perlfaq update from From Tom Christiansen and Nathan Torkington
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / pod / perlpod.pod
CommitLineData
a0d0e21e 1=head1 NAME
2
cb1a09d0 3perlpod - plain old documentation
a0d0e21e 4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7A pod-to-whatever translator reads a pod file paragraph by paragraph,
8and translates it to the appropriate output format. There are
9three kinds of paragraphs:
b74bceb9 10L<verbatim|/"Verbatim Paragraph">,
11L<command|/"Command Paragraph">, and
12L<ordinary text|/"Ordinary Block of Text">.
a0d0e21e 13
a0d0e21e 14
b74bceb9 15=head2 Verbatim Paragraph
a0d0e21e 16
17A verbatim paragraph, distinguished by being indented (that is,
18it starts with space or tab). It should be reproduced exactly,
19with tabs assumed to be on 8-column boundaries. There are no
20special formatting escapes, so you can't italicize or anything
21like that. A \ means \, and nothing else.
22
a0d0e21e 23
b74bceb9 24=head2 Command Paragraph
25
26All command paragraphs start with "=", followed by an
a0d0e21e 27identifier, followed by arbitrary text that the command can
28use however it pleases. Currently recognized commands are
29
30 =head1 heading
31 =head2 heading
32 =item text
33 =over N
34 =back
4633a7c4 35 =cut
cb1a09d0 36 =pod
c7c9f956 37 =for X
38 =begin X
39 =end X
cb1a09d0 40
b74bceb9 41=over 4
42
43=item =pod
44
45=item =cut
46
cb1a09d0 47The "=pod" directive does nothing beyond telling the compiler to lay
116160e3 48off parsing code through the next "=cut". It's useful for adding
49another paragraph to the doc if you're mixing up code and pod a lot.
cb1a09d0 50
b74bceb9 51=item =head1
52
53=item =head2
54
116160e3 55Head1 and head2 produce first and second level headings, with the text in
56the same paragraph as the "=headn" directive forming the heading description.
cb1a09d0 57
b74bceb9 58=item =over
59
60=item =back
61
62=item =item
63
116160e3 64Item, over, and back require a little more explanation: "=over" starts a
65section specifically for the generation of a list using "=item" commands. At
66the end of your list, use "=back" to end it. You will probably want to give
67"4" as the number to "=over", as some formatters will use this for indentation.
cb1a09d0 68This should probably be a default. Note also that there are some basic rules
69to using =item: don't use them outside of an =over/=back block, use at least
70one inside an =over/=back block, you don't _have_ to include the =back if
71the list just runs off the document, and perhaps most importantly, keep the
72items consistent: either use "=item *" for all of them, to produce bullets,
73or use "=item 1.", "=item 2.", etc., to produce numbered lists, or use
74"=item foo", "=item bar", etc., i.e., things that looks nothing like bullets
75or numbers. If you start with bullets or numbers, stick with them, as many
54310121 76formatters use the first "=item" type to decide how to format the list.
cb1a09d0 77
b74bceb9 78
79=item =for
80
81=item =begin
82
83=item =end
84
116160e3 85For, begin, and end let you include sections that are not interpreted
86as pod text, but passed directly to particular formatters. A formatter
87that can utilize that format will use the section, otherwise it will be
88completely ignored. The directive "=for" specifies that the entire next
89paragraph is in the format indicated by the first word after
90"=for", like this:
c7c9f956 91
54310121 92 =for html <br>
c7c9f956 93 <p> This is a raw HTML paragraph </p>
94
116160e3 95The paired commands "=begin" and "=end" work very similarly to "=for", but
96instead of only accepting a single paragraph, all text from "=begin" to a
54310121 97paragraph with a matching "=end" are treated as a particular format.
c7c9f956 98
99Here are some examples of how to use these:
100
101 =begin html
a6006777 102
c7c9f956 103 <br>Figure 1.<IMG SRC="figure1.png"><br>
a6006777 104
c7c9f956 105 =end html
a6006777 106
c7c9f956 107 =begin text
a6006777 108
c7c9f956 109 ---------------
110 | foo |
111 | bar |
112 ---------------
a6006777 113
c7c9f956 114 ^^^^ Figure 1. ^^^^
a6006777 115
c7c9f956 116 =end text
117
118Some format names that formatters currently are known to accept include
119"roff", "man", "latex", "tex", "text", and "html". (Some formatters will
120treat some of these as synonyms.)
121
116160e3 122And don't forget, when using any command, that the command lasts up until
cb1a09d0 123the end of the B<paragraph>, not the line. Hence in the examples below, you
3fe9a6f1 124can see the empty lines after each command to end its paragraph.
cb1a09d0 125
126Some examples of lists include:
127
128 =over 4
129
130 =item *
131
132 First item
133
134 =item *
135
136 Second item
137
138 =back
139
140 =over 4
141
142 =item Foo()
143
144 Description of Foo function
145
146 =item Bar()
147
148 Description of Bar function
149
150 =back
a0d0e21e 151
a0d0e21e 152
b74bceb9 153=back
154
155
156=head2 Ordinary Block of Text
157
158It will be filled, and maybe even
a0d0e21e 159justified. Certain interior sequences are recognized both
160here and in commands:
161
162 I<text> italicize text, used for emphasis or variables
163 B<text> embolden text, used for switches and programs
164 S<text> text contains non-breaking spaces
54310121 165 C<code> literal code
a0d0e21e 166 L<name> A link (cross reference) to name
5f05dabc 167 L<name> manual page
168 L<name/ident> item in manual page
169 L<name/"sec"> section in other manual page
170 L<"sec"> section in this manual page
a0d0e21e 171 (the quotes are optional)
cb1a09d0 172 L</"sec"> ditto
b74bceb9 173 same as above but only 'text' is used for output.
174 (Text can not contain the characters '|' or '>')
175 L<text|name>
176 L<text|name/ident>
177 L<text|name/"sec">
178 L<text|"sec">
179 L<text|/"sec">
180
a0d0e21e 181 F<file> Used for filenames
cb1a09d0 182 X<index> An index entry
fa859636 183 Z<> A zero-width character
c7c9f956 184 E<escape> A named character (very similar to HTML escapes)
1294c5d8 185 E<lt> A literal <
186 E<gt> A literal >
187 (these are optional except in other interior
188 sequences and when preceded by a capital letter)
c7c9f956 189 E<n> Character number n (probably in ASCII)
7f3dfc00 190 E<html> Some non-numeric HTML entity, such
191 as E<Agrave>
a0d0e21e 192
b74bceb9 193
194=head2 The Intent
3141265f 195
a0d0e21e 196That's it. The intent is simplicity, not power. I wanted paragraphs
197to look like paragraphs (block format), so that they stand out
198visually, and so that I could run them through fmt easily to reformat
199them (that's F7 in my version of B<vi>). I wanted the translator (and not
200me) to worry about whether " or ' is a left quote or a right quote
5f05dabc 201within filled text, and I wanted it to leave the quotes alone, dammit, in
a0d0e21e 202verbatim mode, so I could slurp in a working program, shift it over 4
203spaces, and have it print out, er, verbatim. And presumably in a
204constant width font.
205
206In particular, you can leave things like this verbatim in your text:
207
208 Perl
209 FILEHANDLE
210 $variable
211 function()
212 manpage(3r)
213
214Doubtless a few other commands or sequences will need to be added along
215the way, but I've gotten along surprisingly well with just these.
216
217Note that I'm not at all claiming this to be sufficient for producing a
218book. I'm just trying to make an idiot-proof common source for nroff,
219TeX, and other markup languages, as used for online documentation.
cb1a09d0 220Translators exist for B<pod2man> (that's for nroff(1) and troff(1)),
b74bceb9 221B<pod2text>, B<pod2html>, B<pod2latex>, and B<pod2fm>.
a0d0e21e 222
b74bceb9 223
224=head2 Embedding Pods in Perl Modules
4633a7c4 225
226You can embed pod documentation in your Perl scripts. Start your
116160e3 227documentation with a "=head1" command at the beginning, and end it
228with a "=cut" command. Perl will ignore the pod text. See any of the
229supplied library modules for examples. If you're going to put your
230pods at the end of the file, and you're using an __END__ or __DATA__
3fe9a6f1 231cut mark, make sure to put an empty line there before the first pod
116160e3 232directive.
cb1a09d0 233
234 __END__
235
116160e3 236
cb1a09d0 237 =head1 NAME
238
239 modern - I am a modern module
240
3fe9a6f1 241If you had not had that empty line there, then the translators wouldn't
cb1a09d0 242have seen it.
243
b74bceb9 244
245=head2 Common Pod Pitfalls
1294c5d8 246
247=over 4
248
249=item *
250
251Pod translators usually will require paragraphs to be separated by
3fe9a6f1 252completely empty lines. If you have an apparently empty line with
1294c5d8 253some spaces on it, this can cause odd formatting.
254
255=item *
256
257Translators will mostly add wording around a LE<lt>E<gt> link, so that
258C<LE<lt>foo(1)E<gt>> becomes "the I<foo>(1) manpage", for example (see
259B<pod2man> for details). Thus, you shouldn't write things like C<the
260LE<lt>fooE<gt> manpage>, if you want the translated document to read
261sensibly.
262
b74bceb9 263If you don need or want total control of the text used for a
264link in the output use the form LE<lt>show this text|fooE<gt>
265instead.
266
1294c5d8 267=item *
268
269The script F<pod/checkpods.PL> in the Perl source distribution
3fe9a6f1 270provides skeletal checking for lines that look empty but aren't
1294c5d8 271B<only>, but is there as a placeholder until someone writes
272Pod::Checker. The best way to check your pod is to pass it through
273one or more translators and proofread the result, or print out the
274result and proofread that. Some of the problems found may be bugs in
275the translators, which you may or may not wish to work around.
276
277=back
278
cb1a09d0 279=head1 SEE ALSO
280
281L<pod2man> and L<perlsyn/"PODs: Embedded Documentation">
4633a7c4 282
cb1a09d0 283=head1 AUTHOR
a0d0e21e 284
285Larry Wall
286