The Perl Toolchain Summit needs more sponsors. If your company depends on Perl, please support this very important event.

NAME

PPI::Token::Comment - A comment in Perl source code

INHERITANCE

  PPI::Token::Comment
  isa PPI::Token
      isa PPI::Element

SYNOPSIS

  # This is a PPI::Token::Comment
  
  print "Hello World!"; # So it this
  
  $string =~ s/ foo  # This, unfortunately, is not :(
        bar
        /w;

DESCRIPTION

In PPI, comments are represented by PPI::Token::Comment objects.

These come in two flavours, line comment and inline comments.

A line comment is a comment that stands on its own line. These comments hold their own newline and whitespace (both leading and trailing) as part of the one PPI::Token::Comment object.

An inline comment is a comment that appears after some code, and continues to the end of the line. This does not include whitespace, and the terminating newlines is considered a separate PPI::Token::Whitespace token.

This is largely a convenience, simplifying a lot of normal code relating to the common things people do with comments.

Most commonly, it means when you prune or delete a comment, a line comment disappears taking the entire line with it, and an inline comment is removed from the inside of the line, allowing the newline to drop back onto the end of the code, as you would expect.

It also means you can move comments around in blocks much more easily.

For now, this is a suitably handy way to do things. However, I do reserve the right to change my mind on this one if it gets dangerously anachronistic somewhere down the line.

METHODS

Only very limited methods are available, beyond those provided by our parent PPI::Token and PPI::Element classes.

line

The line accessor returns true if the PPI::Token::Comment is a line comment, or false if it is an inline comment.

SUPPORT

See the support section in the main module.

AUTHOR

Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2001 - 2010 Adam Kennedy.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.