. |
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369 | sub begin_pod { |
370 | my $self = shift; |
371 | |
372 | # Try to figure out the name and section from the file name. |
373 | my $section = $$self{section} || 1; |
374 | my $name = $$self{name}; |
375 | if (!defined $name) { |
376 | $name = $self->input_file; |
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377 | $section = 3 if (!$$self{section} && $name =~ /\.pm\z/i); |
378 | $name =~ s/\.p(od|[lm])\z//i; |
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379 | if ($section !~ /^3/) { |
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380 | require File::Basename; |
381 | $name = uc File::Basename::basename ($name); |
382 | } else { |
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383 | # Assume that we're dealing with a module. We want to figure out |
384 | # the full module name from the path to the file, but we don't |
385 | # want to include too much of the path into the module name. Lose |
386 | # everything up to the first of: |
387 | # |
388 | # */lib/*perl*/ standard or site_perl module |
389 | # */*perl*/lib/ from -Dprefix=/opt/perl |
390 | # */*perl*/ random module hierarchy |
391 | # |
392 | # which works. Also strip off a leading site or site_perl |
393 | # component, any OS-specific component, and any version number |
394 | # component, and strip off an initial component of "lib" or |
395 | # "blib/lib" since that's what ExtUtils::MakeMaker creates. |
396 | # splitdir requires at least File::Spec 0.8. |
397 | require File::Spec; |
398 | my ($volume, $dirs, $file) = File::Spec->splitpath ($name); |
399 | my @dirs = File::Spec->splitdir ($dirs); |
400 | my $cut = 0; |
401 | my $i; |
402 | for ($i = 0; $i < scalar @dirs; $i++) { |
403 | if ($dirs[$i] eq 'lib' && $dirs[$i + 1] =~ /perl/) { |
404 | $cut = $i + 2; |
405 | last; |
406 | } elsif ($dirs[$i] =~ /perl/) { |
407 | $cut = $i + 1; |
408 | $cut++ if $dirs[$i + 1] eq 'lib'; |
409 | last; |
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410 | } |
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411 | } |
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412 | if ($cut > 0) { |
413 | splice (@dirs, 0, $cut); |
414 | shift @dirs if ($dirs[0] =~ /^site(_perl)?$/); |
415 | shift @dirs if ($dirs[0] =~ /^[\d.]+$/); |
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416 | shift @dirs if ($dirs[0] =~ /^(.*-$^O|$^O-.*|$^O)$/); |
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417 | } |
418 | shift @dirs if $dirs[0] eq 'lib'; |
419 | splice (@dirs, 0, 2) if ($dirs[0] eq 'blib' && $dirs[1] eq 'lib'); |
420 | |
421 | # Remove empty directories when building the module name; they |
422 | # occur too easily on Unix by doubling slashes. |
423 | $name = join ('::', (grep { $_ ? $_ : () } @dirs), $file); |
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424 | } |
425 | } |
426 | |
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427 | # If $name contains spaces, quote it; this mostly comes up in the case of |
428 | # input from stdin. |
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429 | $name = '"' . $name . '"' if ($name =~ /\s/); |
430 | |
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431 | # Modification date header. Try to use the modification time of our |
432 | # input. |
433 | if (!defined $$self{date}) { |
434 | my $time = (stat $self->input_file)[9] || time; |
435 | my ($day, $month, $year) = (localtime $time)[3,4,5]; |
436 | $month++; |
437 | $year += 1900; |
c9abbd5d |
438 | $$self{date} = sprintf ('%4d-%02d-%02d', $year, $month, $day); |
9741dab0 |
439 | } |
440 | |
bf202ccd |
441 | # Now, print out the preamble and the title. The meaning of the arguments |
442 | # to .TH unfortunately vary by system; some systems consider the fourth |
443 | # argument to be a "source" and others use it as a version number. |
444 | # Generally it's just presented as the left-side footer, though, so it |
445 | # doesn't matter too much if a particular system gives it another |
446 | # interpretation. |
447 | # |
448 | # The order of date and release used to be reversed in older versions of |
449 | # this module, but this order is correct for both Solaris and Linux. |
ab1f1d91 |
450 | local $_ = $PREAMBLE; |
451 | s/\@CFONT\@/$$self{fixed}/; |
452 | s/\@LQUOTE\@/$$self{LQUOTE}/; |
453 | s/\@RQUOTE\@/$$self{RQUOTE}/; |
454 | chomp $_; |
bf202ccd |
455 | my $pversion = $Pod::Parser::VERSION; |
9741dab0 |
456 | print { $self->output_handle } <<"----END OF HEADER----"; |
bf202ccd |
457 | .\\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v$VERSION, Pod::Parser v$pversion |
9741dab0 |
458 | .\\" |
459 | .\\" Standard preamble: |
3c014959 |
460 | .\\" ======================================================================== |
ab1f1d91 |
461 | $_ |
3c014959 |
462 | .\\" ======================================================================== |
9741dab0 |
463 | .\\" |
464 | .IX Title "$name $section" |
bf202ccd |
465 | .TH $name $section "$$self{date}" "$$self{release}" "$$self{center}" |
9741dab0 |
466 | ----END OF HEADER---- |
9741dab0 |
467 | |
468 | # Initialize a few per-file variables. |
b616daaf |
469 | $$self{INDENT} = 0; # Current indentation level. |
470 | $$self{INDENTS} = []; # Stack of indentations. |
471 | $$self{INDEX} = []; # Index keys waiting to be printed. |
2da3dd12 |
472 | $$self{IN_NAME} = 0; # Whether processing the NAME section. |
b616daaf |
473 | $$self{ITEMS} = 0; # The number of consecutive =items. |
4213be12 |
474 | $$self{ITEMTYPES} = []; # Stack of =item types, one per list. |
b616daaf |
475 | $$self{SHIFTWAIT} = 0; # Whether there is a shift waiting. |
476 | $$self{SHIFTS} = []; # Stack of .RS shifts. |
9741dab0 |
477 | } |
478 | |
479 | |
3c014959 |
480 | ############################################################################## |
9741dab0 |
481 | # Core overrides |
3c014959 |
482 | ############################################################################## |
9741dab0 |
483 | |
484 | # Called for each command paragraph. Gets the command, the associated |
485 | # paragraph, the line number, and a Pod::Paragraph object. Just dispatches |
486 | # the command to a method named the same as the command. =cut is handled |
487 | # internally by Pod::Parser. |
488 | sub command { |
489 | my $self = shift; |
490 | my $command = shift; |
491 | return if $command eq 'pod'; |
3c014959 |
492 | return if ($$self{EXCLUDE} && $command ne 'end'); |
ab1f1d91 |
493 | if ($self->can ('cmd_' . $command)) { |
494 | $command = 'cmd_' . $command; |
844b31e3 |
495 | $self->$command (@_); |
3c014959 |
496 | } else { |
ab1f1d91 |
497 | my ($text, $line, $paragraph) = @_; |
5cdeb5a2 |
498 | my $file; |
499 | ($file, $line) = $paragraph->file_line; |
ab1f1d91 |
500 | $text =~ s/\n+\z//; |
501 | $text = " $text" if ($text =~ /^\S/); |
502 | warn qq($file:$line: Unknown command paragraph "=$command$text"\n); |
503 | return; |
844b31e3 |
504 | } |
9741dab0 |
505 | } |
506 | |
3c014959 |
507 | # Called for a verbatim paragraph. Gets the paragraph, the line number, and a |
508 | # Pod::Paragraph object. Rofficate backslashes, untabify, put a zero-width |
509 | # character at the beginning of each line to protect against commands, and |
510 | # wrap in .Vb/.Ve. |
9741dab0 |
511 | sub verbatim { |
512 | my $self = shift; |
513 | return if $$self{EXCLUDE}; |
514 | local $_ = shift; |
515 | return if /^\s+$/; |
516 | s/\s+$/\n/; |
517 | my $lines = tr/\n/\n/; |
518 | 1 while s/^(.*?)(\t+)/$1 . ' ' x (length ($2) * 8 - length ($1) % 8)/me; |
519 | s/\\/\\e/g; |
520 | s/^(\s*\S)/'\&' . $1/gme; |
5cdeb5a2 |
521 | $self->makespace; |
9741dab0 |
522 | $self->output (".Vb $lines\n$_.Ve\n"); |
2da3dd12 |
523 | $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 1; |
9741dab0 |
524 | } |
525 | |
3c014959 |
526 | # Called for a regular text block. Gets the paragraph, the line number, and a |
527 | # Pod::Paragraph object. Perform interpolation and output the results. |
9741dab0 |
528 | sub textblock { |
529 | my $self = shift; |
530 | return if $$self{EXCLUDE}; |
531 | $self->output ($_[0]), return if $$self{VERBATIM}; |
532 | |
bf202ccd |
533 | # Parse the tree. collapse knows about references to scalars as well as |
534 | # scalars and does the right thing with them. Tidy up any trailing |
535 | # whitespace. |
c9abbd5d |
536 | my $text = shift; |
c9abbd5d |
537 | $text = $self->parse ($text, @_); |
538 | $text =~ s/\n\s*$/\n/; |
bf202ccd |
539 | |
540 | # Output the paragraph. We also have to handle =over without =item. If |
4213be12 |
541 | # there's an =over without =item, SHIFTWAIT will be set, and we need to |
542 | # handle creation of the indent here. Add the shift to SHIFTS so that it |
543 | # will be cleaned up on =back. |
5cdeb5a2 |
544 | $self->makespace; |
b616daaf |
545 | if ($$self{SHIFTWAIT}) { |
bf202ccd |
546 | $self->output (".RS $$self{INDENT}\n"); |
b616daaf |
547 | push (@{ $$self{SHIFTS} }, $$self{INDENT}); |
548 | $$self{SHIFTWAIT} = 0; |
bf202ccd |
549 | } |
50a3fd2a |
550 | $self->output (protect $self->textmapfonts ($text)); |
9741dab0 |
551 | $self->outindex; |
552 | $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 1; |
553 | } |
554 | |
b84d8b9e |
555 | # Called for a formatting code. Takes a Pod::InteriorSequence object and |
9741dab0 |
556 | # returns a reference to a scalar. This scalar is the final formatted text. |
b84d8b9e |
557 | # It's returned as a reference to an array so that other formatting codes |
558 | # above us know that the text has already been processed. |
9741dab0 |
559 | sub sequence { |
560 | my ($self, $seq) = @_; |
561 | my $command = $seq->cmd_name; |
562 | |
bf202ccd |
563 | # We have to defer processing of the inside of an L<> formatting code. If |
b84d8b9e |
564 | # this code is nested inside an L<> code, return the literal raw text of |
565 | # it. |
bf202ccd |
566 | my $parent = $seq->nested; |
567 | while (defined $parent) { |
568 | return $seq->raw_text if ($parent->cmd_name eq 'L'); |
569 | $parent = $parent->nested; |
570 | } |
571 | |
9741dab0 |
572 | # Zero-width characters. |
b84d8b9e |
573 | return [ '\&' ] if ($command eq 'Z'); |
9741dab0 |
574 | |
a3e04946 |
575 | # C<>, L<>, X<>, and E<> don't apply guesswork to their contents. C<> |
576 | # needs some additional special handling. |
577 | my $literal = ($command =~ /^[CELX]$/); |
b84d8b9e |
578 | local $_ = $self->collapse ($seq->parse_tree, $literal, $command eq 'C'); |
9741dab0 |
579 | |
bf202ccd |
580 | # Handle E<> escapes. Numeric escapes that match one of the supported ISO |
581 | # 8859-1 characters don't work at present. |
9741dab0 |
582 | if ($command eq 'E') { |
2e20e14f |
583 | if (/^\d+$/) { |
b84d8b9e |
584 | return [ chr ($_) ]; |
2e20e14f |
585 | } elsif (exists $ESCAPES{$_}) { |
b84d8b9e |
586 | return [ $ESCAPES{$_} ]; |
9741dab0 |
587 | } else { |
aa212ad6 |
588 | my ($file, $line) = $seq->file_line; |
589 | warn "$file:$line: Unknown escape E<$_>\n"; |
b84d8b9e |
590 | return [ "E<$_>" ]; |
9741dab0 |
591 | } |
592 | } |
593 | |
b84d8b9e |
594 | # For all the other codes, empty content produces no output. |
9741dab0 |
595 | return '' if $_ eq ''; |
596 | |
b84d8b9e |
597 | # Handle simple formatting codes. |
9741dab0 |
598 | if ($command eq 'B') { |
b84d8b9e |
599 | return [ '\f(BS' . $_ . '\f(BE' ]; |
600 | } elsif ($command eq 'F' || $command eq 'I') { |
601 | return [ '\f(IS' . $_ . '\f(IE' ]; |
9741dab0 |
602 | } elsif ($command eq 'C') { |
b84d8b9e |
603 | return [ $self->quote_literal ($_) ]; |
9741dab0 |
604 | } |
605 | |
606 | # Handle links. |
607 | if ($command eq 'L') { |
bf202ccd |
608 | my ($text, $type) = (parselink ($_))[1,4]; |
609 | return '' unless $text; |
610 | my ($file, $line) = $seq->file_line; |
611 | $text = $self->parse ($text, $line); |
612 | $text = '<' . $text . '>' if $type eq 'url'; |
b84d8b9e |
613 | return [ $text ]; |
9741dab0 |
614 | } |
5cdeb5a2 |
615 | |
9741dab0 |
616 | # Whitespace protection replaces whitespace with "\ ". |
617 | if ($command eq 'S') { |
618 | s/\s+/\\ /g; |
b84d8b9e |
619 | return [ $_ ]; |
9741dab0 |
620 | } |
621 | |
622 | # Add an index entry to the list of ones waiting to be output. |
b84d8b9e |
623 | if ($command eq 'X') { |
624 | push (@{ $$self{INDEX} }, $_); |
625 | return ''; |
626 | } |
9741dab0 |
627 | |
628 | # Anything else is unknown. |
aa212ad6 |
629 | my ($file, $line) = $seq->file_line; |
b84d8b9e |
630 | warn "$file:$line: Unknown formatting code $command<$_>\n"; |
9741dab0 |
631 | } |
632 | |
633 | |
3c014959 |
634 | ############################################################################## |
9741dab0 |
635 | # Command paragraphs |
3c014959 |
636 | ############################################################################## |
9741dab0 |
637 | |
638 | # All command paragraphs take the paragraph and the line number. |
639 | |
640 | # First level heading. We can't output .IX in the NAME section due to a bug |
641 | # in some versions of catman, so don't output a .IX for that section. .SH |
2da3dd12 |
642 | # already uses small caps, so remove \s1 and \s-1. Maintain IN_NAME as |
643 | # appropriate, but don't leave it set while calling parse() so as to not |
644 | # override guesswork on section headings after NAME. |
9741dab0 |
645 | sub cmd_head1 { |
646 | my $self = shift; |
2da3dd12 |
647 | $$self{IN_NAME} = 0; |
9741dab0 |
648 | local $_ = $self->parse (@_); |
649 | s/\s+$//; |
650 | s/\\s-?\d//g; |
77003bb1 |
651 | s/\s*\n\s*/ /g; |
5cdeb5a2 |
652 | if ($$self{ITEMS} > 1) { |
653 | $$self{ITEMS} = 0; |
654 | $self->output (".PD\n"); |
655 | } |
50a3fd2a |
656 | $self->output ($self->switchquotes ('.SH', $self->mapfonts ($_))); |
9741dab0 |
657 | $self->outindex (($_ eq 'NAME') ? () : ('Header', $_)); |
658 | $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 0; |
2da3dd12 |
659 | $$self{IN_NAME} = ($_ eq 'NAME'); |
9741dab0 |
660 | } |
661 | |
662 | # Second level heading. |
663 | sub cmd_head2 { |
664 | my $self = shift; |
665 | local $_ = $self->parse (@_); |
666 | s/\s+$//; |
77003bb1 |
667 | s/\s*\n\s*/ /g; |
5cdeb5a2 |
668 | if ($$self{ITEMS} > 1) { |
669 | $$self{ITEMS} = 0; |
670 | $self->output (".PD\n"); |
671 | } |
50a3fd2a |
672 | $self->output ($self->switchquotes ('.Sh', $self->mapfonts ($_))); |
9741dab0 |
673 | $self->outindex ('Subsection', $_); |
674 | $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 0; |
675 | } |
676 | |
50a3fd2a |
677 | # Third level heading. |
678 | sub cmd_head3 { |
679 | my $self = shift; |
680 | local $_ = $self->parse (@_); |
681 | s/\s+$//; |
77003bb1 |
682 | s/\s*\n\s*/ /g; |
50a3fd2a |
683 | if ($$self{ITEMS} > 1) { |
684 | $$self{ITEMS} = 0; |
685 | $self->output (".PD\n"); |
686 | } |
687 | $self->makespace; |
b616daaf |
688 | $self->output ($self->textmapfonts ('\f(IS' . $_ . '\f(IE') . "\n"); |
50a3fd2a |
689 | $self->outindex ('Subsection', $_); |
690 | $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 1; |
691 | } |
692 | |
693 | # Fourth level heading. |
694 | sub cmd_head4 { |
695 | my $self = shift; |
696 | local $_ = $self->parse (@_); |
697 | s/\s+$//; |
77003bb1 |
698 | s/\s*\n\s*/ /g; |
50a3fd2a |
699 | if ($$self{ITEMS} > 1) { |
700 | $$self{ITEMS} = 0; |
701 | $self->output (".PD\n"); |
702 | } |
703 | $self->makespace; |
704 | $self->output ($self->textmapfonts ($_) . "\n"); |
705 | $self->outindex ('Subsection', $_); |
706 | $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 1; |
707 | } |
708 | |
9741dab0 |
709 | # Start a list. For indents after the first, wrap the outside indent in .RS |
710 | # so that hanging paragraph tags will be correct. |
711 | sub cmd_over { |
712 | my $self = shift; |
713 | local $_ = shift; |
714 | unless (/^[-+]?\d+\s+$/) { $_ = $$self{indent} } |
b616daaf |
715 | if (@{ $$self{SHIFTS} } < @{ $$self{INDENTS} }) { |
9741dab0 |
716 | $self->output (".RS $$self{INDENT}\n"); |
b616daaf |
717 | push (@{ $$self{SHIFTS} }, $$self{INDENT}); |
9741dab0 |
718 | } |
719 | push (@{ $$self{INDENTS} }, $$self{INDENT}); |
4213be12 |
720 | push (@{ $$self{ITEMTYPES} }, 'unknown'); |
9741dab0 |
721 | $$self{INDENT} = ($_ + 0); |
b616daaf |
722 | $$self{SHIFTWAIT} = 1; |
9741dab0 |
723 | } |
724 | |
725 | # End a list. If we've closed an embedded indent, we've mangled the hanging |
726 | # paragraph indent, so temporarily replace it with .RS and set WEIRDINDENT. |
727 | # We'll close that .RS at the next =back or =item. |
728 | sub cmd_back { |
729 | my $self = shift; |
730 | $$self{INDENT} = pop @{ $$self{INDENTS} }; |
4213be12 |
731 | if (defined $$self{INDENT}) { |
732 | pop @{ $$self{ITEMTYPES} }; |
733 | } else { |
aa212ad6 |
734 | my ($file, $line, $paragraph) = @_; |
735 | ($file, $line) = $paragraph->file_line; |
736 | warn "$file:$line: Unmatched =back\n"; |
9741dab0 |
737 | $$self{INDENT} = 0; |
738 | } |
b616daaf |
739 | if (@{ $$self{SHIFTS} } > @{ $$self{INDENTS} }) { |
9741dab0 |
740 | $self->output (".RE\n"); |
b616daaf |
741 | pop @{ $$self{SHIFTS} }; |
9741dab0 |
742 | } |
743 | if (@{ $$self{INDENTS} } > 0) { |
744 | $self->output (".RE\n"); |
745 | $self->output (".RS $$self{INDENT}\n"); |
9741dab0 |
746 | } |
747 | $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 1; |
b616daaf |
748 | $$self{SHIFTWAIT} = 0; |
9741dab0 |
749 | } |
750 | |
751 | # An individual list item. Emit an index entry for anything that's |
752 | # interesting, but don't emit index entries for things like bullets and |
3c014959 |
753 | # numbers. rofficate bullets too while we're at it (so for nice output, use * |
754 | # for your lists rather than o or . or - or some other thing). Newlines in an |
755 | # item title are turned into spaces since *roff can't handle them embedded. |
9741dab0 |
756 | sub cmd_item { |
757 | my $self = shift; |
758 | local $_ = $self->parse (@_); |
759 | s/\s+$//; |
46bce7d0 |
760 | s/\s*\n\s*/ /g; |
9741dab0 |
761 | my $index; |
762 | if (/\w/ && !/^\w[.\)]\s*$/) { |
763 | $index = $_; |
fe2227f0 |
764 | $index =~ s/^\s*[-*+o.]?(?:\s+|\Z)//; |
9741dab0 |
765 | } |
4213be12 |
766 | $_ = '*' unless length ($_) > 0; |
767 | my $type = $$self{ITEMTYPES}[0]; |
768 | unless (defined $type) { |
769 | my ($file, $line, $paragraph) = @_; |
770 | ($file, $line) = $paragraph->file_line; |
771 | $type = 'unknown'; |
772 | } |
773 | if ($type eq 'unknown') { |
774 | $type = /^\*\s*\Z/ ? 'bullet' : 'text'; |
775 | $$self{ITEMTYPES}[0] = $type if $$self{ITEMTYPES}[0]; |
776 | } |
777 | s/^\*\s*\Z/\\\(bu/ if $type eq 'bullet'; |
b616daaf |
778 | if (@{ $$self{SHIFTS} } == @{ $$self{INDENTS} }) { |
9741dab0 |
779 | $self->output (".RE\n"); |
b616daaf |
780 | pop @{ $$self{SHIFTS} }; |
9741dab0 |
781 | } |
50a3fd2a |
782 | $_ = $self->textmapfonts ($_); |
5cdeb5a2 |
783 | $self->output (".PD 0\n") if ($$self{ITEMS} == 1); |
3c014959 |
784 | $self->output ($self->switchquotes ('.IP', $_, $$self{INDENT})); |
9741dab0 |
785 | $self->outindex ($index ? ('Item', $index) : ()); |
786 | $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 0; |
5cdeb5a2 |
787 | $$self{ITEMS}++; |
b616daaf |
788 | $$self{SHIFTWAIT} = 0; |
9741dab0 |
789 | } |
790 | |
791 | # Begin a block for a particular translator. Setting VERBATIM triggers |
792 | # special handling in textblock(). |
793 | sub cmd_begin { |
794 | my $self = shift; |
795 | local $_ = shift; |
796 | my ($kind) = /^(\S+)/ or return; |
797 | if ($kind eq 'man' || $kind eq 'roff') { |
798 | $$self{VERBATIM} = 1; |
799 | } else { |
800 | $$self{EXCLUDE} = 1; |
801 | } |
802 | } |
803 | |
804 | # End a block for a particular translator. We assume that all =begin/=end |
805 | # pairs are properly closed. |
806 | sub cmd_end { |
807 | my $self = shift; |
808 | $$self{EXCLUDE} = 0; |
809 | $$self{VERBATIM} = 0; |
810 | } |
811 | |
812 | # One paragraph for a particular translator. Ignore it unless it's intended |
813 | # for man or roff, in which case we output it verbatim. |
814 | sub cmd_for { |
815 | my $self = shift; |
816 | local $_ = shift; |
9741dab0 |
817 | return unless s/^(?:man|roff)\b[ \t]*\n?//; |
818 | $self->output ($_); |
819 | } |
820 | |
821 | |
3c014959 |
822 | ############################################################################## |
9741dab0 |
823 | # Escaping and fontification |
3c014959 |
824 | ############################################################################## |
9741dab0 |
825 | |
826 | # At this point, we'll have embedded font codes of the form \f(<font>[SE] |
3c014959 |
827 | # where <font> is one of B, I, or F. Turn those into the right font start or |
828 | # end codes. The old pod2man didn't get B<someI<thing> else> right; after I<> |
829 | # it switched back to normal text rather than bold. We take care of this by |
830 | # using variables as a combined pointer to our current font sequence, and set |
831 | # each to the number of current nestings of start tags for that font. Use |
832 | # them as a vector to look up what font sequence to use. |
50a3fd2a |
833 | # |
834 | # \fP changes to the previous font, but only one previous font is kept. We |
835 | # don't know what the outside level font is; normally it's R, but if we're |
3c014959 |
836 | # inside a heading it could be something else. So arrange things so that the |
837 | # outside font is always the "previous" font and end with \fP instead of \fR. |
838 | # Idea from Zack Weinberg. |
9741dab0 |
839 | sub mapfonts { |
840 | my $self = shift; |
841 | local $_ = shift; |
842 | |
843 | my ($fixed, $bold, $italic) = (0, 0, 0); |
844 | my %magic = (F => \$fixed, B => \$bold, I => \$italic); |
50a3fd2a |
845 | my $last = '\fR'; |
846 | s { \\f\((.)(.) } { |
847 | my $sequence = ''; |
848 | my $f; |
849 | if ($last ne '\fR') { $sequence = '\fP' } |
850 | ${ $magic{$1} } += ($2 eq 'S') ? 1 : -1; |
851 | $f = $$self{FONTS}{($fixed && 1) . ($bold && 1) . ($italic && 1)}; |
852 | if ($f eq $last) { |
853 | ''; |
854 | } else { |
855 | if ($f ne '\fR') { $sequence .= $f } |
856 | $last = $f; |
857 | $sequence; |
858 | } |
859 | }gxe; |
860 | $_; |
861 | } |
862 | |
863 | # Unfortunately, there is a bug in Solaris 2.6 nroff (not present in GNU |
864 | # groff) where the sequence \fB\fP\f(CW\fP leaves the font set to B rather |
3c014959 |
865 | # than R, presumably because \f(CW doesn't actually do a font change. To work |
866 | # around this, use a separate textmapfonts for text blocks where the default |
867 | # font is always R and only use the smart mapfonts for headings. |
50a3fd2a |
868 | sub textmapfonts { |
869 | my $self = shift; |
870 | local $_ = shift; |
871 | |
872 | my ($fixed, $bold, $italic) = (0, 0, 0); |
873 | my %magic = (F => \$fixed, B => \$bold, I => \$italic); |
9741dab0 |
874 | s { \\f\((.)(.) } { |
875 | ${ $magic{$1} } += ($2 eq 'S') ? 1 : -1; |
876 | $$self{FONTS}{($fixed && 1) . ($bold && 1) . ($italic && 1)}; |
877 | }gxe; |
878 | $_; |
879 | } |
880 | |
881 | |
3c014959 |
882 | ############################################################################## |
883 | # *roff-specific parsing and magic |
884 | ############################################################################## |
9741dab0 |
885 | |
886 | # Called instead of parse_text, calls parse_text with the right flags. |
887 | sub parse { |
888 | my $self = shift; |
889 | $self->parse_text ({ -expand_seq => 'sequence', |
890 | -expand_ptree => 'collapse' }, @_); |
891 | } |
5cdeb5a2 |
892 | |
b84d8b9e |
893 | # Takes a parse tree, a flag saying whether or not to treat it as literal text |
894 | # (not call guesswork on it), and a flag saying whether or not to clean some |
895 | # things up for *roff, and returns the concatenation of all of the text |
896 | # strings in that parse tree. If the literal flag isn't true, guesswork() |
2da3dd12 |
897 | # will be called on all plain scalars in the parse tree. Otherwise, if |
898 | # collapse is being called on a C<> code, $cleanup should be set to true and |
899 | # some additional cleanup will be done. Assumes that everything in the parse |
900 | # tree is either a scalar or a reference to a scalar. |
9741dab0 |
901 | sub collapse { |
b84d8b9e |
902 | my ($self, $ptree, $literal, $cleanup) = @_; |
2da3dd12 |
903 | |
904 | # If we're processing the NAME section, don't do normal guesswork. This |
905 | # is because NAME lines are often extracted by utilities like catman that |
906 | # require plain text and don't understand *roff markup. We still need to |
907 | # escape backslashes and hyphens for *roff (and catman expects \- instead |
908 | # of -). |
909 | if ($$self{IN_NAME}) { |
910 | $literal = 1; |
911 | $cleanup = 1; |
912 | } |
913 | |
914 | # Do the collapse of the parse tree as described above. |
b84d8b9e |
915 | return join ('', map { |
916 | if (ref $_) { |
917 | join ('', @$_); |
918 | } elsif ($literal) { |
919 | if ($cleanup) { |
920 | s/\\/\\e/g; |
921 | s/-/\\-/g; |
922 | s/__/_\\|_/g; |
9741dab0 |
923 | } |
b84d8b9e |
924 | $_; |
925 | } else { |
926 | $self->guesswork ($_); |
927 | } |
928 | } $ptree->children); |
9741dab0 |
929 | } |
930 | |
931 | # Takes a text block to perform guesswork on; this is guaranteed not to |
b84d8b9e |
932 | # contain any formatting codes. Returns the text block with remapping done. |
9741dab0 |
933 | sub guesswork { |
934 | my $self = shift; |
935 | local $_ = shift; |
936 | |
937 | # rofficate backslashes. |
938 | s/\\/\\e/g; |
939 | |
940 | # Ensure double underbars have a tiny space between them. |
941 | s/__/_\\|_/g; |
942 | |
bf202ccd |
943 | # Leave hyphens only if they're part of regular words and there is only |
944 | # one dash at a time. Leave a dash after the first character as a regular |
945 | # non-breaking dash, but don't let it mark the rest of the word invalid |
946 | # for hyphenation. |
947 | s/-/\\-/g; |
948 | s{ |
949 | ( (?:\G|^|\s) [a-zA-Z] ) ( \\- )? |
950 | ( (?: [a-zA-Z]+ \\-)+ ) |
951 | ( [a-zA-Z]+ ) (?=\s|\Z) |
952 | \b |
953 | } { |
954 | my ($prefix, $hyphen, $main, $suffix) = ($1, $2, $3, $4); |
955 | $hyphen ||= ''; |
956 | $main =~ s/\\-/-/g; |
957 | $prefix . $hyphen . $main . $suffix; |
958 | }egx; |
959 | |
960 | # Translate -- into a real em dash if it's used like one. |
961 | s{ (\s) \\-\\- (\s) } { $1 . '\*(--' . $2 }egx; |
962 | s{ (\b[a-zA-Z]+) \\-\\- (\s|\Z|[a-zA-Z]+\b) } { $1 . '\*(--' . $2 }egx; |
963 | |
3c014959 |
964 | # Make all caps a little smaller. Be careful here, since we don't want to |
965 | # make @ARGV into small caps, nor do we want to fix the MIME in |
9741dab0 |
966 | # MIME-Version, since it looks weird with the full-height V. |
967 | s{ |
968 | ( ^ | [\s\(\"\'\`\[\{<>] ) |
bf202ccd |
969 | ( [A-Z] [A-Z] (?: [/A-Z+:\d_\$&] | \\- )* ) |
970 | (?= [\s>\}\]\(\)\'\".?!,;] | \\*\(-- | $ ) |
c9abbd5d |
971 | } { $1 . '\s-1' . $2 . '\s0' }egx; |
9741dab0 |
972 | |
9741dab0 |
973 | # Italize functions in the form func(). |
974 | s{ |
ee89c1da |
975 | ( \b | \\s-1 ) |
9741dab0 |
976 | ( |
ee89c1da |
977 | [A-Za-z_] ([:\w]|\\s-?[01])+ \(\) |
9741dab0 |
978 | ) |
ee89c1da |
979 | } { $1 . '\f(IS' . $2 . '\f(IE' }egx; |
9741dab0 |
980 | |
981 | # func(n) is a reference to a manual page. Make it \fIfunc\fR\|(n). |
982 | s{ |
ee89c1da |
983 | ( \b | \\s-1 ) |
bf202ccd |
984 | ( [A-Za-z_] (?:[.:\w]|\\-|\\s-?[01])+ ) |
9741dab0 |
985 | ( |
ee89c1da |
986 | \( \d [a-z]* \) |
9741dab0 |
987 | ) |
ee89c1da |
988 | } { $1 . '\f(IS' . $2 . '\f(IE\|' . $3 }egx; |
9741dab0 |
989 | |
990 | # Convert simple Perl variable references to a fixed-width font. |
991 | s{ |
992 | ( \s+ ) |
993 | ( [\$\@%] [\w:]+ ) |
994 | (?! \( ) |
995 | } { $1 . '\f(FS' . $2 . '\f(FE'}egx; |
996 | |
9741dab0 |
997 | # Fix up double quotes. |
998 | s{ \" ([^\"]+) \" } { '\*(L"' . $1 . '\*(R"' }egx; |
999 | |
1000 | # Make C++ into \*(C+, which is a squinched version. |
1001 | s{ \b C\+\+ } {\\*\(C+}gx; |
1002 | |
1003 | # All done. |
1004 | $_; |
1005 | } |
1006 | |
3c014959 |
1007 | # Handles C<> text, deciding whether to put \*C` around it or not. This is a |
1008 | # whole bunch of messy heuristics to try to avoid overquoting, originally from |
1009 | # Barrie Slaymaker. This largely duplicates similar code in Pod::Text. |
1010 | sub quote_literal { |
1011 | my $self = shift; |
1012 | local $_ = shift; |
1013 | |
1014 | # A regex that matches the portion of a variable reference that's the |
1015 | # array or hash index, separated out just because we want to use it in |
1016 | # several places in the following regex. |
1017 | my $index = '(?: \[.*\] | \{.*\} )?'; |
1018 | |
1019 | # Check for things that we don't want to quote, and if we find any of |
1020 | # them, return the string with just a font change and no quoting. |
1021 | m{ |
1022 | ^\s* |
1023 | (?: |
1024 | ( [\'\`\"] ) .* \1 # already quoted |
1025 | | \` .* \' # `quoted' |
1026 | | \$+ [\#^]? \S $index # special ($^Foo, $") |
1027 | | [\$\@%&*]+ \#? [:\'\w]+ $index # plain var or func |
1028 | | [\$\@%&*]* [:\'\w]+ (?: -> )? \(\s*[^\s,]\s*\) # 0/1-arg func call |
f011ec7d |
1029 | | [+-]? ( \d[\d.]* | \.\d+ ) (?: [eE][+-]?\d+ )? # a number |
3c014959 |
1030 | | 0x [a-fA-F\d]+ # a hex constant |
1031 | ) |
1032 | \s*\z |
1033 | }xo && return '\f(FS' . $_ . '\f(FE'; |
1034 | |
1035 | # If we didn't return, go ahead and quote the text. |
1036 | return '\f(FS\*(C`' . $_ . "\\*(C'\\f(FE"; |
1037 | } |
1038 | |
9741dab0 |
1039 | |
3c014959 |
1040 | ############################################################################## |
9741dab0 |
1041 | # Output formatting |
3c014959 |
1042 | ############################################################################## |
9741dab0 |
1043 | |
1044 | # Make vertical whitespace. |
1045 | sub makespace { |
1046 | my $self = shift; |
5cdeb5a2 |
1047 | $self->output (".PD\n") if ($$self{ITEMS} > 1); |
1048 | $$self{ITEMS} = 0; |
1049 | $self->output ($$self{INDENT} > 0 ? ".Sp\n" : ".PP\n") |
1050 | if $$self{NEEDSPACE}; |
9741dab0 |
1051 | } |
1052 | |
3c014959 |
1053 | # Output any pending index entries, and optionally an index entry given as an |
1054 | # argument. Support multiple index entries in X<> separated by slashes, and |
1055 | # strip special escapes from index entries. |
9741dab0 |
1056 | sub outindex { |
1057 | my ($self, $section, $index) = @_; |
1058 | my @entries = map { split m%\s*/\s*% } @{ $$self{INDEX} }; |
1059 | return unless ($section || @entries); |
1060 | $$self{INDEX} = []; |
b616daaf |
1061 | my @output; |
9741dab0 |
1062 | if (@entries) { |
b616daaf |
1063 | push (@output, [ 'Xref', join (' ', @entries) ]); |
9741dab0 |
1064 | } |
1065 | if ($section) { |
9741dab0 |
1066 | $index =~ s/\\-/-/g; |
1067 | $index =~ s/\\(?:s-?\d|.\(..|.)//g; |
b616daaf |
1068 | push (@output, [ $section, $index ]); |
1069 | } |
1070 | for (@output) { |
1071 | my ($type, $entry) = @$_; |
1072 | $entry =~ s/\"/\"\"/g; |
1073 | $self->output (".IX $type " . '"' . $entry . '"' . "\n"); |
9741dab0 |
1074 | } |
9741dab0 |
1075 | } |
1076 | |
1077 | # Output text to the output device. |
1078 | sub output { print { $_[0]->output_handle } $_[1] } |
1079 | |
50a3fd2a |
1080 | # Given a command and a single argument that may or may not contain double |
1081 | # quotes, handle double-quote formatting for it. If there are no double |
1082 | # quotes, just return the command followed by the argument in double quotes. |
1083 | # If there are double quotes, use an if statement to test for nroff, and for |
1084 | # nroff output the command followed by the argument in double quotes with |
1085 | # embedded double quotes doubled. For other formatters, remap paired double |
73849855 |
1086 | # quotes to LQUOTE and RQUOTE. |
50a3fd2a |
1087 | sub switchquotes { |
1088 | my $self = shift; |
1089 | my $command = shift; |
1090 | local $_ = shift; |
1091 | my $extra = shift; |
1092 | s/\\\*\([LR]\"/\"/g; |
1093 | |
1094 | # We also have to deal with \*C` and \*C', which are used to add the |
1095 | # quotes around C<> text, since they may expand to " and if they do this |
b616daaf |
1096 | # confuses the .SH macros and the like no end. Expand them ourselves. |
1097 | # Also separate troff from nroff if there are any fixed-width fonts in use |
1098 | # to work around problems with Solaris nroff. |
50a3fd2a |
1099 | my $c_is_quote = ($$self{LQUOTE} =~ /\"/) || ($$self{RQUOTE} =~ /\"/); |
b616daaf |
1100 | my $fixedpat = join ('|', @{ $$self{FONTS} }{'100', '101', '110', '111'}); |
1101 | $fixedpat =~ s/\\/\\\\/g; |
1102 | $fixedpat =~ s/\(/\\\(/g; |
1103 | if (/\"/ || /$fixedpat/) { |
50a3fd2a |
1104 | s/\"/\"\"/g; |
3c014959 |
1105 | my $nroff = $_; |
50a3fd2a |
1106 | my $troff = $_; |
1107 | $troff =~ s/\"\"([^\"]*)\"\"/\`\`$1\'\'/g; |
3c014959 |
1108 | if ($c_is_quote && /\\\*\(C[\'\`]/) { |
1109 | $nroff =~ s/\\\*\(C\`/$$self{LQUOTE}/g; |
1110 | $nroff =~ s/\\\*\(C\'/$$self{RQUOTE}/g; |
1111 | $troff =~ s/\\\*\(C[\'\`]//g; |
1112 | } |
1113 | $nroff = qq("$nroff") . ($extra ? " $extra" : ''); |
50a3fd2a |
1114 | $troff = qq("$troff") . ($extra ? " $extra" : ''); |
3c014959 |
1115 | |
1116 | # Work around the Solaris nroff bug where \f(CW\fP leaves the font set |
1117 | # to Roman rather than the actual previous font when used in headings. |
1118 | # troff output may still be broken, but at least we can fix nroff by |
b616daaf |
1119 | # just switching the font changes to the non-fixed versions. |
1120 | $nroff =~ s/\Q$$self{FONTS}{100}\E(.*)\\f[PR]/$1/g; |
1121 | $nroff =~ s/\Q$$self{FONTS}{101}\E(.*)\\f([PR])/\\fI$1\\f$2/g; |
1122 | $nroff =~ s/\Q$$self{FONTS}{110}\E(.*)\\f([PR])/\\fB$1\\f$2/g; |
1123 | $nroff =~ s/\Q$$self{FONTS}{111}\E(.*)\\f([PR])/\\f\(BI$1\\f$2/g; |
3c014959 |
1124 | |
59548eca |
1125 | # Now finally output the command. Only bother with .ie if the nroff |
3c014959 |
1126 | # and troff output isn't the same. |
1127 | if ($nroff ne $troff) { |
59548eca |
1128 | return ".ie n $command $nroff\n.el $command $troff\n"; |
3c014959 |
1129 | } else { |
1130 | return "$command $nroff\n"; |
1131 | } |
50a3fd2a |
1132 | } else { |
1133 | $_ = qq("$_") . ($extra ? " $extra" : ''); |
1134 | return "$command $_\n"; |
1135 | } |
1136 | } |
1137 | |
3c014959 |
1138 | ############################################################################## |
5e2effed |
1139 | # Module return value and documentation |
3c014959 |
1140 | ############################################################################## |
9741dab0 |
1141 | |
5e2effed |
1142 | 1; |
1143 | __END__ |
1144 | |
9741dab0 |
1145 | =head1 NAME |
1146 | |
1147 | Pod::Man - Convert POD data to formatted *roff input |
1148 | |
1149 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
1150 | |
1151 | use Pod::Man; |
1152 | my $parser = Pod::Man->new (release => $VERSION, section => 8); |
1153 | |
1154 | # Read POD from STDIN and write to STDOUT. |
1155 | $parser->parse_from_filehandle; |
1156 | |
1157 | # Read POD from file.pod and write to file.1. |
1158 | $parser->parse_from_file ('file.pod', 'file.1'); |
1159 | |
1160 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
1161 | |
1162 | Pod::Man is a module to convert documentation in the POD format (the |
1163 | preferred language for documenting Perl) into *roff input using the man |
1164 | macro set. The resulting *roff code is suitable for display on a terminal |
bf202ccd |
1165 | using L<nroff(1)>, normally via L<man(1)>, or printing using L<troff(1)>. |
1166 | It is conventionally invoked using the driver script B<pod2man>, but it can |
1167 | also be used directly. |
9741dab0 |
1168 | |
1169 | As a derived class from Pod::Parser, Pod::Man supports the same methods and |
1170 | interfaces. See L<Pod::Parser> for all the details; briefly, one creates a |
b4558dc4 |
1171 | new parser with C<< Pod::Man->new() >> and then calls either |
9741dab0 |
1172 | parse_from_filehandle() or parse_from_file(). |
1173 | |
1174 | new() can take options, in the form of key/value pairs that control the |
1175 | behavior of the parser. See below for details. |
1176 | |
1177 | If no options are given, Pod::Man uses the name of the input file with any |
1178 | trailing C<.pod>, C<.pm>, or C<.pl> stripped as the man page title, to |
1179 | section 1 unless the file ended in C<.pm> in which case it defaults to |
1180 | section 3, to a centered title of "User Contributed Perl Documentation", to |
1181 | a centered footer of the Perl version it is run with, and to a left-hand |
1182 | footer of the modification date of its input (or the current date if given |
1183 | STDIN for input). |
1184 | |
1185 | Pod::Man assumes that your *roff formatters have a fixed-width font named |
1186 | CW. If yours is called something else (like CR), use the C<fixed> option to |
1187 | specify it. This generally only matters for troff output for printing. |
1188 | Similarly, you can set the fonts used for bold, italic, and bold italic |
1189 | fixed-width output. |
1190 | |
1191 | Besides the obvious pod conversions, Pod::Man also takes care of formatting |
bf202ccd |
1192 | func(), func(3), and simple variable references like $foo or @bar so you |
9741dab0 |
1193 | don't have to use code escapes for them; complex expressions like |
1194 | C<$fred{'stuff'}> will still need to be escaped, though. It also translates |
1195 | dashes that aren't used as hyphens into en dashes, makes long dashes--like |
b4558dc4 |
1196 | this--into proper em dashes, fixes "paired quotes," makes C++ look right, |
1197 | puts a little space between double underbars, makes ALLCAPS a teeny bit |
1198 | smaller in B<troff>, and escapes stuff that *roff treats as special so that |
1199 | you don't have to. |
9741dab0 |
1200 | |
1201 | The recognized options to new() are as follows. All options take a single |
1202 | argument. |
1203 | |
1204 | =over 4 |
1205 | |
1206 | =item center |
1207 | |
1208 | Sets the centered page header to use instead of "User Contributed Perl |
1209 | Documentation". |
1210 | |
1211 | =item date |
1212 | |
1213 | Sets the left-hand footer. By default, the modification date of the input |
1214 | file will be used, or the current date if stat() can't find that file (the |
1215 | case if the input is from STDIN), and the date will be formatted as |
1216 | YYYY-MM-DD. |
1217 | |
1218 | =item fixed |
1219 | |
1220 | The fixed-width font to use for vertabim text and code. Defaults to CW. |
bf202ccd |
1221 | Some systems may want CR instead. Only matters for B<troff> output. |
9741dab0 |
1222 | |
1223 | =item fixedbold |
1224 | |
1225 | Bold version of the fixed-width font. Defaults to CB. Only matters for |
bf202ccd |
1226 | B<troff> output. |
9741dab0 |
1227 | |
1228 | =item fixeditalic |
1229 | |
1230 | Italic version of the fixed-width font (actually, something of a misnomer, |
1231 | since most fixed-width fonts only have an oblique version, not an italic |
bf202ccd |
1232 | version). Defaults to CI. Only matters for B<troff> output. |
9741dab0 |
1233 | |
1234 | =item fixedbolditalic |
1235 | |
1236 | Bold italic (probably actually oblique) version of the fixed-width font. |
1237 | Pod::Man doesn't assume you have this, and defaults to CB. Some systems |
bf202ccd |
1238 | (such as Solaris) have this font available as CX. Only matters for B<troff> |
9741dab0 |
1239 | output. |
1240 | |
bf202ccd |
1241 | =item name |
1242 | |
1243 | Set the name of the manual page. Without this option, the manual name is |
1244 | set to the uppercased base name of the file being converted unless the |
1245 | manual section is 3, in which case the path is parsed to see if it is a Perl |
1246 | module path. If it is, a path like C<.../lib/Pod/Man.pm> is converted into |
1247 | a name like C<Pod::Man>. This option, if given, overrides any automatic |
1248 | determination of the name. |
1249 | |
ab1f1d91 |
1250 | =item quotes |
1251 | |
1252 | Sets the quote marks used to surround CE<lt>> text. If the value is a |
1253 | single character, it is used as both the left and right quote; if it is two |
1254 | characters, the first character is used as the left quote and the second as |
1255 | the right quoted; and if it is four characters, the first two are used as |
1256 | the left quote and the second two as the right quote. |
1257 | |
1258 | This may also be set to the special value C<none>, in which case no quote |
1259 | marks are added around CE<lt>> text (but the font is still changed for troff |
1260 | output). |
1261 | |
9741dab0 |
1262 | =item release |
1263 | |
1264 | Set the centered footer. By default, this is the version of Perl you run |
bf202ccd |
1265 | Pod::Man under. Note that some system an macro sets assume that the |
9741dab0 |
1266 | centered footer will be a modification date and will prepend something like |
1267 | "Last modified: "; if this is the case, you may want to set C<release> to |
1268 | the last modified date and C<date> to the version number. |
1269 | |
1270 | =item section |
1271 | |
1272 | Set the section for the C<.TH> macro. The standard section numbering |
1273 | convention is to use 1 for user commands, 2 for system calls, 3 for |
1274 | functions, 4 for devices, 5 for file formats, 6 for games, 7 for |
1275 | miscellaneous information, and 8 for administrator commands. There is a lot |
1276 | of variation here, however; some systems (like Solaris) use 4 for file |
1277 | formats, 5 for miscellaneous information, and 7 for devices. Still others |
1278 | use 1m instead of 8, or some mix of both. About the only section numbers |
1279 | that are reliably consistent are 1, 2, and 3. |
1280 | |
1281 | By default, section 1 will be used unless the file ends in .pm in which case |
1282 | section 3 will be selected. |
1283 | |
1284 | =back |
1285 | |
1286 | The standard Pod::Parser method parse_from_filehandle() takes up to two |
1287 | arguments, the first being the file handle to read POD from and the second |
1288 | being the file handle to write the formatted output to. The first defaults |
1289 | to STDIN if not given, and the second defaults to STDOUT. The method |
1290 | parse_from_file() is almost identical, except that its two arguments are the |
1291 | input and output disk files instead. See L<Pod::Parser> for the specific |
1292 | details. |
1293 | |
1294 | =head1 DIAGNOSTICS |
1295 | |
1296 | =over 4 |
1297 | |
ab1f1d91 |
1298 | =item roff font should be 1 or 2 chars, not "%s" |
9741dab0 |
1299 | |
1300 | (F) You specified a *roff font (using C<fixed>, C<fixedbold>, etc.) that |
1301 | wasn't either one or two characters. Pod::Man doesn't support *roff fonts |
1302 | longer than two characters, although some *roff extensions do (the canonical |
bf202ccd |
1303 | versions of B<nroff> and B<troff> don't either). |
9741dab0 |
1304 | |
1305 | =item Invalid link %s |
1306 | |
b84d8b9e |
1307 | (W) The POD source contained a C<LE<lt>E<gt>> formatting code that |
1308 | Pod::Man was unable to parse. You should never see this error message; it |
1309 | probably indicates a bug in Pod::Man. |
9741dab0 |
1310 | |
ab1f1d91 |
1311 | =item Invalid quote specification "%s" |
1312 | |
1313 | (F) The quote specification given (the quotes option to the constructor) was |
1314 | invalid. A quote specification must be one, two, or four characters long. |
1315 | |
1316 | =item %s:%d: Unknown command paragraph "%s". |
1317 | |
1318 | (W) The POD source contained a non-standard command paragraph (something of |
1319 | the form C<=command args>) that Pod::Man didn't know about. It was ignored. |
1320 | |
aa212ad6 |
1321 | =item %s:%d: Unknown escape EE<lt>%sE<gt> |
9741dab0 |
1322 | |
1323 | (W) The POD source contained an C<EE<lt>E<gt>> escape that Pod::Man didn't |
1324 | know about. C<EE<lt>%sE<gt>> was printed verbatim in the output. |
1325 | |
b84d8b9e |
1326 | =item %s:%d: Unknown formatting code %s |
9741dab0 |
1327 | |
b84d8b9e |
1328 | (W) The POD source contained a non-standard formatting code (something of |
9741dab0 |
1329 | the form C<XE<lt>E<gt>>) that Pod::Man didn't know about. It was ignored. |
1330 | |
aa212ad6 |
1331 | =item %s:%d: Unmatched =back |
9741dab0 |
1332 | |
1333 | (W) Pod::Man encountered a C<=back> command that didn't correspond to an |
1334 | C<=over> command. |
1335 | |
1336 | =back |
1337 | |
1338 | =head1 BUGS |
1339 | |
b4558dc4 |
1340 | Eight-bit input data isn't handled at all well at present. The correct |
1341 | approach would be to map EE<lt>E<gt> escapes to the appropriate UTF-8 |
1342 | characters and then do a translation pass on the output according to the |
1343 | user-specified output character set. Unfortunately, we can't send eight-bit |
1344 | data directly to the output unless the user says this is okay, since some |
1345 | vendor *roff implementations can't handle eight-bit data. If the *roff |
1346 | implementation can, however, that's far superior to the current hacked |
1347 | characters that only work under troff. |
1348 | |
1349 | There is currently no way to turn off the guesswork that tries to format |
1350 | unmarked text appropriately, and sometimes it isn't wanted (particularly |
1351 | when using POD to document something other than Perl). |
9741dab0 |
1352 | |
1353 | The NAME section should be recognized specially and index entries emitted |
1354 | for everything in that section. This would have to be deferred until the |
1355 | next section, since extraneous things in NAME tends to confuse various man |
1356 | page processors. |
1357 | |
9741dab0 |
1358 | Pod::Man doesn't handle font names longer than two characters. Neither do |
bf202ccd |
1359 | most B<troff> implementations, but GNU troff does as an extension. It would |
9741dab0 |
1360 | be nice to support as an option for those who want to use it. |
1361 | |
1362 | The preamble added to each output file is rather verbose, and most of it is |
1363 | only necessary in the presence of EE<lt>E<gt> escapes for non-ASCII |
1364 | characters. It would ideally be nice if all of those definitions were only |
1365 | output if needed, perhaps on the fly as the characters are used. |
1366 | |
9741dab0 |
1367 | Pod::Man is excessively slow. |
1368 | |
b4558dc4 |
1369 | =head1 CAVEATS |
1370 | |
1371 | The handling of hyphens and em dashes is somewhat fragile, and one may get |
1372 | the wrong one under some circumstances. This should only matter for |
1373 | B<troff> output. |
1374 | |
1375 | When and whether to use small caps is somewhat tricky, and Pod::Man doesn't |
1376 | necessarily get it right. |
1377 | |
9741dab0 |
1378 | =head1 SEE ALSO |
1379 | |
bf202ccd |
1380 | L<Pod::Parser>, L<perlpod(1)>, L<pod2man(1)>, L<nroff(1)>, L<troff(1)>, |
1381 | L<man(1)>, L<man(7)> |
9741dab0 |
1382 | |
1383 | Ossanna, Joseph F., and Brian W. Kernighan. "Troff User's Manual," |
1384 | Computing Science Technical Report No. 54, AT&T Bell Laboratories. This is |
bf202ccd |
1385 | the best documentation of standard B<nroff> and B<troff>. At the time of |
1386 | this writing, it's available at |
1387 | L<http://www.cs.bell-labs.com/cm/cs/cstr.html>. |
9741dab0 |
1388 | |
bf202ccd |
1389 | The man page documenting the man macro set may be L<man(5)> instead of |
1390 | L<man(7)> on your system. Also, please see L<pod2man(1)> for extensive |
1391 | documentation on writing manual pages if you've not done it before and |
1392 | aren't familiar with the conventions. |
9741dab0 |
1393 | |
fd20da51 |
1394 | The current version of this module is always available from its web site at |
1395 | L<http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/software/podlators/>. It is also part of the |
1396 | Perl core distribution as of 5.6.0. |
1397 | |
9741dab0 |
1398 | =head1 AUTHOR |
1399 | |
bf202ccd |
1400 | Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu>, based I<very> heavily on the original |
1401 | B<pod2man> by Tom Christiansen <tchrist@mox.perl.com>. |
9741dab0 |
1402 | |
3c014959 |
1403 | =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE |
1404 | |
4213be12 |
1405 | Copyright 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003 by Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu>. |
3c014959 |
1406 | |
1407 | This program is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it |
1408 | under the same terms as Perl itself. |
1409 | |
9741dab0 |
1410 | =cut |