This is a live mirror of the Perl 5 development currently hosted at https://github.com/perl/perl5
perldelta for 2384afee9 / #123553
[perl5.git] / pod / perlpodspec.pod
CommitLineData
49781f4a 1=encoding utf8
8a93676d
SB
2
3=head1 NAME
4
5perlpodspec - Plain Old Documentation: format specification and notes
6
7=head1 DESCRIPTION
8
9This document is detailed notes on the Pod markup language. Most
10people will only have to read L<perlpod|perlpod> to know how to write
11in Pod, but this document may answer some incidental questions to do
12with parsing and rendering Pod.
13
14In this document, "must" / "must not", "should" /
15"should not", and "may" have their conventional (cf. RFC 2119)
16meanings: "X must do Y" means that if X doesn't do Y, it's against
17this specification, and should really be fixed. "X should do Y"
18means that it's recommended, but X may fail to do Y, if there's a
19good reason. "X may do Y" is merely a note that X can do Y at
20will (although it is up to the reader to detect any connotation of
21"and I think it would be I<nice> if X did Y" versus "it wouldn't
22really I<bother> me if X did Y").
23
24Notably, when I say "the parser should do Y", the
25parser may fail to do Y, if the calling application explicitly
26requests that the parser I<not> do Y. I often phrase this as
27"the parser should, by default, do Y." This doesn't I<require>
28the parser to provide an option for turning off whatever
29feature Y is (like expanding tabs in verbatim paragraphs), although
30it implicates that such an option I<may> be provided.
31
32=head1 Pod Definitions
33
ac036724 34Pod is embedded in files, typically Perl source files, although you
8a93676d
SB
35can write a file that's nothing but Pod.
36
37A B<line> in a file consists of zero or more non-newline characters,
38terminated by either a newline or the end of the file.
39
40A B<newline sequence> is usually a platform-dependent concept, but
41Pod parsers should understand it to mean any of CR (ASCII 13), LF
42(ASCII 10), or a CRLF (ASCII 13 followed immediately by ASCII 10), in
43addition to any other system-specific meaning. The first CR/CRLF/LF
44sequence in the file may be used as the basis for identifying the
45newline sequence for parsing the rest of the file.
46
47A B<blank line> is a line consisting entirely of zero or more spaces
48(ASCII 32) or tabs (ASCII 9), and terminated by a newline or end-of-file.
49A B<non-blank line> is a line containing one or more characters other
50than space or tab (and terminated by a newline or end-of-file).
51
52(I<Note:> Many older Pod parsers did not accept a line consisting of
ac036724 53spaces/tabs and then a newline as a blank line. The only lines they
8a93676d
SB
54considered blank were lines consisting of I<no characters at all>,
55terminated by a newline.)
56
57B<Whitespace> is used in this document as a blanket term for spaces,
58tabs, and newline sequences. (By itself, this term usually refers
59to literal whitespace. That is, sequences of whitespace characters
60in Pod source, as opposed to "EE<lt>32>", which is a formatting
61code that I<denotes> a whitespace character.)
62
63A B<Pod parser> is a module meant for parsing Pod (regardless of
64whether this involves calling callbacks or building a parse tree or
65directly formatting it). A B<Pod formatter> (or B<Pod translator>)
66is a module or program that converts Pod to some other format (HTML,
67plaintext, TeX, PostScript, RTF). A B<Pod processor> might be a
68formatter or translator, or might be a program that does something
353c6505 69else with the Pod (like counting words, scanning for index points,
8a93676d
SB
70etc.).
71
72Pod content is contained in B<Pod blocks>. A Pod block starts with a
73line that matches <m/\A=[a-zA-Z]/>, and continues up to the next line
ac036724 74that matches C<m/\A=cut/> or up to the end of the file if there is
8a93676d
SB
75no C<m/\A=cut/> line.
76
77=for comment
78 The current perlsyn says:
79 [beginquote]
80 Note that pod translators should look at only paragraphs beginning
81 with a pod directive (it makes parsing easier), whereas the compiler
82 actually knows to look for pod escapes even in the middle of a
83 paragraph. This means that the following secret stuff will be ignored
84 by both the compiler and the translators.
85 $a=3;
86 =secret stuff
87 warn "Neither POD nor CODE!?"
88 =cut back
89 print "got $a\n";
90 You probably shouldn't rely upon the warn() being podded out forever.
91 Not all pod translators are well-behaved in this regard, and perhaps
92 the compiler will become pickier.
93 [endquote]
94 I think that those paragraphs should just be removed; paragraph-based
95 parsing seems to have been largely abandoned, because of the hassle
96 with non-empty blank lines messing up what people meant by "paragraph".
97 Even if the "it makes parsing easier" bit were especially true,
98 it wouldn't be worth the confusion of having perl and pod2whatever
99 actually disagree on what can constitute a Pod block.
100
101Within a Pod block, there are B<Pod paragraphs>. A Pod paragraph
102consists of non-blank lines of text, separated by one or more blank
103lines.
104
105For purposes of Pod processing, there are four types of paragraphs in
106a Pod block:
107
108=over
109
110=item *
111
112A command paragraph (also called a "directive"). The first line of
113this paragraph must match C<m/\A=[a-zA-Z]/>. Command paragraphs are
114typically one line, as in:
115
116 =head1 NOTES
117
118 =item *
119
120But they may span several (non-blank) lines:
121
122 =for comment
123 Hm, I wonder what it would look like if
124 you tried to write a BNF for Pod from this.
210b36aa 125
8a93676d
SB
126 =head3 Dr. Strangelove, or: How I Learned to
127 Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb
128
129I<Some> command paragraphs allow formatting codes in their content
130(i.e., after the part that matches C<m/\A=[a-zA-Z]\S*\s*/>), as in:
131
132 =head1 Did You Remember to C<use strict;>?
133
134In other words, the Pod processing handler for "head1" will apply the
135same processing to "Did You Remember to CE<lt>use strict;>?" that it
ac036724 136would to an ordinary paragraph (i.e., formatting codes like
8a93676d
SB
137"CE<lt>...>") are parsed and presumably formatted appropriately, and
138whitespace in the form of literal spaces and/or tabs is not
139significant.
140
141=item *
142
143A B<verbatim paragraph>. The first line of this paragraph must be a
144literal space or tab, and this paragraph must not be inside a "=begin
145I<identifier>", ... "=end I<identifier>" sequence unless
146"I<identifier>" begins with a colon (":"). That is, if a paragraph
147starts with a literal space or tab, but I<is> inside a
148"=begin I<identifier>", ... "=end I<identifier>" region, then it's
149a data paragraph, unless "I<identifier>" begins with a colon.
150
151Whitespace I<is> significant in verbatim paragraphs (although, in
152processing, tabs are probably expanded).
153
154=item *
155
156An B<ordinary paragraph>. A paragraph is an ordinary paragraph
157if its first line matches neither C<m/\A=[a-zA-Z]/> nor
158C<m/\A[ \t]/>, I<and> if it's not inside a "=begin I<identifier>",
159... "=end I<identifier>" sequence unless "I<identifier>" begins with
160a colon (":").
161
162=item *
163
164A B<data paragraph>. This is a paragraph that I<is> inside a "=begin
165I<identifier>" ... "=end I<identifier>" sequence where
166"I<identifier>" does I<not> begin with a literal colon (":"). In
167some sense, a data paragraph is not part of Pod at all (i.e.,
168effectively it's "out-of-band"), since it's not subject to most kinds
169of Pod parsing; but it is specified here, since Pod
170parsers need to be able to call an event for it, or store it in some
171form in a parse tree, or at least just parse I<around> it.
172
173=back
174
175For example: consider the following paragraphs:
176
177 # <- that's the 0th column
178
179 =head1 Foo
210b36aa 180
8a93676d 181 Stuff
210b36aa 182
8a93676d 183 $foo->bar
210b36aa 184
8a93676d
SB
185 =cut
186
187Here, "=head1 Foo" and "=cut" are command paragraphs because the first
188line of each matches C<m/\A=[a-zA-Z]/>. "I<[space][space]>$foo->bar"
189is a verbatim paragraph, because its first line starts with a literal
190whitespace character (and there's no "=begin"..."=end" region around).
191
192The "=begin I<identifier>" ... "=end I<identifier>" commands stop
6fbdb1cc 193paragraphs that they surround from being parsed as ordinary or verbatim
8a93676d
SB
194paragraphs, if I<identifier> doesn't begin with a colon. This
195is discussed in detail in the section
196L</About Data Paragraphs and "=beginE<sol>=end" Regions>.
197
198=head1 Pod Commands
199
200This section is intended to supplement and clarify the discussion in
201L<perlpod/"Command Paragraph">. These are the currently recognized
202Pod commands:
203
204=over
205
206=item "=head1", "=head2", "=head3", "=head4"
207
208This command indicates that the text in the remainder of the paragraph
209is a heading. That text may contain formatting codes. Examples:
210
211 =head1 Object Attributes
210b36aa 212
8a93676d
SB
213 =head3 What B<Not> to Do!
214
215=item "=pod"
216
217This command indicates that this paragraph begins a Pod block. (If we
218are already in the middle of a Pod block, this command has no effect at
219all.) If there is any text in this command paragraph after "=pod",
220it must be ignored. Examples:
221
222 =pod
210b36aa 223
8a93676d 224 This is a plain Pod paragraph.
210b36aa 225
8a93676d
SB
226 =pod This text is ignored.
227
228=item "=cut"
229
230This command indicates that this line is the end of this previously
231started Pod block. If there is any text after "=cut" on the line, it must be
232ignored. Examples:
233
234 =cut
235
236 =cut The documentation ends here.
237
238 =cut
239 # This is the first line of program text.
240 sub foo { # This is the second.
241
659cfd94 242It is an error to try to I<start> a Pod block with a "=cut" command. In
8a93676d
SB
243that case, the Pod processor must halt parsing of the input file, and
244must by default emit a warning.
245
246=item "=over"
247
248This command indicates that this is the start of a list/indent
249region. If there is any text following the "=over", it must consist
250of only a nonzero positive numeral. The semantics of this numeral is
251explained in the L</"About =over...=back Regions"> section, further
252below. Formatting codes are not expanded. Examples:
253
254 =over 3
210b36aa 255
8a93676d 256 =over 3.5
210b36aa 257
8a93676d
SB
258 =over
259
260=item "=item"
261
262This command indicates that an item in a list begins here. Formatting
263codes are processed. The semantics of the (optional) text in the
264remainder of this paragraph are
265explained in the L</"About =over...=back Regions"> section, further
266below. Examples:
267
268 =item
210b36aa 269
8a93676d 270 =item *
210b36aa 271
8a93676d 272 =item *
210b36aa 273
8a93676d 274 =item 14
210b36aa 275
8a93676d 276 =item 3.
210b36aa 277
8a93676d 278 =item C<< $thing->stuff(I<dodad>) >>
210b36aa 279
8a93676d
SB
280 =item For transporting us beyond seas to be tried for pretended
281 offenses
210b36aa 282
8a93676d
SB
283 =item He is at this time transporting large armies of foreign
284 mercenaries to complete the works of death, desolation and
285 tyranny, already begun with circumstances of cruelty and perfidy
286 scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally
287 unworthy the head of a civilized nation.
288
289=item "=back"
290
291This command indicates that this is the end of the region begun
292by the most recent "=over" command. It permits no text after the
293"=back" command.
294
295=item "=begin formatname"
296
93592fd5
RS
297=item "=begin formatname parameter"
298
8a93676d
SB
299This marks the following paragraphs (until the matching "=end
300formatname") as being for some special kind of processing. Unless
301"formatname" begins with a colon, the contained non-command
302paragraphs are data paragraphs. But if "formatname" I<does> begin
303with a colon, then non-command paragraphs are ordinary paragraphs
304or data paragraphs. This is discussed in detail in the section
305L</About Data Paragraphs and "=beginE<sol>=end" Regions>.
306
307It is advised that formatnames match the regexp
c85e9b4c 308C<m/\A:?[-a-zA-Z0-9_]+\z/>. Everything following whitespace after the
93592fd5
RS
309formatname is a parameter that may be used by the formatter when dealing
310with this region. This parameter must not be repeated in the "=end"
311paragraph. Implementors should anticipate future expansion in the
312semantics and syntax of the first parameter to "=begin"/"=end"/"=for".
8a93676d
SB
313
314=item "=end formatname"
315
316This marks the end of the region opened by the matching
317"=begin formatname" region. If "formatname" is not the formatname
318of the most recent open "=begin formatname" region, then this
319is an error, and must generate an error message. This
320is discussed in detail in the section
321L</About Data Paragraphs and "=beginE<sol>=end" Regions>.
322
323=item "=for formatname text..."
324
325This is synonymous with:
326
327 =begin formatname
210b36aa 328
8a93676d 329 text...
210b36aa 330
8a93676d
SB
331 =end formatname
332
333That is, it creates a region consisting of a single paragraph; that
334paragraph is to be treated as a normal paragraph if "formatname"
335begins with a ":"; if "formatname" I<doesn't> begin with a colon,
336then "text..." will constitute a data paragraph. There is no way
337to use "=for formatname text..." to express "text..." as a verbatim
338paragraph.
339
a179871b
SB
340=item "=encoding encodingname"
341
342This command, which should occur early in the document (at least
1e54db1a 343before any non-US-ASCII data!), declares that this document is
a179871b 344encoded in the encoding I<encodingname>, which must be
6fbdb1cc 345an encoding name that L<Encode> recognizes. (Encode's list
8a3f7e95 346of supported encodings, in L<Encode::Supported>, is useful here.)
a179871b
SB
347If the Pod parser cannot decode the declared encoding, it
348should emit a warning and may abort parsing the document
349altogether.
350
351A document having more than one "=encoding" line should be
352considered an error. Pod processors may silently tolerate this if
353the not-first "=encoding" lines are just duplicates of the
6fbdb1cc
RS
354first one (e.g., if there's a "=encoding utf8" line, and later on
355another "=encoding utf8" line). But Pod processors should complain if
a179871b
SB
356there are contradictory "=encoding" lines in the same document
357(e.g., if there is a "=encoding utf8" early in the document and
358"=encoding big5" later). Pod processors that recognize BOMs
359may also complain if they see an "=encoding" line
1e54db1a
JH
360that contradicts the BOM (e.g., if a document with a UTF-16LE
361BOM has an "=encoding shiftjis" line).
a179871b 362
8a93676d
SB
363=back
364
365If a Pod processor sees any command other than the ones listed
366above (like "=head", or "=haed1", or "=stuff", or "=cuttlefish",
367or "=w123"), that processor must by default treat this as an
368error. It must not process the paragraph beginning with that
369command, must by default warn of this as an error, and may
370abort the parse. A Pod parser may allow a way for particular
371applications to add to the above list of known commands, and to
372stipulate, for each additional command, whether formatting
373codes should be processed.
374
375Future versions of this specification may add additional
376commands.
377
378
379
380=head1 Pod Formatting Codes
381
382(Note that in previous drafts of this document and of perlpod,
383formatting codes were referred to as "interior sequences", and
384this term may still be found in the documentation for Pod parsers,
385and in error messages from Pod processors.)
386
387There are two syntaxes for formatting codes:
388
389=over
390
391=item *
392
393A formatting code starts with a capital letter (just US-ASCII [A-Z])
394followed by a "<", any number of characters, and ending with the first
395matching ">". Examples:
396
397 That's what I<you> think!
398
399 What's C<dump()> for?
400
401 X<C<chmod> and C<unlink()> Under Different Operating Systems>
402
403=item *
404
405A formatting code starts with a capital letter (just US-ASCII [A-Z])
406followed by two or more "<"'s, one or more whitespace characters,
407any number of characters, one or more whitespace characters,
408and ending with the first matching sequence of two or more ">"'s, where
409the number of ">"'s equals the number of "<"'s in the opening of this
410formatting code. Examples:
411
412 That's what I<< you >> think!
413
414 C<<< open(X, ">>thing.dat") || die $! >>>
415
416 B<< $foo->bar(); >>
417
418With this syntax, the whitespace character(s) after the "CE<lt><<"
ac036724 419and before the ">>" (or whatever letter) are I<not> renderable. They
8a93676d
SB
420do not signify whitespace, are merely part of the formatting codes
421themselves. That is, these are all synonymous:
422
423 C<thing>
424 C<< thing >>
425 C<< thing >>
426 C<<< thing >>>
427 C<<<<
428 thing
429 >>>>
430
431and so on.
432
a3d78747
RS
433Finally, the multiple-angle-bracket form does I<not> alter the interpretation
434of nested formatting codes, meaning that the following four example lines are
435identical in meaning:
436
437 B<example: C<$a E<lt>=E<gt> $b>>
438
439 B<example: C<< $a <=> $b >>>
440
441 B<example: C<< $a E<lt>=E<gt> $b >>>
442
443 B<<< example: C<< $a E<lt>=E<gt> $b >> >>>
444
8a93676d
SB
445=back
446
447In parsing Pod, a notably tricky part is the correct parsing of
448(potentially nested!) formatting codes. Implementors should
449consult the code in the C<parse_text> routine in Pod::Parser as an
450example of a correct implementation.
451
452=over
453
454=item C<IE<lt>textE<gt>> -- italic text
455
456See the brief discussion in L<perlpod/"Formatting Codes">.
457
458=item C<BE<lt>textE<gt>> -- bold text
459
460See the brief discussion in L<perlpod/"Formatting Codes">.
461
462=item C<CE<lt>codeE<gt>> -- code text
463
464See the brief discussion in L<perlpod/"Formatting Codes">.
465
466=item C<FE<lt>filenameE<gt>> -- style for filenames
467
468See the brief discussion in L<perlpod/"Formatting Codes">.
469
470=item C<XE<lt>topic nameE<gt>> -- an index entry
471
472See the brief discussion in L<perlpod/"Formatting Codes">.
473
474This code is unusual in that most formatters completely discard
475this code and its content. Other formatters will render it with
476invisible codes that can be used in building an index of
477the current document.
478
479=item C<ZE<lt>E<gt>> -- a null (zero-effect) formatting code
480
481Discussed briefly in L<perlpod/"Formatting Codes">.
482
483This code is unusual is that it should have no content. That is,
484a processor may complain if it sees C<ZE<lt>potatoesE<gt>>. Whether
485or not it complains, the I<potatoes> text should ignored.
486
487=item C<LE<lt>nameE<gt>> -- a hyperlink
488
489The complicated syntaxes of this code are discussed at length in
490L<perlpod/"Formatting Codes">, and implementation details are
491discussed below, in L</"About LE<lt>...E<gt> Codes">. Parsing the
492contents of LE<lt>content> is tricky. Notably, the content has to be
493checked for whether it looks like a URL, or whether it has to be split
494on literal "|" and/or "/" (in the right order!), and so on,
495I<before> EE<lt>...> codes are resolved.
496
497=item C<EE<lt>escapeE<gt>> -- a character escape
498
499See L<perlpod/"Formatting Codes">, and several points in
500L</Notes on Implementing Pod Processors>.
501
502=item C<SE<lt>textE<gt>> -- text contains non-breaking spaces
503
504This formatting code is syntactically simple, but semantically
505complex. What it means is that each space in the printable
3e666715 506content of this code signifies a non-breaking space.
8a93676d
SB
507
508Consider:
509
510 C<$x ? $y : $z>
511
512 S<C<$x ? $y : $z>>
513
514Both signify the monospace (c[ode] style) text consisting of
515"$x", one space, "?", one space, ":", one space, "$z". The
516difference is that in the latter, with the S code, those spaces
3e666715 517are not "normal" spaces, but instead are non-breaking spaces.
8a93676d
SB
518
519=back
520
521
522If a Pod processor sees any formatting code other than the ones
523listed above (as in "NE<lt>...>", or "QE<lt>...>", etc.), that
524processor must by default treat this as an error.
525A Pod parser may allow a way for particular
526applications to add to the above list of known formatting codes;
527a Pod parser might even allow a way to stipulate, for each additional
528command, whether it requires some form of special processing, as
529LE<lt>...> does.
530
531Future versions of this specification may add additional
532formatting codes.
533
534Historical note: A few older Pod processors would not see a ">" as
535closing a "CE<lt>" code, if the ">" was immediately preceded by
536a "-". This was so that this:
537
538 C<$foo->bar>
539
540would parse as equivalent to this:
541
75f15e9f 542 C<$foo-E<gt>bar>
8a93676d
SB
543
544instead of as equivalent to a "C" formatting code containing
545only "$foo-", and then a "bar>" outside the "C" formatting code. This
546problem has since been solved by the addition of syntaxes like this:
547
548 C<< $foo->bar >>
549
550Compliant parsers must not treat "->" as special.
551
552Formatting codes absolutely cannot span paragraphs. If a code is
553opened in one paragraph, and no closing code is found by the end of
554that paragraph, the Pod parser must close that formatting code,
555and should complain (as in "Unterminated I code in the paragraph
556starting at line 123: 'Time objects are not...'"). So these
557two paragraphs:
558
559 I<I told you not to do this!
210b36aa 560
8a93676d
SB
561 Don't make me say it again!>
562
563...must I<not> be parsed as two paragraphs in italics (with the I
564code starting in one paragraph and starting in another.) Instead,
565the first paragraph should generate a warning, but that aside, the
566above code must parse as if it were:
567
568 I<I told you not to do this!>
210b36aa 569
8a93676d
SB
570 Don't make me say it again!E<gt>
571
572(In SGMLish jargon, all Pod commands are like block-level
573elements, whereas all Pod formatting codes are like inline-level
574elements.)
575
576
577
578=head1 Notes on Implementing Pod Processors
579
580The following is a long section of miscellaneous requirements
581and suggestions to do with Pod processing.
582
583=over
584
585=item *
586
587Pod formatters should tolerate lines in verbatim blocks that are of
588any length, even if that means having to break them (possibly several
589times, for very long lines) to avoid text running off the side of the
590page. Pod formatters may warn of such line-breaking. Such warnings
591are particularly appropriate for lines are over 100 characters long, which
592are usually not intentional.
593
594=item *
595
596Pod parsers must recognize I<all> of the three well-known newline
597formats: CR, LF, and CRLF. See L<perlport|perlport>.
598
599=item *
600
601Pod parsers should accept input lines that are of any length.
602
603=item *
604
605Since Perl recognizes a Unicode Byte Order Mark at the start of files
606as signaling that the file is Unicode encoded as in UTF-16 (whether
607big-endian or little-endian) or UTF-8, Pod parsers should do the
608same. Otherwise, the character encoding should be understood as
609being UTF-8 if the first highbit byte sequence in the file seems
610valid as a UTF-8 sequence, or otherwise as Latin-1.
611
612Future versions of this specification may specify
613how Pod can accept other encodings. Presumably treatment of other
614encodings in Pod parsing would be as in XML parsing: whatever the
615encoding declared by a particular Pod file, content is to be
616stored in memory as Unicode characters.
617
618=item *
619
620The well known Unicode Byte Order Marks are as follows: if the
621file begins with the two literal byte values 0xFE 0xFF, this is
622the BOM for big-endian UTF-16. If the file begins with the two
623literal byte value 0xFF 0xFE, this is the BOM for little-endian
624UTF-16. If the file begins with the three literal byte values
6250xEF 0xBB 0xBF, this is the BOM for UTF-8.
626
627=for comment
628 use bytes; print map sprintf(" 0x%02X", ord $_), split '', "\x{feff}";
629 0xEF 0xBB 0xBF
630
631=for comment
1e54db1a 632 If toke.c is modified to support UTF-32, add mention of those here.
8a93676d
SB
633
634=item *
635
9a5b9407 636A naive but often sufficient heuristic for testing the first highbit
8a93676d
SB
637byte-sequence in a BOM-less file (whether in code or in Pod!), to see
638whether that sequence is valid as UTF-8 (RFC 2279) is to check whether
9a5b9407 639that the first byte in the sequence is in the range 0xC2 - 0xFD
8a93676d
SB
640I<and> whether the next byte is in the range
6410x80 - 0xBF. If so, the parser may conclude that this file is in
642UTF-8, and all highbit sequences in the file should be assumed to
643be UTF-8. Otherwise the parser should treat the file as being
9a5b9407
KW
644in Latin-1. (A better check is to pass a copy of the sequence to
645L<utf8::decode()|utf8> which performs a full validity check on the
646sequence and returns TRUE if it is valid UTF-8, FALSE otherwise. This
647function is always pre-loaded, is fast because it is written in C, and
648will only get called at most once, so you don't need to avoid it out of
649performance concerns.)
650In the unlikely circumstance that the first highbit
8a93676d
SB
651sequence in a truly non-UTF-8 file happens to appear to be UTF-8, one
652can cater to our heuristic (as well as any more intelligent heuristic)
653by prefacing that line with a comment line containing a highbit
654sequence that is clearly I<not> valid as UTF-8. A line consisting
655of simply "#", an e-acute, and any non-highbit byte,
656is sufficient to establish this file's encoding.
657
658=for comment
659 If/WHEN some brave soul makes these heuristics into a generic
fae2c0fb 660 text-file class (or PerlIO layer?), we can presumably delete
8a93676d 661 mention of these icky details from this file, and can instead
fae2c0fb 662 tell people to just use appropriate class/layer.
8a93676d 663 Auto-recognition of newline sequences would be another desirable
fae2c0fb 664 feature of such a class/layer.
8a93676d
SB
665 HINT HINT HINT.
666
667=for comment
668 "The probability that a string of characters
669 in any other encoding appears as valid UTF-8 is low" - RFC2279
670
671=item *
672
673This document's requirements and suggestions about encodings
674do not apply to Pod processors running on non-ASCII platforms,
675notably EBCDIC platforms.
676
677=item *
678
679Pod processors must treat a "=for [label] [content...]" paragraph as
680meaning the same thing as a "=begin [label]" paragraph, content, and
681an "=end [label]" paragraph. (The parser may conflate these two
682constructs, or may leave them distinct, in the expectation that the
683formatter will nevertheless treat them the same.)
684
685=item *
686
687When rendering Pod to a format that allows comments (i.e., to nearly
688any format other than plaintext), a Pod formatter must insert comment
689text identifying its name and version number, and the name and
690version numbers of any modules it might be using to process the Pod.
691Minimal examples:
692
555bd962 693 %% POD::Pod2PS v3.14159, using POD::Parser v1.92
210b36aa 694
555bd962 695 <!-- Pod::HTML v3.14159, using POD::Parser v1.92 -->
210b36aa 696
555bd962 697 {\doccomm generated by Pod::Tree::RTF 3.14159 using Pod::Tree 1.08}
210b36aa 698
555bd962 699 .\" Pod::Man version 3.14159, using POD::Parser version 1.92
8a93676d
SB
700
701Formatters may also insert additional comments, including: the
702release date of the Pod formatter program, the contact address for
703the author(s) of the formatter, the current time, the name of input
704file, the formatting options in effect, version of Perl used, etc.
705
706Formatters may also choose to note errors/warnings as comments,
707besides or instead of emitting them otherwise (as in messages to
708STDERR, or C<die>ing).
709
710=item *
711
712Pod parsers I<may> emit warnings or error messages ("Unknown E code
713EE<lt>zslig>!") to STDERR (whether through printing to STDERR, or
714C<warn>ing/C<carp>ing, or C<die>ing/C<croak>ing), but I<must> allow
715suppressing all such STDERR output, and instead allow an option for
716reporting errors/warnings
717in some other way, whether by triggering a callback, or noting errors
718in some attribute of the document object, or some similarly unobtrusive
719mechanism -- or even by appending a "Pod Errors" section to the end of
720the parsed form of the document.
721
722=item *
723
724In cases of exceptionally aberrant documents, Pod parsers may abort the
725parse. Even then, using C<die>ing/C<croak>ing is to be avoided; where
726possible, the parser library may simply close the input file
727and add text like "*** Formatting Aborted ***" to the end of the
728(partial) in-memory document.
729
730=item *
731
732In paragraphs where formatting codes (like EE<lt>...>, BE<lt>...>)
733are understood (i.e., I<not> verbatim paragraphs, but I<including>
734ordinary paragraphs, and command paragraphs that produce renderable
735text, like "=head1"), literal whitespace should generally be considered
736"insignificant", in that one literal space has the same meaning as any
737(nonzero) number of literal spaces, literal newlines, and literal tabs
738(as long as this produces no blank lines, since those would terminate
739the paragraph). Pod parsers should compact literal whitespace in each
740processed paragraph, but may provide an option for overriding this
741(since some processing tasks do not require it), or may follow
742additional special rules (for example, specially treating
743period-space-space or period-newline sequences).
744
745=item *
746
747Pod parsers should not, by default, try to coerce apostrophe (') and
748quote (") into smart quotes (little 9's, 66's, 99's, etc), nor try to
749turn backtick (`) into anything else but a single backtick character
353c6505 750(distinct from an open quote character!), nor "--" into anything but
8a93676d
SB
751two minus signs. They I<must never> do any of those things to text
752in CE<lt>...> formatting codes, and never I<ever> to text in verbatim
753paragraphs.
754
755=item *
756
757When rendering Pod to a format that has two kinds of hyphens (-), one
3e666715 758that's a non-breaking hyphen, and another that's a breakable hyphen
8a93676d
SB
759(as in "object-oriented", which can be split across lines as
760"object-", newline, "oriented"), formatters are encouraged to
3e666715 761generally translate "-" to non-breaking hyphen, but may apply
8a93676d
SB
762heuristics to convert some of these to breaking hyphens.
763
764=item *
765
766Pod formatters should make reasonable efforts to keep words of Perl
767code from being broken across lines. For example, "Foo::Bar" in some
768formatting systems is seen as eligible for being broken across lines
769as "Foo::" newline "Bar" or even "Foo::-" newline "Bar". This should
770be avoided where possible, either by disabling all line-breaking in
771mid-word, or by wrapping particular words with internal punctuation
772in "don't break this across lines" codes (which in some formats may
773not be a single code, but might be a matter of inserting non-breaking
774zero-width spaces between every pair of characters in a word.)
775
776=item *
777
778Pod parsers should, by default, expand tabs in verbatim paragraphs as
779they are processed, before passing them to the formatter or other
780processor. Parsers may also allow an option for overriding this.
781
782=item *
783
784Pod parsers should, by default, remove newlines from the end of
785ordinary and verbatim paragraphs before passing them to the
786formatter. For example, while the paragraph you're reading now
787could be considered, in Pod source, to end with (and contain)
788the newline(s) that end it, it should be processed as ending with
789(and containing) the period character that ends this sentence.
790
791=item *
792
793Pod parsers, when reporting errors, should make some effort to report
794an approximate line number ("Nested EE<lt>>'s in Paragraph #52, near
795line 633 of Thing/Foo.pm!"), instead of merely noting the paragraph
796number ("Nested EE<lt>>'s in Paragraph #52 of Thing/Foo.pm!"). Where
797this is problematic, the paragraph number should at least be
798accompanied by an excerpt from the paragraph ("Nested EE<lt>>'s in
799Paragraph #52 of Thing/Foo.pm, which begins 'Read/write accessor for
800the CE<lt>interest rate> attribute...'").
801
802=item *
803
804Pod parsers, when processing a series of verbatim paragraphs one
805after another, should consider them to be one large verbatim
806paragraph that happens to contain blank lines. I.e., these two
d1be9408 807lines, which have a blank line between them:
8a93676d
SB
808
809 use Foo;
810
811 print Foo->VERSION
812
813should be unified into one paragraph ("\tuse Foo;\n\n\tprint
814Foo->VERSION") before being passed to the formatter or other
815processor. Parsers may also allow an option for overriding this.
816
817While this might be too cumbersome to implement in event-based Pod
818parsers, it is straightforward for parsers that return parse trees.
819
820=item *
821
822Pod formatters, where feasible, are advised to avoid splitting short
823verbatim paragraphs (under twelve lines, say) across pages.
824
825=item *
826
827Pod parsers must treat a line with only spaces and/or tabs on it as a
828"blank line" such as separates paragraphs. (Some older parsers
829recognized only two adjacent newlines as a "blank line" but would not
830recognize a newline, a space, and a newline, as a blank line. This
831is noncompliant behavior.)
832
833=item *
834
835Authors of Pod formatters/processors should make every effort to
836avoid writing their own Pod parser. There are already several in
837CPAN, with a wide range of interface styles -- and one of them,
838Pod::Parser, comes with modern versions of Perl.
839
840=item *
841
842Characters in Pod documents may be conveyed either as literals, or by
843number in EE<lt>n> codes, or by an equivalent mnemonic, as in
844EE<lt>eacute> which is exactly equivalent to EE<lt>233>.
845
846Characters in the range 32-126 refer to those well known US-ASCII
847characters (also defined there by Unicode, with the same meaning),
848which all Pod formatters must render faithfully. Characters
849in the ranges 0-31 and 127-159 should not be used (neither as
850literals, nor as EE<lt>number> codes), except for the
210b36aa 851literal byte-sequences for newline (13, 13 10, or 10), and tab (9).
8a93676d
SB
852
853Characters in the range 160-255 refer to Latin-1 characters (also
854defined there by Unicode, with the same meaning). Characters above
855255 should be understood to refer to Unicode characters.
856
857=item *
858
859Be warned
860that some formatters cannot reliably render characters outside 32-126;
861and many are able to handle 32-126 and 160-255, but nothing above
862255.
863
864=item *
865
866Besides the well-known "EE<lt>lt>" and "EE<lt>gt>" codes for
867less-than and greater-than, Pod parsers must understand "EE<lt>sol>"
868for "/" (solidus, slash), and "EE<lt>verbar>" for "|" (vertical bar,
869pipe). Pod parsers should also understand "EE<lt>lchevron>" and
870"EE<lt>rchevron>" as legacy codes for characters 171 and 187, i.e.,
871"left-pointing double angle quotation mark" = "left pointing
872guillemet" and "right-pointing double angle quotation mark" = "right
873pointing guillemet". (These look like little "<<" and ">>", and they
874are now preferably expressed with the HTML/XHTML codes "EE<lt>laquo>"
875and "EE<lt>raquo>".)
876
877=item *
878
879Pod parsers should understand all "EE<lt>html>" codes as defined
880in the entity declarations in the most recent XHTML specification at
881C<www.W3.org>. Pod parsers must understand at least the entities
882that define characters in the range 160-255 (Latin-1). Pod parsers,
883when faced with some unknown "EE<lt>I<identifier>>" code,
884shouldn't simply replace it with nullstring (by default, at least),
885but may pass it through as a string consisting of the literal characters
886E, less-than, I<identifier>, greater-than. Or Pod parsers may offer the
887alternative option of processing such unknown
888"EE<lt>I<identifier>>" codes by firing an event especially
889for such codes, or by adding a special node-type to the in-memory
890document tree. Such "EE<lt>I<identifier>>" may have special meaning
891to some processors, or some processors may choose to add them to
892a special error report.
893
894=item *
895
896Pod parsers must also support the XHTML codes "EE<lt>quot>" for
897character 34 (doublequote, "), "EE<lt>amp>" for character 38
898(ampersand, &), and "EE<lt>apos>" for character 39 (apostrophe, ').
899
900=item *
901
902Note that in all cases of "EE<lt>whatever>", I<whatever> (whether
903an htmlname, or a number in any base) must consist only of
904alphanumeric characters -- that is, I<whatever> must watch
905C<m/\A\w+\z/>. So "EE<lt> 0 1 2 3 >" is invalid, because
906it contains spaces, which aren't alphanumeric characters. This
907presumably does not I<need> special treatment by a Pod processor;
908" 0 1 2 3 " doesn't look like a number in any base, so it would
909presumably be looked up in the table of HTML-like names. Since
210b36aa 910there isn't (and cannot be) an HTML-like entity called " 0 1 2 3 ",
8a93676d
SB
911this will be treated as an error. However, Pod processors may
912treat "EE<lt> 0 1 2 3 >" or "EE<lt>e-acute>" as I<syntactically>
913invalid, potentially earning a different error message than the
914error message (or warning, or event) generated by a merely unknown
915(but theoretically valid) htmlname, as in "EE<lt>qacute>"
916[sic]. However, Pod parsers are not required to make this
917distinction.
918
919=item *
920
921Note that EE<lt>number> I<must not> be interpreted as simply
922"codepoint I<number> in the current/native character set". It always
923means only "the character represented by codepoint I<number> in
924Unicode." (This is identical to the semantics of &#I<number>; in XML.)
925
926This will likely require many formatters to have tables mapping from
927treatable Unicode codepoints (such as the "\xE9" for the e-acute
928character) to the escape sequences or codes necessary for conveying
929such sequences in the target output format. A converter to *roff
930would, for example know that "\xE9" (whether conveyed literally, or via
931a EE<lt>...> sequence) is to be conveyed as "e\\*'".
8939ba94 932Similarly, a program rendering Pod in a Mac OS application window, would
8a93676d 933presumably need to know that "\xE9" maps to codepoint 142 in MacRoman
8939ba94 934encoding that (at time of writing) is native for Mac OS. Such
8a93676d
SB
935Unicode2whatever mappings are presumably already widely available for
936common output formats. (Such mappings may be incomplete! Implementers
937are not expected to bend over backwards in an attempt to render
938Cherokee syllabics, Etruscan runes, Byzantine musical symbols, or any
939of the other weird things that Unicode can encode.) And
940if a Pod document uses a character not found in such a mapping, the
941formatter should consider it an unrenderable character.
942
943=item *
944
945If, surprisingly, the implementor of a Pod formatter can't find a
946satisfactory pre-existing table mapping from Unicode characters to
947escapes in the target format (e.g., a decent table of Unicode
948characters to *roff escapes), it will be necessary to build such a
949table. If you are in this circumstance, you should begin with the
950characters in the range 0x00A0 - 0x00FF, which is mostly the heavily
951used accented characters. Then proceed (as patience permits and
952fastidiousness compels) through the characters that the (X)HTML
953standards groups judged important enough to merit mnemonics
954for. These are declared in the (X)HTML specifications at the
955www.W3.org site. At time of writing (September 2001), the most recent
956entity declaration files are:
957
958 http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml-lat1.ent
959 http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml-special.ent
960 http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml-symbol.ent
961
962Then you can progress through any remaining notable Unicode characters
963in the range 0x2000-0x204D (consult the character tables at
964www.unicode.org), and whatever else strikes your fancy. For example,
965in F<xhtml-symbol.ent>, there is the entry:
966
967 <!ENTITY infin "&#8734;"> <!-- infinity, U+221E ISOtech -->
968
969While the mapping "infin" to the character "\x{221E}" will (hopefully)
970have been already handled by the Pod parser, the presence of the
971character in this file means that it's reasonably important enough to
972include in a formatter's table that maps from notable Unicode characters
973to the codes necessary for rendering them. So for a Unicode-to-*roff
974mapping, for example, this would merit the entry:
975
976 "\x{221E}" => '\(in',
977
978It is eagerly hoped that in the future, increasing numbers of formats
979(and formatters) will support Unicode characters directly (as (X)HTML
980does with C<&infin;>, C<&#8734;>, or C<&#x221E;>), reducing the need
981for idiosyncratic mappings of Unicode-to-I<my_escapes>.
982
983=item *
984
353c6505 985It is up to individual Pod formatter to display good judgement when
8a93676d
SB
986confronted with an unrenderable character (which is distinct from an
987unknown EE<lt>thing> sequence that the parser couldn't resolve to
988anything, renderable or not). It is good practice to map Latin letters
989with diacritics (like "EE<lt>eacute>"/"EE<lt>233>") to the corresponding
990unaccented US-ASCII letters (like a simple character 101, "e"), but
210b36aa 991clearly this is often not feasible, and an unrenderable character may
8a93676d
SB
992be represented as "?", or the like. In attempting a sane fallback
993(as from EE<lt>233> to "e"), Pod formatters may use the
994%Latin1Code_to_fallback table in L<Pod::Escapes|Pod::Escapes>, or
995L<Text::Unidecode|Text::Unidecode>, if available.
996
997For example, this Pod text:
998
999 magic is enabled if you set C<$Currency> to 'E<euro>'.
1000
1001may be rendered as:
1002"magic is enabled if you set C<$Currency> to 'I<?>'" or as
1003"magic is enabled if you set C<$Currency> to 'B<[euro]>'", or as
1004"magic is enabled if you set C<$Currency> to '[x20AC]', etc.
1005
1006A Pod formatter may also note, in a comment or warning, a list of what
1007unrenderable characters were encountered.
1008
1009=item *
1010
1011EE<lt>...> may freely appear in any formatting code (other than
1012in another EE<lt>...> or in an ZE<lt>>). That is, "XE<lt>The
1013EE<lt>euro>1,000,000 Solution>" is valid, as is "LE<lt>The
1014EE<lt>euro>1,000,000 Solution|Million::Euros>".
1015
1016=item *
1017
3e666715 1018Some Pod formatters output to formats that implement non-breaking
8a93676d 1019spaces as an individual character (which I'll call "NBSP"), and
3e666715 1020others output to formats that implement non-breaking spaces just as
8a93676d
SB
1021spaces wrapped in a "don't break this across lines" code. Note that
1022at the level of Pod, both sorts of codes can occur: Pod can contain a
1023NBSP character (whether as a literal, or as a "EE<lt>160>" or
1024"EE<lt>nbsp>" code); and Pod can contain "SE<lt>foo
1025IE<lt>barE<gt> baz>" codes, where "mere spaces" (character 32) in
3e666715 1026such codes are taken to represent non-breaking spaces. Pod
8a93676d
SB
1027parsers should consider supporting the optional parsing of "SE<lt>foo
1028IE<lt>barE<gt> baz>" as if it were
1029"fooI<NBSP>IE<lt>barE<gt>I<NBSP>baz", and, going the other way, the
1030optional parsing of groups of words joined by NBSP's as if each group
1031were in a SE<lt>...> code, so that formatters may use the
1032representation that maps best to what the output format demands.
1033
1034=item *
1035
210b36aa 1036Some processors may find that the C<SE<lt>...E<gt>> code is easiest to
8a93676d
SB
1037implement by replacing each space in the parse tree under the content
1038of the S, with an NBSP. But note: the replacement should apply I<not> to
1039spaces in I<all> text, but I<only> to spaces in I<printable> text. (This
1040distinction may or may not be evident in the particular tree/event
1041model implemented by the Pod parser.) For example, consider this
1042unusual case:
1043
1044 S<L</Autoloaded Functions>>
1045
1046This means that the space in the middle of the visible link text must
1047not be broken across lines. In other words, it's the same as this:
1048
1049 L<"AutoloadedE<160>Functions"/Autoloaded Functions>
1050
1051However, a misapplied space-to-NBSP replacement could (wrongly)
1052produce something equivalent to this:
1053
1054 L<"AutoloadedE<160>Functions"/AutoloadedE<160>Functions>
1055
1056...which is almost definitely not going to work as a hyperlink (assuming
1057this formatter outputs a format supporting hypertext).
1058
1059Formatters may choose to just not support the S format code,
1060especially in cases where the output format simply has no NBSP
1061character/code and no code for "don't break this stuff across lines".
1062
1063=item *
1064
1065Besides the NBSP character discussed above, implementors are reminded
1066of the existence of the other "special" character in Latin-1, the
210b36aa 1067"soft hyphen" character, also known as "discretionary hyphen",
8a93676d
SB
1068i.e. C<EE<lt>173E<gt>> = C<EE<lt>0xADE<gt>> =
1069C<EE<lt>shyE<gt>>). This character expresses an optional hyphenation
1070point. That is, it normally renders as nothing, but may render as a
1071"-" if a formatter breaks the word at that point. Pod formatters
1072should, as appropriate, do one of the following: 1) render this with
1073a code with the same meaning (e.g., "\-" in RTF), 2) pass it through
1074in the expectation that the formatter understands this character as
1075such, or 3) delete it.
1076
1077For example:
1078
1079 sigE<shy>action
1080 manuE<shy>script
1081 JarkE<shy>ko HieE<shy>taE<shy>nieE<shy>mi
1082
1083These signal to a formatter that if it is to hyphenate "sigaction"
1084or "manuscript", then it should be done as
1085"sig-I<[linebreak]>action" or "manu-I<[linebreak]>script"
1086(and if it doesn't hyphenate it, then the C<EE<lt>shyE<gt>> doesn't
1087show up at all). And if it is
1088to hyphenate "Jarkko" and/or "Hietaniemi", it can do
1089so only at the points where there is a C<EE<lt>shyE<gt>> code.
1090
1091In practice, it is anticipated that this character will not be used
1092often, but formatters should either support it, or delete it.
1093
1094=item *
1095
1096If you think that you want to add a new command to Pod (like, say, a
1097"=biblio" command), consider whether you could get the same
1098effect with a for or begin/end sequence: "=for biblio ..." or "=begin
1099biblio" ... "=end biblio". Pod processors that don't understand
1100"=for biblio", etc, will simply ignore it, whereas they may complain
1101loudly if they see "=biblio".
1102
1103=item *
1104
1105Throughout this document, "Pod" has been the preferred spelling for
1106the name of the documentation format. One may also use "POD" or
da75cd15 1107"pod". For the documentation that is (typically) in the Pod
8a93676d
SB
1108format, you may use "pod", or "Pod", or "POD". Understanding these
1109distinctions is useful; but obsessing over how to spell them, usually
1110is not.
1111
1112=back
1113
1114
1115
1116
1117
1118=head1 About LE<lt>...E<gt> Codes
1119
1120As you can tell from a glance at L<perlpod|perlpod>, the LE<lt>...>
1121code is the most complex of the Pod formatting codes. The points below
1122will hopefully clarify what it means and how processors should deal
1123with it.
1124
1125=over
1126
1127=item *
1128
1129In parsing an LE<lt>...> code, Pod parsers must distinguish at least
1130four attributes:
1131
1132=over
1133
1134=item First:
1135
1136The link-text. If there is none, this must be undef. (E.g., in
1137"LE<lt>Perl Functions|perlfunc>", the link-text is "Perl Functions".
1138In "LE<lt>Time::HiRes>" and even "LE<lt>|Time::HiRes>", there is no
1139link text. Note that link text may contain formatting.)
1140
1141=item Second:
1142
ac036724 1143The possibly inferred link-text; i.e., if there was no real link
8a93676d
SB
1144text, then this is the text that we'll infer in its place. (E.g., for
1145"LE<lt>Getopt::Std>", the inferred link text is "Getopt::Std".)
1146
1147=item Third:
1148
1149The name or URL, or undef if none. (E.g., in "LE<lt>Perl
ac036724 1150Functions|perlfunc>", the name (also sometimes called the page)
8a93676d
SB
1151is "perlfunc". In "LE<lt>/CAVEATS>", the name is undef.)
1152
1153=item Fourth:
1154
1155The section (AKA "item" in older perlpods), or undef if none. E.g.,
f41e638c 1156in "LE<lt>Getopt::Std/DESCRIPTIONE<gt>", "DESCRIPTION" is the section. (Note
8a93676d
SB
1157that this is not the same as a manpage section like the "5" in "man 5
1158crontab". "Section Foo" in the Pod sense means the part of the text
6edf2346 1159that's introduced by the heading or item whose text is "Foo".)
8a93676d
SB
1160
1161=back
1162
1163Pod parsers may also note additional attributes including:
1164
1165=over
1166
1167=item Fifth:
1168
1169A flag for whether item 3 (if present) is a URL (like
1170"http://lists.perl.org" is), in which case there should be no section
1171attribute; a Pod name (like "perldoc" and "Getopt::Std" are); or
1172possibly a man page name (like "crontab(5)" is).
1173
1174=item Sixth:
1175
1176The raw original LE<lt>...> content, before text is split on
1177"|", "/", etc, and before EE<lt>...> codes are expanded.
1178
1179=back
1180
1181(The above were numbered only for concise reference below. It is not
1182a requirement that these be passed as an actual list or array.)
1183
1184For example:
1185
1186 L<Foo::Bar>
555bd962
BG
1187 => undef, # link text
1188 "Foo::Bar", # possibly inferred link text
1189 "Foo::Bar", # name
1190 undef, # section
1191 'pod', # what sort of link
1192 "Foo::Bar" # original content
8a93676d
SB
1193
1194 L<Perlport's section on NL's|perlport/Newlines>
555bd962
BG
1195 => "Perlport's section on NL's", # link text
1196 "Perlport's section on NL's", # possibly inferred link text
1197 "perlport", # name
1198 "Newlines", # section
1199 'pod', # what sort of link
1200 "Perlport's section on NL's|perlport/Newlines"
1201 # original content
8a93676d
SB
1202
1203 L<perlport/Newlines>
555bd962
BG
1204 => undef, # link text
1205 '"Newlines" in perlport', # possibly inferred link text
1206 "perlport", # name
1207 "Newlines", # section
1208 'pod', # what sort of link
1209 "perlport/Newlines" # original content
8a93676d
SB
1210
1211 L<crontab(5)/"DESCRIPTION">
555bd962
BG
1212 => undef, # link text
1213 '"DESCRIPTION" in crontab(5)', # possibly inferred link text
1214 "crontab(5)", # name
1215 "DESCRIPTION", # section
1216 'man', # what sort of link
1217 'crontab(5)/"DESCRIPTION"' # original content
8a93676d
SB
1218
1219 L</Object Attributes>
555bd962
BG
1220 => undef, # link text
1221 '"Object Attributes"', # possibly inferred link text
1222 undef, # name
1223 "Object Attributes", # section
1224 'pod', # what sort of link
1225 "/Object Attributes" # original content
8a93676d
SB
1226
1227 L<http://www.perl.org/>
555bd962
BG
1228 => undef, # link text
1229 "http://www.perl.org/", # possibly inferred link text
1230 "http://www.perl.org/", # name
1231 undef, # section
1232 'url', # what sort of link
1233 "http://www.perl.org/" # original content
8a93676d 1234
f6e963e4 1235 L<Perl.org|http://www.perl.org/>
555bd962
BG
1236 => "Perl.org", # link text
1237 "http://www.perl.org/", # possibly inferred link text
1238 "http://www.perl.org/", # name
1239 undef, # section
1240 'url', # what sort of link
f6e963e4
RS
1241 "Perl.org|http://www.perl.org/" # original content
1242
8a93676d
SB
1243Note that you can distinguish URL-links from anything else by the
1244fact that they match C<m/\A\w+:[^:\s]\S*\z/>. So
1245C<LE<lt>http://www.perl.comE<gt>> is a URL, but
1246C<LE<lt>HTTP::ResponseE<gt>> isn't.
1247
1248=item *
1249
1250In case of LE<lt>...> codes with no "text|" part in them,
1251older formatters have exhibited great variation in actually displaying
1252the link or cross reference. For example, LE<lt>crontab(5)> would render
1253as "the C<crontab(5)> manpage", or "in the C<crontab(5)> manpage"
1254or just "C<crontab(5)>".
1255
1256Pod processors must now treat "text|"-less links as follows:
1257
1258 L<name> => L<name|name>
1259 L</section> => L<"section"|/section>
1260 L<name/section> => L<"section" in name|name/section>
1261
1262=item *
1263
1264Note that section names might contain markup. I.e., if a section
1265starts with:
1266
1267 =head2 About the C<-M> Operator
1268
1269or with:
1270
1271 =item About the C<-M> Operator
1272
1273then a link to it would look like this:
1274
1275 L<somedoc/About the C<-M> Operator>
1276
1277Formatters may choose to ignore the markup for purposes of resolving
1278the link and use only the renderable characters in the section name,
1279as in:
1280
1281 <h1><a name="About_the_-M_Operator">About the <code>-M</code>
1282 Operator</h1>
210b36aa 1283
8a93676d 1284 ...
210b36aa 1285
8a93676d
SB
1286 <a href="somedoc#About_the_-M_Operator">About the <code>-M</code>
1287 Operator" in somedoc</a>
1288
1289=item *
1290
1291Previous versions of perlpod distinguished C<LE<lt>name/"section"E<gt>>
1292links from C<LE<lt>name/itemE<gt>> links (and their targets). These
1293have been merged syntactically and semantically in the current
1294specification, and I<section> can refer either to a "=headI<n> Heading
1295Content" command or to a "=item Item Content" command. This
1296specification does not specify what behavior should be in the case
1297of a given document having several things all seeming to produce the
1298same I<section> identifier (e.g., in HTML, several things all producing
1299the same I<anchorname> in <a name="I<anchorname>">...</a>
1300elements). Where Pod processors can control this behavior, they should
1301use the first such anchor. That is, C<LE<lt>Foo/BarE<gt>> refers to the
1302I<first> "Bar" section in Foo.
1303
1304But for some processors/formats this cannot be easily controlled; as
1305with the HTML example, the behavior of multiple ambiguous
1306<a name="I<anchorname>">...</a> is most easily just left up to
1307browsers to decide.
1308
1309=item *
1310
8a93676d
SB
1311In a C<LE<lt>text|...E<gt>> code, text may contain formatting codes
1312for formatting or for EE<lt>...> escapes, as in:
1313
1314 L<B<ummE<234>stuff>|...>
1315
1316For C<LE<lt>...E<gt>> codes without a "name|" part, only
ac036724 1317C<EE<lt>...E<gt>> and C<ZE<lt>E<gt>> codes may occur. That is,
1318authors should not use "C<LE<lt>BE<lt>Foo::BarE<gt>E<gt>>".
8a93676d
SB
1319
1320Note, however, that formatting codes and ZE<lt>>'s can occur in any
1321and all parts of an LE<lt>...> (i.e., in I<name>, I<section>, I<text>,
1322and I<url>).
1323
1324Authors must not nest LE<lt>...> codes. For example, "LE<lt>The
1325LE<lt>Foo::Bar> man page>" should be treated as an error.
1326
1327=item *
1328
1329Note that Pod authors may use formatting codes inside the "text"
1330part of "LE<lt>text|name>" (and so on for LE<lt>text|/"sec">).
1331
1332In other words, this is valid:
1333
1334 Go read L<the docs on C<$.>|perlvar/"$.">
1335
1336Some output formats that do allow rendering "LE<lt>...>" codes as
1337hypertext, might not allow the link-text to be formatted; in
1338that case, formatters will have to just ignore that formatting.
1339
1340=item *
1341
1342At time of writing, C<LE<lt>nameE<gt>> values are of two types:
1343either the name of a Pod page like C<LE<lt>Foo::BarE<gt>> (which
1344might be a real Perl module or program in an @INC / PATH
e1020413 1345directory, or a .pod file in those places); or the name of a Unix
8a93676d
SB
1346man page, like C<LE<lt>crontab(5)E<gt>>. In theory, C<LE<lt>chmodE<gt>>
1347in ambiguous between a Pod page called "chmod", or the Unix man page
1348"chmod" (in whatever man-section). However, the presence of a string
1349in parens, as in "crontab(5)", is sufficient to signal that what
1350is being discussed is not a Pod page, and so is presumably a
e1020413 1351Unix man page. The distinction is of no importance to many
8a93676d
SB
1352Pod processors, but some processors that render to hypertext formats
1353may need to distinguish them in order to know how to render a
1354given C<LE<lt>fooE<gt>> code.
1355
1356=item *
1357
b41aadf2
RS
1358Previous versions of perlpod allowed for a C<LE<lt>sectionE<gt>> syntax (as in
1359C<LE<lt>Object AttributesE<gt>>), which was not easily distinguishable from
1360C<LE<lt>nameE<gt>> syntax and for C<LE<lt>"section"E<gt>> which was only
1361slightly less ambiguous. This syntax is no longer in the specification, and
1362has been replaced by the C<LE<lt>/sectionE<gt>> syntax (where the slash was
1363formerly optional). Pod parsers should tolerate the C<LE<lt>"section"E<gt>>
1364syntax, for a while at least. The suggested heuristic for distinguishing
1365C<LE<lt>sectionE<gt>> from C<LE<lt>nameE<gt>> is that if it contains any
1366whitespace, it's a I<section>. Pod processors should warn about this being
1367deprecated syntax.
8a93676d
SB
1368
1369=back
1370
1371=head1 About =over...=back Regions
1372
1373"=over"..."=back" regions are used for various kinds of list-like
1374structures. (I use the term "region" here simply as a collective
1375term for everything from the "=over" to the matching "=back".)
1376
1377=over
1378
1379=item *
1380
1381The non-zero numeric I<indentlevel> in "=over I<indentlevel>" ...
1382"=back" is used for giving the formatter a clue as to how many
1383"spaces" (ems, or roughly equivalent units) it should tab over,
1384although many formatters will have to convert this to an absolute
1385measurement that may not exactly match with the size of spaces (or M's)
1386in the document's base font. Other formatters may have to completely
1387ignore the number. The lack of any explicit I<indentlevel> parameter is
1388equivalent to an I<indentlevel> value of 4. Pod processors may
1389complain if I<indentlevel> is present but is not a positive number
1390matching C<m/\A(\d*\.)?\d+\z/>.
1391
1392=item *
1393
1394Authors of Pod formatters are reminded that "=over" ... "=back" may
1395map to several different constructs in your output format. For
1396example, in converting Pod to (X)HTML, it can map to any of
1397<ul>...</ul>, <ol>...</ol>, <dl>...</dl>, or
1398<blockquote>...</blockquote>. Similarly, "=item" can map to <li> or
1399<dt>.
1400
1401=item *
1402
1403Each "=over" ... "=back" region should be one of the following:
1404
1405=over
1406
1407=item *
1408
1409An "=over" ... "=back" region containing only "=item *" commands,
1410each followed by some number of ordinary/verbatim paragraphs, other
1411nested "=over" ... "=back" regions, "=for..." paragraphs, and
1412"=begin"..."=end" regions.
1413
1414(Pod processors must tolerate a bare "=item" as if it were "=item
1415*".) Whether "*" is rendered as a literal asterisk, an "o", or as
1416some kind of real bullet character, is left up to the Pod formatter,
1417and may depend on the level of nesting.
1418
1419=item *
1420
1421An "=over" ... "=back" region containing only
1422C<m/\A=item\s+\d+\.?\s*\z/> paragraphs, each one (or each group of them)
1423followed by some number of ordinary/verbatim paragraphs, other nested
1424"=over" ... "=back" regions, "=for..." paragraphs, and/or
1425"=begin"..."=end" codes. Note that the numbers must start at 1
1426in each section, and must proceed in order and without skipping
1427numbers.
1428
1429(Pod processors must tolerate lines like "=item 1" as if they were
1430"=item 1.", with the period.)
1431
1432=item *
1433
1434An "=over" ... "=back" region containing only "=item [text]"
1435commands, each one (or each group of them) followed by some number of
1436ordinary/verbatim paragraphs, other nested "=over" ... "=back"
1437regions, or "=for..." paragraphs, and "=begin"..."=end" regions.
1438
1439The "=item [text]" paragraph should not match
1440C<m/\A=item\s+\d+\.?\s*\z/> or C<m/\A=item\s+\*\s*\z/>, nor should it
1441match just C<m/\A=item\s*\z/>.
1442
1443=item *
1444
1445An "=over" ... "=back" region containing no "=item" paragraphs at
1446all, and containing only some number of
1447ordinary/verbatim paragraphs, and possibly also some nested "=over"
1448... "=back" regions, "=for..." paragraphs, and "=begin"..."=end"
1449regions. Such an itemless "=over" ... "=back" region in Pod is
1450equivalent in meaning to a "<blockquote>...</blockquote>" element in
1451HTML.
1452
1453=back
1454
1455Note that with all the above cases, you can determine which type of
1456"=over" ... "=back" you have, by examining the first (non-"=cut",
1457non-"=pod") Pod paragraph after the "=over" command.
1458
1459=item *
1460
1461Pod formatters I<must> tolerate arbitrarily large amounts of text
1462in the "=item I<text...>" paragraph. In practice, most such
1463paragraphs are short, as in:
1464
1465 =item For cutting off our trade with all parts of the world
1466
1467But they may be arbitrarily long:
1468
1469 =item For transporting us beyond seas to be tried for pretended
1470 offenses
1471
1472 =item He is at this time transporting large armies of foreign
1473 mercenaries to complete the works of death, desolation and
1474 tyranny, already begun with circumstances of cruelty and perfidy
1475 scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally
1476 unworthy the head of a civilized nation.
1477
1478=item *
1479
1480Pod processors should tolerate "=item *" / "=item I<number>" commands
1481with no accompanying paragraph. The middle item is an example:
1482
1483 =over
210b36aa 1484
8a93676d 1485 =item 1
210b36aa 1486
8a93676d 1487 Pick up dry cleaning.
210b36aa 1488
8a93676d 1489 =item 2
210b36aa 1490
8a93676d 1491 =item 3
210b36aa 1492
8a93676d 1493 Stop by the store. Get Abba Zabas, Stoli, and cheap lawn chairs.
210b36aa 1494
8a93676d
SB
1495 =back
1496
1497=item *
1498
1499No "=over" ... "=back" region can contain headings. Processors may
1500treat such a heading as an error.
1501
1502=item *
1503
1504Note that an "=over" ... "=back" region should have some
1505content. That is, authors should not have an empty region like this:
1506
1507 =over
210b36aa 1508
8a93676d
SB
1509 =back
1510
1511Pod processors seeing such a contentless "=over" ... "=back" region,
1512may ignore it, or may report it as an error.
1513
1514=item *
1515
1516Processors must tolerate an "=over" list that goes off the end of the
1517document (i.e., which has no matching "=back"), but they may warn
1518about such a list.
1519
1520=item *
1521
1522Authors of Pod formatters should note that this construct:
1523
1524 =item Neque
1525
1526 =item Porro
1527
1528 =item Quisquam Est
210b36aa 1529
8a93676d
SB
1530 Qui dolorem ipsum quia dolor sit amet, consectetur, adipisci
1531 velit, sed quia non numquam eius modi tempora incidunt ut
1532 labore et dolore magnam aliquam quaerat voluptatem.
1533
1534 =item Ut Enim
1535
1536is semantically ambiguous, in a way that makes formatting decisions
1537a bit difficult. On the one hand, it could be mention of an item
1538"Neque", mention of another item "Porro", and mention of another
1539item "Quisquam Est", with just the last one requiring the explanatory
1540paragraph "Qui dolorem ipsum quia dolor..."; and then an item
1541"Ut Enim". In that case, you'd want to format it like so:
1542
1543 Neque
210b36aa 1544
8a93676d 1545 Porro
210b36aa 1546
8a93676d
SB
1547 Quisquam Est
1548 Qui dolorem ipsum quia dolor sit amet, consectetur, adipisci
1549 velit, sed quia non numquam eius modi tempora incidunt ut
1550 labore et dolore magnam aliquam quaerat voluptatem.
1551
1552 Ut Enim
1553
1554But it could equally well be a discussion of three (related or equivalent)
1555items, "Neque", "Porro", and "Quisquam Est", followed by a paragraph
1556explaining them all, and then a new item "Ut Enim". In that case, you'd
1557probably want to format it like so:
1558
1559 Neque
1560 Porro
1561 Quisquam Est
1562 Qui dolorem ipsum quia dolor sit amet, consectetur, adipisci
1563 velit, sed quia non numquam eius modi tempora incidunt ut
1564 labore et dolore magnam aliquam quaerat voluptatem.
1565
1566 Ut Enim
1567
353c6505 1568But (for the foreseeable future), Pod does not provide any way for Pod
8a93676d
SB
1569authors to distinguish which grouping is meant by the above
1570"=item"-cluster structure. So formatters should format it like so:
1571
1572 Neque
1573
1574 Porro
1575
1576 Quisquam Est
1577
1578 Qui dolorem ipsum quia dolor sit amet, consectetur, adipisci
1579 velit, sed quia non numquam eius modi tempora incidunt ut
1580 labore et dolore magnam aliquam quaerat voluptatem.
1581
1582 Ut Enim
1583
210b36aa 1584That is, there should be (at least roughly) equal spacing between
8a93676d
SB
1585items as between paragraphs (although that spacing may well be less
1586than the full height of a line of text). This leaves it to the reader
1587to use (con)textual cues to figure out whether the "Qui dolorem
1588ipsum..." paragraph applies to the "Quisquam Est" item or to all three
1589items "Neque", "Porro", and "Quisquam Est". While not an ideal
1590situation, this is preferable to providing formatting cues that may
1591be actually contrary to the author's intent.
1592
1593=back
1594
1595
1596
1597=head1 About Data Paragraphs and "=begin/=end" Regions
1598
1599Data paragraphs are typically used for inlining non-Pod data that is
1600to be used (typically passed through) when rendering the document to
1601a specific format:
1602
1603 =begin rtf
210b36aa 1604
8a93676d 1605 \par{\pard\qr\sa4500{\i Printed\~\chdate\~\chtime}\par}
210b36aa 1606
8a93676d
SB
1607 =end rtf
1608
1609The exact same effect could, incidentally, be achieved with a single
1610"=for" paragraph:
1611
1612 =for rtf \par{\pard\qr\sa4500{\i Printed\~\chdate\~\chtime}\par}
1613
1614(Although that is not formally a data paragraph, it has the same
1615meaning as one, and Pod parsers may parse it as one.)
1616
1617Another example of a data paragraph:
1618
1619 =begin html
210b36aa 1620
8a93676d 1621 I like <em>PIE</em>!
210b36aa 1622
8a93676d 1623 <hr>Especially pecan pie!
210b36aa 1624
8a93676d
SB
1625 =end html
1626
1627If these were ordinary paragraphs, the Pod parser would try to
1628expand the "EE<lt>/em>" (in the first paragraph) as a formatting
1629code, just like "EE<lt>lt>" or "EE<lt>eacute>". But since this
1630is in a "=begin I<identifier>"..."=end I<identifier>" region I<and>
1631the identifier "html" doesn't begin have a ":" prefix, the contents
1632of this region are stored as data paragraphs, instead of being
1633processed as ordinary paragraphs (or if they began with a spaces
1634and/or tabs, as verbatim paragraphs).
1635
1636As a further example: At time of writing, no "biblio" identifier is
1637supported, but suppose some processor were written to recognize it as
1638a way of (say) denoting a bibliographic reference (necessarily
1639containing formatting codes in ordinary paragraphs). The fact that
1640"biblio" paragraphs were meant for ordinary processing would be
1641indicated by prefacing each "biblio" identifier with a colon:
1642
1643 =begin :biblio
1644
1645 Wirth, Niklaus. 1976. I<Algorithms + Data Structures =
1646 Programs.> Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ.
1647
1648 =end :biblio
1649
1650This would signal to the parser that paragraphs in this begin...end
1651region are subject to normal handling as ordinary/verbatim paragraphs
1652(while still tagged as meant only for processors that understand the
1653"biblio" identifier). The same effect could be had with:
1654
1655 =for :biblio
1656 Wirth, Niklaus. 1976. I<Algorithms + Data Structures =
1657 Programs.> Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ.
1658
1659The ":" on these identifiers means simply "process this stuff
1660normally, even though the result will be for some special target".
1661I suggest that parser APIs report "biblio" as the target identifier,
1662but also report that it had a ":" prefix. (And similarly, with the
1663above "html", report "html" as the target identifier, and note the
1664I<lack> of a ":" prefix.)
1665
1666Note that a "=begin I<identifier>"..."=end I<identifier>" region where
1667I<identifier> begins with a colon, I<can> contain commands. For example:
1668
1669 =begin :biblio
210b36aa 1670
8a93676d 1671 Wirth's classic is available in several editions, including:
210b36aa 1672
8a93676d
SB
1673 =for comment
1674 hm, check abebooks.com for how much used copies cost.
210b36aa 1675
8a93676d 1676 =over
210b36aa 1677
8a93676d 1678 =item
210b36aa 1679
8a93676d
SB
1680 Wirth, Niklaus. 1975. I<Algorithmen und Datenstrukturen.>
1681 Teubner, Stuttgart. [Yes, it's in German.]
210b36aa 1682
8a93676d 1683 =item
210b36aa 1684
8a93676d
SB
1685 Wirth, Niklaus. 1976. I<Algorithms + Data Structures =
1686 Programs.> Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ.
210b36aa 1687
8a93676d 1688 =back
210b36aa 1689
8a93676d
SB
1690 =end :biblio
1691
1692Note, however, a "=begin I<identifier>"..."=end I<identifier>"
1693region where I<identifier> does I<not> begin with a colon, should not
1694directly contain "=head1" ... "=head4" commands, nor "=over", nor "=back",
1695nor "=item". For example, this may be considered invalid:
1696
1697 =begin somedata
210b36aa 1698
8a93676d 1699 This is a data paragraph.
210b36aa 1700
8a93676d 1701 =head1 Don't do this!
210b36aa 1702
8a93676d 1703 This is a data paragraph too.
210b36aa 1704
8a93676d
SB
1705 =end somedata
1706
1707A Pod processor may signal that the above (specifically the "=head1"
1708paragraph) is an error. Note, however, that the following should
1709I<not> be treated as an error:
1710
1711 =begin somedata
210b36aa 1712
8a93676d 1713 This is a data paragraph.
210b36aa 1714
8a93676d 1715 =cut
210b36aa 1716
8a93676d
SB
1717 # Yup, this isn't Pod anymore.
1718 sub excl { (rand() > .5) ? "hoo!" : "hah!" }
210b36aa 1719
8a93676d 1720 =pod
210b36aa 1721
8a93676d 1722 This is a data paragraph too.
210b36aa 1723
8a93676d
SB
1724 =end somedata
1725
1726And this too is valid:
1727
1728 =begin someformat
210b36aa 1729
8a93676d 1730 This is a data paragraph.
210b36aa 1731
8a93676d 1732 And this is a data paragraph.
210b36aa 1733
8a93676d 1734 =begin someotherformat
210b36aa 1735
8a93676d 1736 This is a data paragraph too.
210b36aa 1737
8a93676d 1738 And this is a data paragraph too.
210b36aa 1739
8a93676d
SB
1740 =begin :yetanotherformat
1741
1742 =head2 This is a command paragraph!
1743
1744 This is an ordinary paragraph!
210b36aa 1745
8a93676d 1746 And this is a verbatim paragraph!
210b36aa 1747
8a93676d 1748 =end :yetanotherformat
210b36aa 1749
8a93676d 1750 =end someotherformat
210b36aa 1751
8a93676d 1752 Another data paragraph!
210b36aa 1753
8a93676d
SB
1754 =end someformat
1755
1756The contents of the above "=begin :yetanotherformat" ...
1757"=end :yetanotherformat" region I<aren't> data paragraphs, because
1758the immediately containing region's identifier (":yetanotherformat")
1759begins with a colon. In practice, most regions that contain
1760data paragraphs will contain I<only> data paragraphs; however,
1761the above nesting is syntactically valid as Pod, even if it is
1762rare. However, the handlers for some formats, like "html",
1763will accept only data paragraphs, not nested regions; and they may
1764complain if they see (targeted for them) nested regions, or commands,
1765other than "=end", "=pod", and "=cut".
1766
1767Also consider this valid structure:
1768
1769 =begin :biblio
210b36aa 1770
8a93676d 1771 Wirth's classic is available in several editions, including:
210b36aa 1772
8a93676d 1773 =over
210b36aa 1774
8a93676d 1775 =item
210b36aa 1776
8a93676d
SB
1777 Wirth, Niklaus. 1975. I<Algorithmen und Datenstrukturen.>
1778 Teubner, Stuttgart. [Yes, it's in German.]
210b36aa 1779
8a93676d 1780 =item
210b36aa 1781
8a93676d
SB
1782 Wirth, Niklaus. 1976. I<Algorithms + Data Structures =
1783 Programs.> Prentice-Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ.
1784
1785 =back
210b36aa 1786
8a93676d 1787 Buy buy buy!
210b36aa 1788
8a93676d 1789 =begin html
210b36aa 1790
8a93676d 1791 <img src='wirth_spokesmodeling_book.png'>
210b36aa 1792
8a93676d 1793 <hr>
210b36aa 1794
8a93676d 1795 =end html
210b36aa 1796
8a93676d 1797 Now now now!
210b36aa 1798
8a93676d
SB
1799 =end :biblio
1800
1801There, the "=begin html"..."=end html" region is nested inside
1802the larger "=begin :biblio"..."=end :biblio" region. Note that the
1803content of the "=begin html"..."=end html" region is data
1804paragraph(s), because the immediately containing region's identifier
1805("html") I<doesn't> begin with a colon.
1806
1807Pod parsers, when processing a series of data paragraphs one
1808after another (within a single region), should consider them to
1809be one large data paragraph that happens to contain blank lines. So
1810the content of the above "=begin html"..."=end html" I<may> be stored
1811as two data paragraphs (one consisting of
1812"<img src='wirth_spokesmodeling_book.png'>\n"
1813and another consisting of "<hr>\n"), but I<should> be stored as
1814a single data paragraph (consisting of
1815"<img src='wirth_spokesmodeling_book.png'>\n\n<hr>\n").
1816
1817Pod processors should tolerate empty
1818"=begin I<something>"..."=end I<something>" regions,
1819empty "=begin :I<something>"..."=end :I<something>" regions, and
1820contentless "=for I<something>" and "=for :I<something>"
1821paragraphs. I.e., these should be tolerated:
1822
1823 =for html
210b36aa 1824
8a93676d 1825 =begin html
210b36aa 1826
8a93676d 1827 =end html
210b36aa 1828
8a93676d 1829 =begin :biblio
210b36aa 1830
8a93676d
SB
1831 =end :biblio
1832
1833Incidentally, note that there's no easy way to express a data
1834paragraph starting with something that looks like a command. Consider:
1835
1836 =begin stuff
210b36aa 1837
8a93676d 1838 =shazbot
210b36aa 1839
8a93676d
SB
1840 =end stuff
1841
1842There, "=shazbot" will be parsed as a Pod command "shazbot", not as a data
1843paragraph "=shazbot\n". However, you can express a data paragraph consisting
1844of "=shazbot\n" using this code:
1845
1846 =for stuff =shazbot
1847
1848The situation where this is necessary, is presumably quite rare.
1849
1850Note that =end commands must match the currently open =begin command. That
1851is, they must properly nest. For example, this is valid:
1852
1853 =begin outer
210b36aa 1854
8a93676d 1855 X
210b36aa 1856
8a93676d 1857 =begin inner
210b36aa 1858
8a93676d 1859 Y
210b36aa 1860
8a93676d 1861 =end inner
210b36aa 1862
8a93676d 1863 Z
210b36aa 1864
8a93676d
SB
1865 =end outer
1866
1867while this is invalid:
1868
1869 =begin outer
210b36aa 1870
8a93676d 1871 X
210b36aa 1872
8a93676d 1873 =begin inner
210b36aa 1874
8a93676d 1875 Y
210b36aa 1876
8a93676d 1877 =end outer
210b36aa 1878
8a93676d 1879 Z
210b36aa 1880
8a93676d 1881 =end inner
210b36aa 1882
8a93676d
SB
1883This latter is improper because when the "=end outer" command is seen, the
1884currently open region has the formatname "inner", not "outer". (It just
1885happens that "outer" is the format name of a higher-up region.) This is
1886an error. Processors must by default report this as an error, and may halt
210b36aa 1887processing the document containing that error. A corollary of this is that
ac036724 1888regions cannot "overlap". That is, the latter block above does not represent
8a93676d
SB
1889a region called "outer" which contains X and Y, overlapping a region called
1890"inner" which contains Y and Z. But because it is invalid (as all
1891apparently overlapping regions would be), it doesn't represent that, or
1892anything at all.
1893
1894Similarly, this is invalid:
1895
1896 =begin thing
210b36aa 1897
8a93676d
SB
1898 =end hting
1899
1900This is an error because the region is opened by "thing", and the "=end"
1901tries to close "hting" [sic].
1902
1903This is also invalid:
1904
1905 =begin thing
210b36aa 1906
8a93676d
SB
1907 =end
1908
1909This is invalid because every "=end" command must have a formatname
1910parameter.
1911
1912=head1 SEE ALSO
1913
1914L<perlpod>, L<perlsyn/"PODs: Embedded Documentation">,
1915L<podchecker>
1916
1917=head1 AUTHOR
1918
1919Sean M. Burke
1920
1921=cut
1922
1923