disable internal globbing for miniperl (or build breaks out
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / lib / Pod / Man.pm
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9741dab0 1# Pod::Man -- Convert POD data to formatted *roff input.
2e20e14f 2# $Id: Man.pm,v 0.8 1999/10/07 09:39:37 eagle Exp $
9741dab0 3#
4# Copyright 1999 by Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu>
5#
6# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
7# under the same terms as Perl itself.
8#
9# This module is intended to be a replacement for pod2man, and attempts to
10# match its output except for some specific circumstances where other
11# decisions seemed to produce better output. It uses Pod::Parser and is
12# designed to be very easy to subclass.
13
14############################################################################
15# Modules and declarations
16############################################################################
17
18package Pod::Man;
19
20require 5.004;
21
22use Carp qw(carp croak);
23use Pod::Parser ();
24
25use strict;
26use subs qw(makespace);
27use vars qw(@ISA %ESCAPES $PREAMBLE $VERSION);
28
29@ISA = qw(Pod::Parser);
30
2e20e14f 31($VERSION = (split (' ', q$Revision: 0.8 $ ))[1]) =~ s/\.(\d)$/.0$1/;
9741dab0 32
33
34############################################################################
35# Preamble and *roff output tables
36############################################################################
37
38# The following is the static preamble which starts all *roff output we
39# generate. It's completely static except for the font to use as a
40# fixed-width font, which is designed by @CFONT@. $PREAMBLE should
41# therefore be run through s/\@CFONT\@/<font>/g before output.
42$PREAMBLE = <<'----END OF PREAMBLE----';
43.de Sh \" Subsection heading
44.br
45.if t .Sp
46.ne 5
47.PP
48\fB\\$1\fR
49.PP
50..
51.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP)
52.if t .sp .5v
53.if n .sp
54..
55.de Ip \" List item
56.br
57.ie \\n(.$>=3 .ne \\$3
58.el .ne 3
59.IP "\\$1" \\$2
60..
61.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text
62.ft @CFONT@
63.nf
64.ne \\$1
65..
66.de Ve \" End verbatim text
67.ft R
68
69.fi
70..
71.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will
72.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left
73.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a
74.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used
75.\" to do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and
76.\" \*(C' expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>
77.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr
78.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p'
79.ie n \{\
80. ds -- \(*W-
81. ds PI pi
82. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch
83. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch
84. ds L" ""
85. ds R" ""
86. ds C` `
87. ds C' '
88'br\}
89.el\{\
90. ds -- \|\(em\|
91. ds PI \(*p
92. ds L" ``
93. ds R" ''
94'br\}
95.\"
96.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr
97.\" for titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and
98.\" index entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process
99.\" the output yourself in some meaningful fashion.
100.if \nF \{\
101. de IX
102. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2"
103. .
104. nr % 0
105. rr F
106.\}
107.\"
108.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it
109.\" makes way too many mistakes in technical documents.
110.hy 0
111.if n .na
112.\"
113.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2).
114.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts.
115.bd B 3
116. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff
117.if n \{\
118. ds #H 0
119. ds #V .8m
120. ds #F .3m
121. ds #[ \f1
122. ds #] \fP
123.\}
124.if t \{\
125. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m)
126. ds #V .6m
127. ds #F 0
128. ds #[ \&
129. ds #] \&
130.\}
131. \" simple accents for nroff and troff
132.if n \{\
133. ds ' \&
134. ds ` \&
135. ds ^ \&
136. ds , \&
137. ds ~ ~
138. ds /
139.\}
140.if t \{\
141. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u"
142. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u'
143. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u'
144. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u'
145. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u'
146. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u'
147.\}
148. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents
149.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V'
150.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H'
151.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#]
152.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H'
153.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u'
154.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#]
155.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#]
156.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e
157.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E
158. \" corrections for vroff
159.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u'
160.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u'
161. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr)
162.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \
163\{\
164. ds : e
165. ds 8 ss
166. ds o a
167. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga
168. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy
169. ds th \o'bp'
170. ds Th \o'LP'
171. ds ae ae
172. ds Ae AE
173.\}
174.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C
175----END OF PREAMBLE----
176
177# This table is taken nearly verbatim from Tom Christiansen's pod2man. It
178# assumes that the standard preamble has already been printed, since that's
179# what defines all of the accent marks. Note that some of these are quoted
180# with double quotes since they contain embedded single quotes, so use \\
181# uniformly for backslash for readability.
182%ESCAPES = (
183 'amp' => '&', # ampersand
184 'lt' => '<', # left chevron, less-than
185 'gt' => '>', # right chevron, greater-than
186 'quot' => '"', # double quote
187
188 'Aacute' => "A\\*'", # capital A, acute accent
189 'aacute' => "a\\*'", # small a, acute accent
190 'Acirc' => 'A\\*^', # capital A, circumflex accent
191 'acirc' => 'a\\*^', # small a, circumflex accent
192 'AElig' => '\*(AE', # capital AE diphthong (ligature)
193 'aelig' => '\*(ae', # small ae diphthong (ligature)
194 'Agrave' => "A\\*`", # capital A, grave accent
195 'agrave' => "A\\*`", # small a, grave accent
196 'Aring' => 'A\\*o', # capital A, ring
197 'aring' => 'a\\*o', # small a, ring
198 'Atilde' => 'A\\*~', # capital A, tilde
199 'atilde' => 'a\\*~', # small a, tilde
200 'Auml' => 'A\\*:', # capital A, dieresis or umlaut mark
201 'auml' => 'a\\*:', # small a, dieresis or umlaut mark
202 'Ccedil' => 'C\\*,', # capital C, cedilla
203 'ccedil' => 'c\\*,', # small c, cedilla
204 'Eacute' => "E\\*'", # capital E, acute accent
205 'eacute' => "e\\*'", # small e, acute accent
206 'Ecirc' => 'E\\*^', # capital E, circumflex accent
207 'ecirc' => 'e\\*^', # small e, circumflex accent
208 'Egrave' => 'E\\*`', # capital E, grave accent
209 'egrave' => 'e\\*`', # small e, grave accent
210 'ETH' => '\\*(D-', # capital Eth, Icelandic
211 'eth' => '\\*(d-', # small eth, Icelandic
212 'Euml' => 'E\\*:', # capital E, dieresis or umlaut mark
213 'euml' => 'e\\*:', # small e, dieresis or umlaut mark
214 'Iacute' => "I\\*'", # capital I, acute accent
215 'iacute' => "i\\*'", # small i, acute accent
216 'Icirc' => 'I\\*^', # capital I, circumflex accent
217 'icirc' => 'i\\*^', # small i, circumflex accent
218 'Igrave' => 'I\\*`', # capital I, grave accent
219 'igrave' => 'i\\*`', # small i, grave accent
220 'Iuml' => 'I\\*:', # capital I, dieresis or umlaut mark
221 'iuml' => 'i\\*:', # small i, dieresis or umlaut mark
222 'Ntilde' => 'N\*~', # capital N, tilde
223 'ntilde' => 'n\*~', # small n, tilde
224 'Oacute' => "O\\*'", # capital O, acute accent
225 'oacute' => "o\\*'", # small o, acute accent
226 'Ocirc' => 'O\\*^', # capital O, circumflex accent
227 'ocirc' => 'o\\*^', # small o, circumflex accent
228 'Ograve' => 'O\\*`', # capital O, grave accent
229 'ograve' => 'o\\*`', # small o, grave accent
230 'Oslash' => 'O\\*/', # capital O, slash
231 'oslash' => 'o\\*/', # small o, slash
232 'Otilde' => 'O\\*~', # capital O, tilde
233 'otilde' => 'o\\*~', # small o, tilde
234 'Ouml' => 'O\\*:', # capital O, dieresis or umlaut mark
235 'ouml' => 'o\\*:', # small o, dieresis or umlaut mark
236 'szlig' => '\*8', # small sharp s, German (sz ligature)
237 'THORN' => '\\*(Th', # capital THORN, Icelandic
238 'thorn' => '\\*(th', # small thorn, Icelandic
239 'Uacute' => "U\\*'", # capital U, acute accent
240 'uacute' => "u\\*'", # small u, acute accent
241 'Ucirc' => 'U\\*^', # capital U, circumflex accent
242 'ucirc' => 'u\\*^', # small u, circumflex accent
243 'Ugrave' => 'U\\*`', # capital U, grave accent
244 'ugrave' => 'u\\*`', # small u, grave accent
245 'Uuml' => 'U\\*:', # capital U, dieresis or umlaut mark
246 'uuml' => 'u\\*:', # small u, dieresis or umlaut mark
247 'Yacute' => "Y\\*'", # capital Y, acute accent
248 'yacute' => "y\\*'", # small y, acute accent
249 'yuml' => 'y\\*:', # small y, dieresis or umlaut mark
250);
251
252
253############################################################################
254# Static helper functions
255############################################################################
256
257# Protect leading quotes and periods against interpretation as commands.
258sub protect { local $_ = shift; s/^([.\'])/\\&$1/mg; $_ }
259
260# Given a command and a single argument that may or may not contain double
261# quotes, handle double-quote formatting for it. If there are no double
262# quotes, just return the command followed by the argument in double quotes.
263# If there are double quotes, use an if statement to test for nroff, and for
264# nroff output the command followed by the argument in double quotes with
265# embedded double quotes doubled. For other formatters, remap paired double
266# quotes to `` and ''.
267sub switchquotes {
268 my $command = shift;
269 local $_ = shift;
270 my $extra = shift;
271 s/\\\*\([LR]\"/\"/g;
272 if (/\"/) {
273 s/\"/\"\"/g;
274 my $troff = $_;
275 $troff =~ s/\"\"([^\"]*)\"\"/\`\`$1\'\'/g;
276 s/\"/\"\"/g if $extra;
277 $troff =~ s/\"/\"\"/g if $extra;
278 $_ = qq("$_") . ($extra ? " $extra" : '');
279 $troff = qq("$troff") . ($extra ? " $extra" : '');
280 return ".if n $command $_\n.el $command $troff\n";
281 } else {
282 $_ = qq("$_") . ($extra ? " $extra" : '');
283 return "$command $_\n";
284 }
285}
286
287# Translate a font string into an escape.
288sub toescape { (length ($_[0]) > 1 ? '\f(' : '\f') . $_[0] }
289
290
291############################################################################
292# Initialization
293############################################################################
294
295# Initialize the object. Here, we also process any additional options
296# passed to the constructor or set up defaults if none were given. center
297# is the centered title, release is the version number, and date is the date
298# for the documentation. Note that we can't know what file name we're
299# processing due to the architecture of Pod::Parser, so that *has* to either
300# be passed to the constructor or set separately with Pod::Man::name().
301sub initialize {
302 my $self = shift;
303
304 # Figure out the fixed-width font. If user-supplied, make sure that
305 # they are the right length.
306 for (qw/fixed fixedbold fixeditalic fixedbolditalic/) {
307 if (defined $$self{$_}) {
308 if (length ($$self{$_}) < 1 || length ($$self{$_}) > 2) {
309 croak "roff font should be 1 or 2 chars, not `$$self{$_}'";
310 }
311 } else {
312 $$self{$_} = '';
313 }
314 }
315
316 # Set the default fonts. We can't be sure what fixed bold-italic is
317 # going to be called, so default to just bold.
318 $$self{fixed} ||= 'CW';
319 $$self{fixedbold} ||= 'CB';
320 $$self{fixeditalic} ||= 'CI';
321 $$self{fixedbolditalic} ||= 'CB';
322
323 # Set up a table of font escapes. First number is fixed-width, second
324 # is bold, third is italic.
325 $$self{FONTS} = { '000' => '\fR', '001' => '\fI',
326 '010' => '\fB', '011' => '\f(BI',
327 '100' => toescape ($$self{fixed}),
328 '101' => toescape ($$self{fixeditalic}),
329 '110' => toescape ($$self{fixedbold}),
330 '111' => toescape ($$self{fixedbolditalic})};
331
332 # Extra stuff for page titles.
333 $$self{center} = 'User Contributed Perl Documentation'
334 unless defined $$self{center};
335 $$self{indent} = 4 unless defined $$self{indent};
336
337 # We used to try first to get the version number from a local binary,
338 # but we shouldn't need that any more. Get the version from the running
339 # Perl.
340 if (!defined $$self{release}) {
341 my ($version, $patch) = ($] =~ /^(.{5})(\d{2})?/);
342 $$self{release} = "perl $version";
343 $$self{release} .= ", patch $patch" if $patch;
344 }
345
346 # Double quotes in things that will be quoted.
347 for (qw/center date release/) { $$self{$_} =~ s/\"/\"\"/g }
348
349 $$self{INDENT} = 0; # Current indentation level.
350 $$self{INDENTS} = []; # Stack of indentations.
351 $$self{INDEX} = []; # Index keys waiting to be printed.
352
353 $self->SUPER::initialize;
354}
355
356# For each document we process, output the preamble first. Note that the
357# fixed width font is a global default; once we interpolate it into the
358# PREAMBLE, it ain't ever changing. Maybe fix this later.
359sub begin_pod {
360 my $self = shift;
361
362 # Try to figure out the name and section from the file name.
363 my $section = $$self{section} || 1;
364 my $name = $$self{name};
365 if (!defined $name) {
366 $name = $self->input_file;
367 $section = 3 if (!$$self{section} && $name =~ /\.pm$/i);
368 $name =~ s/\.p(od|[lm])$//i;
369 if ($section =~ /^1/) {
370 require File::Basename;
371 $name = uc File::Basename::basename ($name);
372 } else {
373 # Lose everything up to the first of
374 # */lib/*perl* standard or site_perl module
375 # */*perl*/lib from -D prefix=/opt/perl
376 # */*perl*/ random module hierarchy
377 # which works. Should be fixed to use File::Spec.
378 for ($name) {
379 s%//+%/%g;
380 if ( s%^.*?/lib/[^/]*perl[^/]*/%%i
381 or s%^.*?/[^/]*perl[^/]*/(?:lib/)?%%i) {
382 s%^site(_perl)?/%%; # site and site_perl
383 s%^(.*-$^O|$^O-.*)/%%o; # arch
384 s%^\d+\.\d+%%; # version
385 }
386 s%/%::%g;
387 }
388 }
389 }
390
391 # Modification date header. Try to use the modification time of our
392 # input.
393 if (!defined $$self{date}) {
394 my $time = (stat $self->input_file)[9] || time;
395 my ($day, $month, $year) = (localtime $time)[3,4,5];
396 $month++;
397 $year += 1900;
398 $$self{date} = join ('-', $year, $month, $day);
399 }
400
401 # Now, print out the preamble and the title.
402 $PREAMBLE =~ s/\@CFONT\@/$$self{fixed}/;
403 chomp $PREAMBLE;
404 print { $self->output_handle } <<"----END OF HEADER----";
405.\\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man version $VERSION
406.\\" @{[ scalar localtime ]}
407.\\"
408.\\" Standard preamble:
409.\\" ======================================================================
410$PREAMBLE
411.\\" ======================================================================
412.\\"
413.IX Title "$name $section"
414.TH $name $section "$$self{release}" "$$self{date}" "$$self{center}"
415.UC
416----END OF HEADER----
417#"# for cperl-mode
418
419 # Initialize a few per-file variables.
420 $$self{INDENT} = 0;
421 $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 0;
422}
423
424
425############################################################################
426# Core overrides
427############################################################################
428
429# Called for each command paragraph. Gets the command, the associated
430# paragraph, the line number, and a Pod::Paragraph object. Just dispatches
431# the command to a method named the same as the command. =cut is handled
432# internally by Pod::Parser.
433sub command {
434 my $self = shift;
435 my $command = shift;
436 return if $command eq 'pod';
437 return if ($$self{EXCLUDE} && $command ne 'end');
438 $command = 'cmd_' . $command;
439 $self->$command (@_);
440}
441
442# Called for a verbatim paragraph. Gets the paragraph, the line number, and
443# a Pod::Paragraph object. Rofficate backslashes, untabify, put a
444# zero-width character at the beginning of each line to protect against
445# commands, and wrap in .Vb/.Ve.
446sub verbatim {
447 my $self = shift;
448 return if $$self{EXCLUDE};
449 local $_ = shift;
450 return if /^\s+$/;
451 s/\s+$/\n/;
452 my $lines = tr/\n/\n/;
453 1 while s/^(.*?)(\t+)/$1 . ' ' x (length ($2) * 8 - length ($1) % 8)/me;
454 s/\\/\\e/g;
455 s/^(\s*\S)/'\&' . $1/gme;
456 $self->makespace if $$self{NEEDSPACE};
457 $self->output (".Vb $lines\n$_.Ve\n");
458 $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 0;
459}
460
461# Called for a regular text block. Gets the paragraph, the line number, and
462# a Pod::Paragraph object. Perform interpolation and output the results.
463sub textblock {
464 my $self = shift;
465 return if $$self{EXCLUDE};
466 $self->output ($_[0]), return if $$self{VERBATIM};
467
468 # Perform a little magic to collapse multiple L<> references. We'll
469 # just rewrite the whole thing into actual text at this part, bypassing
470 # the whole internal sequence parsing thing.
471 s{
472 (L< # A link of the form L</something>.
473 /
474 (
475 [:\w]+ # The item has to be a simple word...
476 (\(\))? # ...or simple function.
477 )
478 >
479 (
480 ,?\s+(and\s+)? # Allow lots of them, conjuncted.
481 L<
482 /
483 ( [:\w]+ ( \(\) )? )
484 >
485 )+
486 )
487 } {
488 local $_ = $1;
489 s{ L< / ([^>]+ ) } {$1}g;
490 my @items = split /(?:,?\s+(?:and\s+)?)/;
491 my $string = "the ";
492 my $i;
493 for ($i = 0; $i < @items; $i++) {
494 $string .= $items[$i];
495 $string .= ", " if @items > 2 && $i != $#items;
496 $string .= " and " if ($i == $#items - 1);
497 }
498 $string .= " entries elsewhere in this document";
499 $string;
500 }gex;
501
502 # Parse the tree and output it. collapse knows about references to
503 # scalars as well as scalars and does the right thing with them.
504 local $_ = $self->parse (@_);
505 s/\n\s*$/\n/;
506 $self->makespace if $$self{NEEDSPACE};
507 $self->output (protect $self->mapfonts ($_));
508 $self->outindex;
509 $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 1;
510}
511
512# Called for an interior sequence. Takes a Pod::InteriorSequence object and
513# returns a reference to a scalar. This scalar is the final formatted text.
514# It's returned as a reference so that other interior sequences above us
515# know that the text has already been processed.
516sub sequence {
517 my ($self, $seq) = @_;
518 my $command = $seq->cmd_name;
519
520 # Zero-width characters.
521 if ($command eq 'Z') { return bless \ '\&', 'Pod::Man::String' }
522
523 # C<>, L<>, X<>, and E<> don't apply guesswork to their contents.
524 local $_ = $self->collapse ($seq->parse_tree, $command =~ /^[CELX]$/);
525
526 # Handle E<> escapes.
527 if ($command eq 'E') {
2e20e14f 528 if (/^\d+$/) {
529 return bless \ chr ($_), 'Pod::Man::String';
530 } elsif (exists $ESCAPES{$_}) {
9741dab0 531 return bless \ "$ESCAPES{$_}", 'Pod::Man::String';
532 } else {
533 carp "Unknown escape E<$1>";
534 return bless \ "E<$_>", 'Pod::Man::String';
535 }
536 }
537
538 # For all the other sequences, empty content produces no output.
539 return '' if $_ eq '';
540
541 # Handle formatting sequences.
542 if ($command eq 'B') {
543 return bless \ ('\f(BS' . $_ . '\f(BE'), 'Pod::Man::String';
544 } elsif ($command eq 'F') {
545 return bless \ ('\f(IS' . $_ . '\f(IE'), 'Pod::Man::String';
546 } elsif ($command eq 'I') {
547 return bless \ ('\f(IS' . $_ . '\f(IE'), 'Pod::Man::String';
548 } elsif ($command eq 'C') {
549 s/-/\\-/g;
550 s/__/_\\|_/g;
551 return bless \ ('\f(FS\*(C`' . $_ . "\\*(C'\\f(FE"),
552 'Pod::Man::String';
553 }
554
555 # Handle links.
556 if ($command eq 'L') {
557 return bless \ ($self->buildlink ($_)), 'Pod::Man::String';
558 }
559
560 # Whitespace protection replaces whitespace with "\ ".
561 if ($command eq 'S') {
562 s/\s+/\\ /g;
563 return bless \ "$_", 'Pod::Man::String';
564 }
565
566 # Add an index entry to the list of ones waiting to be output.
567 if ($command eq 'X') { push (@{ $$self{INDEX} }, $_); return '' }
568
569 # Anything else is unknown.
570 carp "Unknown sequence $command<$_>";
571}
572
573
574############################################################################
575# Command paragraphs
576############################################################################
577
578# All command paragraphs take the paragraph and the line number.
579
580# First level heading. We can't output .IX in the NAME section due to a bug
581# in some versions of catman, so don't output a .IX for that section. .SH
582# already uses small caps, so remove any E<> sequences that would cause
583# them.
584sub cmd_head1 {
585 my $self = shift;
586 local $_ = $self->parse (@_);
587 s/\s+$//;
588 s/\\s-?\d//g;
589 $self->output (switchquotes ('.SH', $self->mapfonts ($_)));
590 $self->outindex (($_ eq 'NAME') ? () : ('Header', $_));
591 $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 0;
592}
593
594# Second level heading.
595sub cmd_head2 {
596 my $self = shift;
597 local $_ = $self->parse (@_);
598 s/\s+$//;
599 $self->output (switchquotes ('.Sh', $self->mapfonts ($_)));
600 $self->outindex ('Subsection', $_);
601 $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 0;
602}
603
604# Start a list. For indents after the first, wrap the outside indent in .RS
605# so that hanging paragraph tags will be correct.
606sub cmd_over {
607 my $self = shift;
608 local $_ = shift;
609 unless (/^[-+]?\d+\s+$/) { $_ = $$self{indent} }
610 if (@{ $$self{INDENTS} } > 0) {
611 $self->output (".RS $$self{INDENT}\n");
612 }
613 push (@{ $$self{INDENTS} }, $$self{INDENT});
614 $$self{INDENT} = ($_ + 0);
615}
616
617# End a list. If we've closed an embedded indent, we've mangled the hanging
618# paragraph indent, so temporarily replace it with .RS and set WEIRDINDENT.
619# We'll close that .RS at the next =back or =item.
620sub cmd_back {
621 my $self = shift;
622 $$self{INDENT} = pop @{ $$self{INDENTS} };
623 unless (defined $$self{INDENT}) {
624 carp "Unmatched =back";
625 $$self{INDENT} = 0;
626 }
627 if ($$self{WEIRDINDENT}) {
628 $self->output (".RE\n");
629 $$self{WEIRDINDENT} = 0;
630 }
631 if (@{ $$self{INDENTS} } > 0) {
632 $self->output (".RE\n");
633 $self->output (".RS $$self{INDENT}\n");
634 $$self{WEIRDINDENT} = 1;
635 }
636 $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 1;
637}
638
639# An individual list item. Emit an index entry for anything that's
640# interesting, but don't emit index entries for things like bullets and
641# numbers. rofficate bullets too while we're at it (so for nice output, use
642# * for your lists rather than o or . or - or some other thing).
643sub cmd_item {
644 my $self = shift;
645 local $_ = $self->parse (@_);
646 s/\s+$//;
647 my $index;
648 if (/\w/ && !/^\w[.\)]\s*$/) {
649 $index = $_;
650 $index =~ s/^\s*[-*+o.]?\s*//;
651 }
652 s/^\*(\s|\Z)/\\\(bu$1/;
653 if ($$self{WEIRDINDENT}) {
654 $self->output (".RE\n");
655 $$self{WEIRDINDENT} = 0;
656 }
657 $_ = $self->mapfonts ($_);
658 $self->output (switchquotes ('.Ip', $_, $$self{INDENT}));
659 $self->outindex ($index ? ('Item', $index) : ());
660 $$self{NEEDSPACE} = 0;
661}
662
663# Begin a block for a particular translator. Setting VERBATIM triggers
664# special handling in textblock().
665sub cmd_begin {
666 my $self = shift;
667 local $_ = shift;
668 my ($kind) = /^(\S+)/ or return;
669 if ($kind eq 'man' || $kind eq 'roff') {
670 $$self{VERBATIM} = 1;
671 } else {
672 $$self{EXCLUDE} = 1;
673 }
674}
675
676# End a block for a particular translator. We assume that all =begin/=end
677# pairs are properly closed.
678sub cmd_end {
679 my $self = shift;
680 $$self{EXCLUDE} = 0;
681 $$self{VERBATIM} = 0;
682}
683
684# One paragraph for a particular translator. Ignore it unless it's intended
685# for man or roff, in which case we output it verbatim.
686sub cmd_for {
687 my $self = shift;
688 local $_ = shift;
689 my $line = shift;
690 return unless s/^(?:man|roff)\b[ \t]*\n?//;
691 $self->output ($_);
692}
693
694
695############################################################################
696# Link handling
697############################################################################
698
699# Handle links. We can't actually make real hyperlinks, so this is all to
700# figure out what text and formatting we print out.
701sub buildlink {
702 my $self = shift;
703 local $_ = shift;
704
705 # Smash whitespace in case we were split across multiple lines.
706 s/\s+/ /g;
707
708 # If we were given any explicit text, just output it.
709 if (m{ ^ ([^|]+) \| }x) { return $1 }
710
711 # Okay, leading and trailing whitespace isn't important.
712 s/^\s+//;
713 s/\s+$//;
714
715 # Default to using the whole content of the link entry as a section
716 # name. Note that L<manpage/> forces a manpage interpretation, as does
717 # something looking like L<manpage(section)>. Do the same thing to
718 # L<manpage(section)> as we would to manpage(section) without the L<>;
719 # see guesswork(). If we've added italics, don't add the "manpage"
720 # text; markup is sufficient.
721 my ($manpage, $section) = ('', $_);
722 if (/^"\s*(.*?)\s*"$/) {
723 $section = '"' . $1 . '"';
724 } elsif (m{ ^ [-:.\w]+ (?: \( \S+ \) )? $ }x) {
725 ($manpage, $section) = ($_, '');
726 $manpage =~ s/^([^\(]+)\(/'\f(IS' . $1 . '\f(IE\|('/e;
727 } elsif (m%/%) {
728 ($manpage, $section) = split (/\s*\/\s*/, $_, 2);
729 if ($manpage =~ /^[-:.\w]+(?:\(\S+\))?$/) {
730 $manpage =~ s/^([^\(]+)\(/'\f(IS' . $1 . '\f(IE\|'/e;
731 }
732 $section =~ s/^\"\s*//;
733 $section =~ s/\s*\"$//;
734 }
735 if ($manpage && $manpage !~ /\\f\(IS/) {
736 $manpage = "the $manpage manpage";
737 }
738
739 # Now build the actual output text.
740 my $text = '';
741 if (!length ($section) && !length ($manpage)) {
742 carp "Invalid link $_";
743 } elsif (!length ($section)) {
744 $text = $manpage;
745 } elsif ($section =~ /^[:\w]+(?:\(\))?/) {
746 $text .= 'the ' . $section . ' entry';
747 $text .= (length $manpage) ? " in $manpage"
748 : " elsewhere in this document";
749 } else {
2e20e14f 750 if ($section !~ /^".*"$/) { $section = '"' . $section . '"' }
751 $text .= 'the section on ' . $section;
9741dab0 752 $text .= " in $manpage" if length $manpage;
753 }
754 $text;
755}
756
757
758############################################################################
759# Escaping and fontification
760############################################################################
761
762# At this point, we'll have embedded font codes of the form \f(<font>[SE]
763# where <font> is one of B, I, or F. Turn those into the right font start
764# or end codes. B<someI<thing> else> should map to \fBsome\f(BIthing\fB
765# else\fR. The old pod2man didn't get this right; the second \fB was \fR,
766# so nested sequences didn't work right. We take care of this by using
767# variables as a combined pointer to our current font sequence, and set each
768# to the number of current nestings of start tags for that font. Use them
769# as a vector to look up what font sequence to use.
770sub mapfonts {
771 my $self = shift;
772 local $_ = shift;
773
774 my ($fixed, $bold, $italic) = (0, 0, 0);
775 my %magic = (F => \$fixed, B => \$bold, I => \$italic);
776 s { \\f\((.)(.) } {
777 ${ $magic{$1} } += ($2 eq 'S') ? 1 : -1;
778 $$self{FONTS}{($fixed && 1) . ($bold && 1) . ($italic && 1)};
779 }gxe;
780 $_;
781}
782
783
784############################################################################
785# *roff-specific parsing
786############################################################################
787
788# Called instead of parse_text, calls parse_text with the right flags.
789sub parse {
790 my $self = shift;
791 $self->parse_text ({ -expand_seq => 'sequence',
792 -expand_ptree => 'collapse' }, @_);
793}
794
795# Takes a parse tree and a flag saying whether or not to treat it as literal
796# text (not call guesswork on it), and returns the concatenation of all of
797# the text strings in that parse tree. If the literal flag isn't true,
798# guesswork() will be called on all plain scalars in the parse tree.
799# Assumes that everything in the parse tree is either a scalar or a
800# reference to a scalar.
801sub collapse {
802 my ($self, $ptree, $literal) = @_;
803 if ($literal) {
804 return join ('', map {
805 if (ref $_) {
806 $$_;
807 } else {
808 s/\\/\\e/g;
809 $_;
810 }
811 } $ptree->children);
812 } else {
813 return join ('', map {
814 ref ($_) ? $$_ : $self->guesswork ($_)
815 } $ptree->children);
816 }
817}
818
819# Takes a text block to perform guesswork on; this is guaranteed not to
820# contain any interior sequences. Returns the text block with remapping
821# done.
822sub guesswork {
823 my $self = shift;
824 local $_ = shift;
825
826 # rofficate backslashes.
827 s/\\/\\e/g;
828
829 # Ensure double underbars have a tiny space between them.
830 s/__/_\\|_/g;
831
832 # Make all caps a little smaller. Be careful here, since we don't want
833 # to make @ARGV into small caps, nor do we want to fix the MIME in
834 # MIME-Version, since it looks weird with the full-height V.
835 s{
836 ( ^ | [\s\(\"\'\`\[\{<>] )
837 ( [A-Z] [A-Z] [/A-Z+:\d_\$&-]* )
838 (?: (?= [\s>\}\]\)\'\".?!,;:] | -- ) | $ )
839 } { $1 . '\s-1' . $2 . '\s0' . $3 }egx;
840
841 # Turn PI into a pretty pi.
842 s{ (?: \\s-1 | \b ) PI (?: \\s0 | \b ) } {\\*\(PI}gx;
843
844 # Italize functions in the form func().
845 s{
846 \b
847 (
848 [:\w]+ (?:\\s-1)? \(\)
849 )
850 } { '\f(IS' . $1 . '\f(IE' }egx;
851
852 # func(n) is a reference to a manual page. Make it \fIfunc\fR\|(n).
853 s{
854 \b
855 (\w[-:.\w]+ (?:\\s-1)?)
856 (
857 \( [^\)] \)
858 )
859 } { '\f(IS' . $1 . '\f(IE\|' . $2 }egx;
860
861 # Convert simple Perl variable references to a fixed-width font.
862 s{
863 ( \s+ )
864 ( [\$\@%] [\w:]+ )
865 (?! \( )
866 } { $1 . '\f(FS' . $2 . '\f(FE'}egx;
867
868 # Translate -- into a real em dash if it's used like one and fix up
869 # dashes, but keep hyphens hyphens.
870 s{ (\G|^|.) (-+) (\b|.) } {
871 my ($pre, $dash, $post) = ($1, $2, $3);
872 if (length ($dash) == 1) {
873 ($pre =~ /[a-zA-Z]/) ? "$pre-$post" : "$pre\\-$post";
874 } elsif (length ($dash) == 2
875 && ((!$pre && !$post)
876 || ($pre =~ /\w/ && !$post)
877 || ($pre eq ' ' && $post eq ' ')
878 || ($pre eq '=' && $post ne '=')
879 || ($pre ne '=' && $post eq '='))) {
880 "$pre\\*(--$post";
881 } else {
882 $pre . ('\-' x length $dash) . $post;
883 }
884 }egxs;
885
886 # Fix up double quotes.
887 s{ \" ([^\"]+) \" } { '\*(L"' . $1 . '\*(R"' }egx;
888
889 # Make C++ into \*(C+, which is a squinched version.
890 s{ \b C\+\+ } {\\*\(C+}gx;
891
892 # All done.
893 $_;
894}
895
896
897############################################################################
898# Output formatting
899############################################################################
900
901# Make vertical whitespace.
902sub makespace {
903 my $self = shift;
904 $self->output ($$self{INDENT} > 0 ? ".Sp\n" : ".PP\n");
905}
906
907# Output any pending index entries, and optionally an index entry given as
908# an argument. Support multiple index entries in X<> separated by slashes,
909# and strip special escapes from index entries.
910sub outindex {
911 my ($self, $section, $index) = @_;
912 my @entries = map { split m%\s*/\s*% } @{ $$self{INDEX} };
913 return unless ($section || @entries);
914 $$self{INDEX} = [];
915 my $output;
916 if (@entries) {
917 my $output = '.IX Xref "'
918 . join (' ', map { s/\"/\"\"/; $_ } @entries)
919 . '"' . "\n";
920 }
921 if ($section) {
922 $index =~ s/\"/\"\"/;
923 $index =~ s/\\-/-/g;
924 $index =~ s/\\(?:s-?\d|.\(..|.)//g;
925 $output .= ".IX $section " . '"' . $index . '"' . "\n";
926 }
927 $self->output ($output);
928}
929
930# Output text to the output device.
931sub output { print { $_[0]->output_handle } $_[1] }
932
933__END__
934
935.\" These are some extra bits of roff that I don't want to lose track of
936.\" but that have been removed from the preamble to make it a bit shorter
937.\" since they're not currently being used. They're accents and special
938.\" characters we don't currently have escapes for.
939.if n \{\
940. ds ? ?
941. ds ! !
942. ds q
943.\}
944.if t \{\
945. ds ? \s-2c\h'-\w'c'u*7/10'\u\h'\*(#H'\zi\d\s+2\h'\w'c'u*8/10'
946. ds ! \s-2\(or\s+2\h'-\w'\(or'u'\v'-.8m'.\v'.8m'
947. ds q o\h'-\w'o'u*8/10'\s-4\v'.4m'\z\(*i\v'-.4m'\s+4\h'\w'o'u*8/10'
948.\}
949.ds v \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\v'-\*(#V'\*(#[\s-4v\s0\v'\*(#V'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#]
950.ds _ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H+(\*(#F*2/3))'\v'-.4m'\z\(hy\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u'
951.ds . \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)'\v'\*(#V*4/10'\z.\v'-\*(#V*4/10'\h'|\\n:u'
952.ds 3 \*(#[\v'.2m'\s-2\&3\s0\v'-.2m'\*(#]
953.ds oe o\h'-(\w'o'u*4/10)'e
954.ds Oe O\h'-(\w'O'u*4/10)'E
955.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \
956\{\
957. ds v \h'-1'\o'\(aa\(ga'
958. ds _ \h'-1'^
959. ds . \h'-1'.
960. ds 3 3
961. ds oe oe
962. ds Oe OE
963.\}
964
965############################################################################
966# Documentation
967############################################################################
968
969=head1 NAME
970
971Pod::Man - Convert POD data to formatted *roff input
972
973=head1 SYNOPSIS
974
975 use Pod::Man;
976 my $parser = Pod::Man->new (release => $VERSION, section => 8);
977
978 # Read POD from STDIN and write to STDOUT.
979 $parser->parse_from_filehandle;
980
981 # Read POD from file.pod and write to file.1.
982 $parser->parse_from_file ('file.pod', 'file.1');
983
984=head1 DESCRIPTION
985
986Pod::Man is a module to convert documentation in the POD format (the
987preferred language for documenting Perl) into *roff input using the man
988macro set. The resulting *roff code is suitable for display on a terminal
989using nroff(1), normally via man(1), or printing using troff(1). It is
990conventionally invoked using the driver script B<pod2roff>, but it can also
991be used directly.
992
993As a derived class from Pod::Parser, Pod::Man supports the same methods and
994interfaces. See L<Pod::Parser> for all the details; briefly, one creates a
995new parser with C<Pod::Man-E<gt>new()> and then calls either
996parse_from_filehandle() or parse_from_file().
997
998new() can take options, in the form of key/value pairs that control the
999behavior of the parser. See below for details.
1000
1001If no options are given, Pod::Man uses the name of the input file with any
1002trailing C<.pod>, C<.pm>, or C<.pl> stripped as the man page title, to
1003section 1 unless the file ended in C<.pm> in which case it defaults to
1004section 3, to a centered title of "User Contributed Perl Documentation", to
1005a centered footer of the Perl version it is run with, and to a left-hand
1006footer of the modification date of its input (or the current date if given
1007STDIN for input).
1008
1009Pod::Man assumes that your *roff formatters have a fixed-width font named
1010CW. If yours is called something else (like CR), use the C<fixed> option to
1011specify it. This generally only matters for troff output for printing.
1012Similarly, you can set the fonts used for bold, italic, and bold italic
1013fixed-width output.
1014
1015Besides the obvious pod conversions, Pod::Man also takes care of formatting
1016func(), func(n), and simple variable references like $foo or @bar so you
1017don't have to use code escapes for them; complex expressions like
1018C<$fred{'stuff'}> will still need to be escaped, though. It also translates
1019dashes that aren't used as hyphens into en dashes, makes long dashes--like
1020this--into proper em dashes, fixes "paired quotes," makes C++ and PI look
1021right, puts a little space between double underbars, makes ALLCAPS a teeny
1022bit smaller in troff(1), and escapes stuff that *roff treats as special so
1023that you don't have to.
1024
1025The recognized options to new() are as follows. All options take a single
1026argument.
1027
1028=over 4
1029
1030=item center
1031
1032Sets the centered page header to use instead of "User Contributed Perl
1033Documentation".
1034
1035=item date
1036
1037Sets the left-hand footer. By default, the modification date of the input
1038file will be used, or the current date if stat() can't find that file (the
1039case if the input is from STDIN), and the date will be formatted as
1040YYYY-MM-DD.
1041
1042=item fixed
1043
1044The fixed-width font to use for vertabim text and code. Defaults to CW.
1045Some systems may want CR instead. Only matters for troff(1) output.
1046
1047=item fixedbold
1048
1049Bold version of the fixed-width font. Defaults to CB. Only matters for
1050troff(1) output.
1051
1052=item fixeditalic
1053
1054Italic version of the fixed-width font (actually, something of a misnomer,
1055since most fixed-width fonts only have an oblique version, not an italic
1056version). Defaults to CI. Only matters for troff(1) output.
1057
1058=item fixedbolditalic
1059
1060Bold italic (probably actually oblique) version of the fixed-width font.
1061Pod::Man doesn't assume you have this, and defaults to CB. Some systems
1062(such as Solaris) have this font available as CX. Only matters for troff(1)
1063output.
1064
1065=item release
1066
1067Set the centered footer. By default, this is the version of Perl you run
1068Pod::Man under. Note that some system an macro sets assume that the
1069centered footer will be a modification date and will prepend something like
1070"Last modified: "; if this is the case, you may want to set C<release> to
1071the last modified date and C<date> to the version number.
1072
1073=item section
1074
1075Set the section for the C<.TH> macro. The standard section numbering
1076convention is to use 1 for user commands, 2 for system calls, 3 for
1077functions, 4 for devices, 5 for file formats, 6 for games, 7 for
1078miscellaneous information, and 8 for administrator commands. There is a lot
1079of variation here, however; some systems (like Solaris) use 4 for file
1080formats, 5 for miscellaneous information, and 7 for devices. Still others
1081use 1m instead of 8, or some mix of both. About the only section numbers
1082that are reliably consistent are 1, 2, and 3.
1083
1084By default, section 1 will be used unless the file ends in .pm in which case
1085section 3 will be selected.
1086
1087=back
1088
1089The standard Pod::Parser method parse_from_filehandle() takes up to two
1090arguments, the first being the file handle to read POD from and the second
1091being the file handle to write the formatted output to. The first defaults
1092to STDIN if not given, and the second defaults to STDOUT. The method
1093parse_from_file() is almost identical, except that its two arguments are the
1094input and output disk files instead. See L<Pod::Parser> for the specific
1095details.
1096
1097=head1 DIAGNOSTICS
1098
1099=over 4
1100
1101=item roff font should be 1 or 2 chars, not `%s'
1102
1103(F) You specified a *roff font (using C<fixed>, C<fixedbold>, etc.) that
1104wasn't either one or two characters. Pod::Man doesn't support *roff fonts
1105longer than two characters, although some *roff extensions do (the canonical
1106versions of nroff(1) and troff(1) don't either).
1107
1108=item Invalid link %s
1109
1110(W) The POD source contained a C<LE<lt>E<gt>> sequence that Pod::Man was
1111unable to parse. You should never see this error message; it probably
1112indicates a bug in Pod::Man.
1113
1114=item Unknown escape EE<lt>%sE<gt>
1115
1116(W) The POD source contained an C<EE<lt>E<gt>> escape that Pod::Man didn't
1117know about. C<EE<lt>%sE<gt>> was printed verbatim in the output.
1118
1119=item Unknown sequence %s
1120
1121(W) The POD source contained a non-standard interior sequence (something of
1122the form C<XE<lt>E<gt>>) that Pod::Man didn't know about. It was ignored.
1123
1124=item Unmatched =back
1125
1126(W) Pod::Man encountered a C<=back> command that didn't correspond to an
1127C<=over> command.
1128
1129=back
1130
1131=head1 BUGS
1132
1133The lint-like features and strict POD format checking done by B<pod2man> are
1134not yet implemented and should be, along with the corresponding C<lax>
1135option.
1136
1137The NAME section should be recognized specially and index entries emitted
1138for everything in that section. This would have to be deferred until the
1139next section, since extraneous things in NAME tends to confuse various man
1140page processors.
1141
1142The handling of hyphens, en dashes, and em dashes is somewhat fragile, and
1143one may get the wrong one under some circumstances. This should only matter
1144for troff(1) output.
1145
1146When and whether to use small caps is somewhat tricky, and Pod::Man doesn't
1147necessarily get it right.
1148
1149Pod::Man doesn't handle font names longer than two characters. Neither do
1150most troff(1) implementations, but GNU troff does as an extension. It would
1151be nice to support as an option for those who want to use it.
1152
1153The preamble added to each output file is rather verbose, and most of it is
1154only necessary in the presence of EE<lt>E<gt> escapes for non-ASCII
1155characters. It would ideally be nice if all of those definitions were only
1156output if needed, perhaps on the fly as the characters are used.
1157
1158Some of the automagic applied to file names assumes Unix directory
1159separators.
1160
1161Pod::Man is excessively slow.
1162
1163=head1 NOTES
1164
1165The intention is for this module and its driver script to eventually replace
1166B<pod2man> in Perl core.
1167
1168=head1 SEE ALSO
1169
1170L<Pod::Parser|Pod::Parser>, perlpod(1), pod2roff(1), nroff(1), troff(1),
1171man(1), man(7)
1172
1173Ossanna, Joseph F., and Brian W. Kernighan. "Troff User's Manual,"
1174Computing Science Technical Report No. 54, AT&T Bell Laboratories. This is
1175the best documentation of standard nroff(1) and troff(1). At the time of
1176this writing, it's available at http://www.cs.bell-labs.com/cm/cs/cstr.html.
1177
1178The man page documenting the man macro set may be man(5) instead of man(7)
1179on your system. Also, please see pod2roff(1) for extensive documentation on
1180writing manual pages if you've not done it before and aren't familiar with
1181the conventions.
1182
1183=head1 AUTHOR
1184
1185Russ Allbery E<lt>rra@stanford.eduE<gt>, based I<very> heavily on the
1186original B<pod2man> by Tom Christiansen E<lt>tchrist@mox.perl.comE<gt>.
1187
1188=cut