Pod::Eventual - read a POD document as a series of trivial events
version 0.094000
package Your::Pod::Parser; use base 'Pod::Eventual'; sub handle_event { my ($self, $event) = @_; print Dumper($event); }
POD is a pretty simple format to write, but it can be a big pain to deal with reading it and doing anything useful with it. Most existing POD parsers care about semantics, like whether a =item occurred after an =over but before a back, figuring out how to link a L<>, and other things like that.
=item
=over
back
L<>
Pod::Eventual is much less ambitious and much more stupid. Fortunately, stupid is often better. (That's what I keep telling myself, anyway.)
Pod::Eventual reads line-based input and produces events describing each POD paragraph or directive it finds. Once complete events are immediately passed to the handle_event method. This method should be implemented by Pod::Eventual subclasses. If it isn't, Pod::Eventual's own handle_event will be called, and will raise an exception.
handle_event
Pod::Eventual->read_handle($io_handle, \%arg);
This method iterates through the lines of a handle, producing events and calling the handle_event method.
The only valid argument in %arg (for now) is in_pod, which indicates whether we should assume that we are parsing pod when we start parsing the file. By default, this is false.
%arg
in_pod
This is useful to behave differently when reading a .pm or .pod file.
Important: the handle is expected to have an encoding layer so that it will return text, not bytes, on reads.
This behaves just like read_handle, but expects a filename rather than a handle. The file will be assumed to be UTF-8 encoded.
read_handle
This behaves just like read_handle, but expects a string containing POD text rather than a handle.
This method is called each time Pod::Evental finishes scanning for a new POD event. It must be implemented by a subclass or it will raise an exception.
This method is called each time a non-POD segment is seen -- that is, lines after =cut and before another command.
=cut
If unimplemented by a subclass, it does nothing by default.
This method is called at the end of a sequence of one or more blank lines.
There are four kinds of events that Pod::Eventual will produce. All are represented as hash references.
These events represent commands -- those things that start with an equals sign in the first column. Here are some examples of POD and the event that would be produced.
A simple header:
=head1 NAME { type => 'command', command => 'head1', content => "NAME\n", start_line => 4 }
Notice that the content includes the trailing newline. That's to maintain similarity with this possibly-surprising case:
=for HTML We're actually still in the command event, here. { type => 'command', command => 'for', content => "HTML\nWe're actually still in the command event, here.\n", start_line => 8, }
Pod::Eventual does not care what the command is. It doesn't keep track of what it's seen or whether you've used a command that isn't defined. The only special case is =cut, which is never more than one line.
=cut We are no longer parsing POD when this line is read. { type => 'command', command => 'cut', content => "\n", start_line => 15, }
Waiving this special case may be an option in the future.
A text event is just a paragraph of text, beginning after one or more empty lines and running until the next empty line (or =cut). In Perl 5's standard usage of Pod, text content that begins with whitespace is a "verbatim" paragraph, and text content that begins with non-whitespace is an "ordinary" paragraph.
Pod::Eventual doesn't care.
Text events look like this:
{ type => 'text', content => "a string of text ending with a\n", start_line => 16, }
These events represent blank lines (or many blank lines) within a Pod section.
Blank events look like this:
{ type => 'blank', content => "\n\n\n\n", start_line => 21, }
These events represent non-Pod segments of the input.
Non-Pod events look like this:
{ type => 'nonpod', content => "#!/usr/bin/perl\nuse strict;\n\nuse Acme::ProgressBar\n\n", start_line => 1, }
Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@cpan.org>
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Ricardo SIGNES.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
To install Pod::Eventual, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Pod::Eventual
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Pod::Eventual
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.