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1
2=for comment
3This document is in Pod format. To read this, use a Pod formatter,
4like "perldoc perlpod".
5
a0d0e21e 6=head1 NAME
d74e8afc 7X<POD> X<plain old documentation>
a0d0e21e 8
8a93676d 9perlpod - the Plain Old Documentation format
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10
11=head1 DESCRIPTION
12
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13Pod is a simple-to-use markup language used for writing documentation
14for Perl, Perl programs, and Perl modules.
15
16Translators are available for converting Pod to various formats
17like plain text, HTML, man pages, and more.
18
19Pod markup consists of three basic kinds of paragraphs:
20L<ordinary|/"Ordinary Paragraph">,
21L<verbatim|/"Verbatim Paragraph">, and
22L<command|/"Command Paragraph">.
23
24
25=head2 Ordinary Paragraph
d74e8afc 26X<POD, ordinary paragraph>
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27
28Most paragraphs in your documentation will be ordinary blocks
29of text, like this one. You can simply type in your text without
30any markup whatsoever, and with just a blank line before and
31after. When it gets formatted, it will undergo minimal formatting,
32like being rewrapped, probably put into a proportionally spaced
33font, and maybe even justified.
34
35You can use formatting codes in ordinary paragraphs, for B<bold>,
36I<italic>, C<code-style>, L<hyperlinks|perlfaq>, and more. Such
37codes are explained in the "L<Formatting Codes|/"Formatting Codes">"
38section, below.
39
a0d0e21e 40
b74bceb9 41=head2 Verbatim Paragraph
d74e8afc 42X<POD, verbatim paragraph> X<verbatim>
a0d0e21e 43
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44Verbatim paragraphs are usually used for presenting a codeblock or
45other text which does not require any special parsing or formatting,
46and which shouldn't be wrapped.
47
48A verbatim paragraph is distinguished by having its first character
49be a space or a tab. (And commonly, all its lines begin with spaces
50and/or tabs.) It should be reproduced exactly, with tabs assumed to
51be on 8-column boundaries. There are no special formatting codes,
52so you can't italicize or anything like that. A \ means \, and
53nothing else.
54
a0d0e21e 55
b74bceb9 56=head2 Command Paragraph
d74e8afc 57X<POD, command>
b74bceb9 58
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59A command paragraph is used for special treatment of whole chunks
60of text, usually as headings or parts of lists.
61
62All command paragraphs (which are typically only one line long) start
63with "=", followed by an identifier, followed by arbitrary text that
64the command can use however it pleases. Currently recognized commands
65are
a0d0e21e 66
2757242d 67 =pod
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68 =head1 Heading Text
69 =head2 Heading Text
70 =head3 Heading Text
71 =head4 Heading Text
72 =over indentlevel
73 =item stuff
a0d0e21e 74 =back
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75 =begin format
76 =end format
77 =for format text...
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78 =encoding type
79 =cut
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80
81To explain them each in detail:
82
83=over
84
85=item C<=head1 I<Heading Text>>
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86X<=head1> X<=head2> X<=head3> X<=head4>
87X<head1> X<head2> X<head3> X<head4>
cb1a09d0 88
8a93676d 89=item C<=head2 I<Heading Text>>
b74bceb9 90
8a93676d 91=item C<=head3 I<Heading Text>>
b74bceb9 92
8a93676d 93=item C<=head4 I<Heading Text>>
b74bceb9 94
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95Head1 through head4 produce headings, head1 being the highest
96level. The text in the rest of this paragraph is the content of the
97heading. For example:
cb1a09d0 98
8a93676d 99 =head2 Object Attributes
b74bceb9 100
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101The text "Object Attributes" comprises the heading there.
102The text in these heading commands can use formatting codes, as seen here:
b74bceb9 103
8a93676d 104 =head2 Possible Values for C<$/>
c6b85e5d 105
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106Such commands are explained in the
107"L<Formatting Codes|/"Formatting Codes">" section, below.
c6b85e5d 108
8a93676d 109=item C<=over I<indentlevel>>
d74e8afc 110X<=over> X<=item> X<=back> X<over> X<item> X<back>
cb1a09d0 111
8a93676d 112=item C<=item I<stuff...>>
b74bceb9 113
8a93676d 114=item C<=back>
b74bceb9 115
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116Item, over, and back require a little more explanation: "=over" starts
117a region specifically for the generation of a list using "=item"
118commands, or for indenting (groups of) normal paragraphs. At the end
119of your list, use "=back" to end it. The I<indentlevel> option to
120"=over" indicates how far over to indent, generally in ems (where
121one em is the width of an "M" in the document's base font) or roughly
122comparable units; if there is no I<indentlevel> option, it defaults
123to four. (And some formatters may just ignore whatever I<indentlevel>
124you provide.) In the I<stuff> in C<=item I<stuff...>>, you may
125use formatting codes, as seen here:
b74bceb9 126
8a93676d 127 =item Using C<$|> to Control Buffering
cb1a09d0 128
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129Such commands are explained in the
130"L<Formatting Codes|/"Formatting Codes">" section, below.
b74bceb9 131
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132Note also that there are some basic rules to using "=over" ...
133"=back" regions:
b74bceb9 134
8a93676d 135=over
b74bceb9 136
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137=item *
138
139Don't use "=item"s outside of an "=over" ... "=back" region.
140
141=item *
c7c9f956 142
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143The first thing after the "=over" command should be an "=item", unless
144there aren't going to be any items at all in this "=over" ... "=back"
145region.
146
147=item *
148
149Don't put "=headI<n>" commands inside an "=over" ... "=back" region.
150
151=item *
152
153And perhaps most importantly, keep the items consistent: either use
154"=item *" for all of them, to produce bullets; or use "=item 1.",
155"=item 2.", etc., to produce numbered lists; or use "=item foo",
ac036724 156"=item bar", etc.--namely, things that look nothing like bullets or
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157numbers.
158
159If you start with bullets or numbers, stick with them, as
160formatters use the first "=item" type to decide how to format the
161list.
162
163=back
164
165=item C<=cut>
d74e8afc 166X<=cut> X<cut>
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167
168To end a Pod block, use a blank line,
169then a line beginning with "=cut", and a blank
170line after it. This lets Perl (and the Pod formatter) know that
171this is where Perl code is resuming. (The blank line before the "=cut"
172is not technically necessary, but many older Pod processors require it.)
173
174=item C<=pod>
d74e8afc 175X<=pod> X<pod>
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176
177The "=pod" command by itself doesn't do much of anything, but it
178signals to Perl (and Pod formatters) that a Pod block starts here. A
179Pod block starts with I<any> command paragraph, so a "=pod" command is
180usually used just when you want to start a Pod block with an ordinary
181paragraph or a verbatim paragraph. For example:
182
183 =item stuff()
210b36aa 184
8a93676d 185 This function does stuff.
210b36aa 186
8a93676d 187 =cut
210b36aa 188
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189 sub stuff {
190 ...
191 }
210b36aa 192
8a93676d 193 =pod
210b36aa 194
8a93676d 195 Remember to check its return value, as in:
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196
197 stuff() || die "Couldn't do stuff!";
198
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199 =cut
200
201=item C<=begin I<formatname>>
d74e8afc 202X<=begin> X<=end> X<=for> X<begin> X<end> X<for>
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203
204=item C<=end I<formatname>>
205
206=item C<=for I<formatname> I<text...>>
207
208For, begin, and end will let you have regions of text/code/data that
209are not generally interpreted as normal Pod text, but are passed
210directly to particular formatters, or are otherwise special. A
211formatter that can use that format will use the region, otherwise it
212will be completely ignored.
213
214A command "=begin I<formatname>", some paragraphs, and a
353c6505 215command "=end I<formatname>", mean that the text/data in between
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216is meant for formatters that understand the special format
217called I<formatname>. For example,
218
219 =begin html
210b36aa 220
8a93676d 221 <hr> <img src="thang.png">
c7c9f956 222 <p> This is a raw HTML paragraph </p>
210b36aa 223
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224 =end html
225
226The command "=for I<formatname> I<text...>"
227specifies that the remainder of just this paragraph (starting
228right after I<formatname>) is in that special format.
229
230 =for html <hr> <img src="thang.png">
231 <p> This is a raw HTML paragraph </p>
232
233This means the same thing as the above "=begin html" ... "=end html"
234region.
c7c9f956 235
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236That is, with "=for", you can have only one paragraph's worth
237of text (i.e., the text in "=foo targetname text..."), but with
238"=begin targetname" ... "=end targetname", you can have any amount
1cecf2c0 239of stuff in between. (Note that there still must be a blank line
8a93676d 240after the "=begin" command and a blank line before the "=end"
943fc58e 241command.)
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242
243Here are some examples of how to use these:
244
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245 =begin html
246
247 <br>Figure 1.<br><IMG SRC="figure1.png"><br>
248
249 =end html
250
251 =begin text
252
253 ---------------
254 | foo |
255 | bar |
256 ---------------
a6006777 257
8a93676d 258 ^^^^ Figure 1. ^^^^
a6006777 259
8a93676d 260 =end text
a6006777 261
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262Some format names that formatters currently are known to accept
263include "roff", "man", "latex", "tex", "text", and "html". (Some
264formatters will treat some of these as synonyms.)
a6006777 265
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266A format name of "comment" is common for just making notes (presumably
267to yourself) that won't appear in any formatted version of the Pod
268document:
a6006777 269
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270 =for comment
271 Make sure that all the available options are documented!
a6006777 272
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273Some I<formatnames> will require a leading colon (as in
274C<"=for :formatname">, or
275C<"=begin :formatname" ... "=end :formatname">),
276to signal that the text is not raw data, but instead I<is> Pod text
277(i.e., possibly containing formatting codes) that's just not for
278normal formatting (e.g., may not be a normal-use paragraph, but might
279be for formatting as a footnote).
c7c9f956 280
a179871b 281=item C<=encoding I<encodingname>>
d74e8afc 282X<=encoding> X<encoding>
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283
284This command is used for declaring the encoding of a document. Most
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285users won't need this; but if your encoding isn't US-ASCII,
286then put a C<=encoding I<encodingname>> command very early in the document so
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287that pod formatters will know how to decode the document. For
288I<encodingname>, use a name recognized by the L<Encode::Supported>
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289module. Some pod formatters may try to guess between a Latin-1 or
290CP-1252 versus
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291UTF-8 encoding, but they may guess wrong. It's best to be explicit if
292you use anything besides strict ASCII. Examples:
293
294 =encoding latin1
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295
296 =encoding utf8
297
298 =encoding koi8-r
f703fc96 299
a179871b 300 =encoding ShiftJIS
f703fc96 301
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302 =encoding big5
303
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304C<=encoding> affects the whole document, and must occur only once.
305
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306=back
307
308And don't forget, all commands but C<=encoding> last up
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309until the end of its I<paragraph>, not its line. So in the
310examples below, you can see that every command needs the blank
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311line after it, to end its paragraph. (And some older Pod translators
312may require the C<=encoding> line to have a following blank line as
313well, even though it should be legal to omit.)
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314
315Some examples of lists include:
316
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317 =over
318
319 =item *
320
321 First item
322
323 =item *
324
325 Second item
326
327 =back
328
329 =over
330
331 =item Foo()
332
333 Description of Foo function
334
335 =item Bar()
cb1a09d0 336
8a93676d 337 Description of Bar function
cb1a09d0 338
8a93676d 339 =back
cb1a09d0 340
cb1a09d0 341
8a93676d 342=head2 Formatting Codes
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343X<POD, formatting code> X<formatting code>
344X<POD, interior sequence> X<interior sequence>
cb1a09d0 345
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346In ordinary paragraphs and in some command paragraphs, various
347formatting codes (a.k.a. "interior sequences") can be used:
cb1a09d0 348
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349=for comment
350 "interior sequences" is such an opaque term.
351 Prefer "formatting codes" instead.
cb1a09d0 352
8a93676d 353=over
cb1a09d0 354
8a93676d 355=item C<IE<lt>textE<gt>> -- italic text
d74e8afc 356X<I> X<< IZ<><> >> X<POD, formatting code, italic> X<italic>
cb1a09d0 357
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358Used for emphasis ("C<be IE<lt>careful!E<gt>>") and parameters
359("C<redo IE<lt>LABELE<gt>>")
360
361=item C<BE<lt>textE<gt>> -- bold text
d74e8afc 362X<B> X<< BZ<><> >> X<POD, formatting code, bold> X<bold>
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363
364Used for switches ("C<perl's BE<lt>-nE<gt> switch>"), programs
365("C<some systems provide a BE<lt>chfnE<gt> for that>"),
366emphasis ("C<be BE<lt>careful!E<gt>>"), and so on
367("C<and that feature is known as BE<lt>autovivificationE<gt>>").
368
369=item C<CE<lt>codeE<gt>> -- code text
d74e8afc 370X<C> X<< CZ<><> >> X<POD, formatting code, code> X<code>
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371
372Renders code in a typewriter font, or gives some other indication that
373this represents program text ("C<CE<lt>gmtime($^T)E<gt>>") or some other
374form of computerese ("C<CE<lt>drwxr-xr-xE<gt>>").
375
376=item C<LE<lt>nameE<gt>> -- a hyperlink
d74e8afc 377X<L> X<< LZ<><> >> X<POD, formatting code, hyperlink> X<hyperlink>
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378
379There are various syntaxes, listed below. In the syntaxes given,
380C<text>, C<name>, and C<section> cannot contain the characters
381'/' and '|'; and any '<' or '>' should be matched.
382
383=over
384
385=item *
cb1a09d0 386
8a93676d 387C<LE<lt>nameE<gt>>
cb1a09d0 388
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389Link to a Perl manual page (e.g., C<LE<lt>Net::PingE<gt>>). Note
390that C<name> should not contain spaces. This syntax
e1020413 391is also occasionally used for references to Unix man pages, as in
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392C<LE<lt>crontab(5)E<gt>>.
393
394=item *
395
396C<LE<lt>name/"sec"E<gt>> or C<LE<lt>name/secE<gt>>
397
398Link to a section in other manual page. E.g.,
399C<LE<lt>perlsyn/"For Loops"E<gt>>
400
401=item *
402
b41aadf2 403C<LE<lt>/"sec"E<gt>> or C<LE<lt>/secE<gt>>
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404
405Link to a section in this manual page. E.g.,
406C<LE<lt>/"Object Methods"E<gt>>
a0d0e21e 407
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408=back
409
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410A section is started by the named heading or item. For
411example, C<LE<lt>perlvar/$.E<gt>> or C<LE<lt>perlvar/"$."E<gt>> both
412link to the section started by "C<=item $.>" in perlvar. And
413C<LE<lt>perlsyn/For LoopsE<gt>> or C<LE<lt>perlsyn/"For Loops"E<gt>>
414both link to the section started by "C<=head2 For Loops>"
415in perlsyn.
416
417To control what text is used for display, you
418use "C<LE<lt>text|...E<gt>>", as in:
419
420=over
421
422=item *
423
424C<LE<lt>text|nameE<gt>>
425
426Link this text to that manual page. E.g.,
427C<LE<lt>Perl Error Messages|perldiagE<gt>>
428
429=item *
430
431C<LE<lt>text|name/"sec"E<gt>> or C<LE<lt>text|name/secE<gt>>
432
433Link this text to that section in that manual page. E.g.,
8325efec 434C<LE<lt>postfix "if"|perlsyn/"Statement Modifiers"E<gt>>
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435
436=item *
437
438C<LE<lt>text|/"sec"E<gt>> or C<LE<lt>text|/secE<gt>>
439or C<LE<lt>text|"sec"E<gt>>
440
441Link this text to that section in this manual page. E.g.,
442C<LE<lt>the various attributes|/"Member Data"E<gt>>
443
444=back
445
446Or you can link to a web page:
447
448=over
449
450=item *
451
452C<LE<lt>scheme:...E<gt>>
453
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454C<LE<lt>text|scheme:...E<gt>>
455
456Links to an absolute URL. For example, C<LE<lt>http://www.perl.org/E<gt>> or
457C<LE<lt>The Perl Home Page|http://www.perl.org/E<gt>>.
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458
459=back
460
461=item C<EE<lt>escapeE<gt>> -- a character escape
d74e8afc 462X<E> X<< EZ<><> >> X<POD, formatting code, escape> X<escape>
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463
464Very similar to HTML/XML C<&I<foo>;> "entity references":
465
466=over
467
468=item *
469
470C<EE<lt>ltE<gt>> -- a literal E<lt> (less than)
471
472=item *
473
474C<EE<lt>gtE<gt>> -- a literal E<gt> (greater than)
475
476=item *
477
478C<EE<lt>verbarE<gt>> -- a literal | (I<ver>tical I<bar>)
479
480=item *
481
1f1448d9 482C<EE<lt>solE<gt>> -- a literal / (I<sol>idus)
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483
484The above four are optional except in other formatting codes,
485notably C<LE<lt>...E<gt>>, and when preceded by a
486capital letter.
487
488=item *
489
490C<EE<lt>htmlnameE<gt>>
491
492Some non-numeric HTML entity name, such as C<EE<lt>eacuteE<gt>>,
493meaning the same thing as C<&eacute;> in HTML -- i.e., a lowercase
494e with an acute (/-shaped) accent.
495
496=item *
497
498C<EE<lt>numberE<gt>>
499
1a3afb4f 500The ASCII/Latin-1/Unicode character with that number. A
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501leading "0x" means that I<number> is hex, as in
502C<EE<lt>0x201EE<gt>>. A leading "0" means that I<number> is octal,
503as in C<EE<lt>075E<gt>>. Otherwise I<number> is interpreted as being
504in decimal, as in C<EE<lt>181E<gt>>.
505
506Note that older Pod formatters might not recognize octal or
507hex numeric escapes, and that many formatters cannot reliably
508render characters above 255. (Some formatters may even have
8f226aee 509to use compromised renderings of Latin-1/CP-1252 characters, like
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510rendering C<EE<lt>eacuteE<gt>> as just a plain "e".)
511
512=back
513
514=item C<FE<lt>filenameE<gt>> -- used for filenames
d74e8afc 515X<F> X<< FZ<><> >> X<POD, formatting code, filename> X<filename>
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516
517Typically displayed in italics. Example: "C<FE<lt>.cshrcE<gt>>"
518
519=item C<SE<lt>textE<gt>> -- text contains non-breaking spaces
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520X<S> X<< SZ<><> >> X<POD, formatting code, non-breaking space>
521X<non-breaking space>
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522
523This means that the words in I<text> should not be broken
524across lines. Example: S<C<SE<lt>$x ? $y : $zE<gt>>>.
525
526=item C<XE<lt>topic nameE<gt>> -- an index entry
d74e8afc 527X<X> X<< XZ<><> >> X<POD, formatting code, index entry> X<index entry>
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528
529This is ignored by most formatters, but some may use it for building
530indexes. It always renders as empty-string.
531Example: C<XE<lt>absolutizing relative URLsE<gt>>
532
533=item C<ZE<lt>E<gt>> -- a null (zero-effect) formatting code
d74e8afc 534X<Z> X<< ZZ<><> >> X<POD, formatting code, null> X<null>
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535
536This is rarely used. It's one way to get around using an
537EE<lt>...E<gt> code sometimes. For example, instead of
538"C<NEE<lt>ltE<gt>3>" (for "NE<lt>3") you could write
539"C<NZE<lt>E<gt>E<lt>3>" (the "ZE<lt>E<gt>" breaks up the "N" and
540the "E<lt>" so they can't be considered
6c1c521a 541the part of a (fictitious) "NE<lt>...E<gt>" code).
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542
543=for comment
544 This was formerly explained as a "zero-width character". But it in
545 most parser models, it parses to nothing at all, as opposed to parsing
546 as if it were a E<zwnj> or E<zwj>, which are REAL zero-width characters.
547 So "width" and "character" are exactly the wrong words.
548
549=back
550
551Most of the time, you will need only a single set of angle brackets to
552delimit the beginning and end of formatting codes. However,
553sometimes you will want to put a real right angle bracket (a
554greater-than sign, '>') inside of a formatting code. This is particularly
555common when using a formatting code to provide a different font-type for a
556snippet of code. As with all things in Perl, there is more than
557one way to do it. One way is to simply escape the closing bracket
558using an C<E> code:
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559
560 C<$a E<lt>=E<gt> $b>
561
562This will produce: "C<$a E<lt>=E<gt> $b>"
563
8a93676d 564A more readable, and perhaps more "plain" way is to use an alternate
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565set of delimiters that doesn't require a single ">" to be escaped.
566Doubled angle brackets ("<<" and ">>") may be used I<if and only if there is
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567whitespace right after the opening delimiter and whitespace right
568before the closing delimiter!> For example, the following will
569do the trick:
d74e8afc 570X<POD, formatting code, escaping with multiple brackets>
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571
572 C<< $a <=> $b >>
573
574In fact, you can use as many repeated angle-brackets as you like so
575long as you have the same number of them in the opening and closing
576delimiters, and make sure that whitespace immediately follows the last
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577'<' of the opening delimiter, and immediately precedes the first '>'
578of the closing delimiter. (The whitespace is ignored.) So the
579following will also work:
d74e8afc 580X<POD, formatting code, escaping with multiple brackets>
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581
582 C<<< $a <=> $b >>>
8a93676d 583 C<<<< $a <=> $b >>>>
5455df32 584
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585And they all mean exactly the same as this:
586
587 C<$a E<lt>=E<gt> $b>
588
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589The multiple-bracket form does not affect the interpretation of the contents of
590the formatting code, only how it must end. That means that the examples above
591are also exactly the same as this:
592
593 C<< $a E<lt>=E<gt> $b >>
594
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595As a further example, this means that if you wanted to put these bits of
596code in C<C> (code) style:
597
598 open(X, ">>thing.dat") || die $!
599 $foo->bar();
600
601you could do it like so:
602
603 C<<< open(X, ">>thing.dat") || die $! >>>
604 C<< $foo->bar(); >>
5455df32 605
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606which is presumably easier to read than the old way:
607
608 C<open(X, "E<gt>E<gt>thing.dat") || die $!>
c58e3c1c 609 C<$foo-E<gt>bar();>
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610
611This is currently supported by pod2text (Pod::Text), pod2man (Pod::Man),
612and any other pod2xxx or Pod::Xxxx translators that use
613Pod::Parser 1.093 or later, or Pod::Tree 1.02 or later.
5455df32 614
b74bceb9 615=head2 The Intent
d74e8afc 616X<POD, intent of>
3141265f 617
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618The intent is simplicity of use, not power of expression. Paragraphs
619look like paragraphs (block format), so that they stand out
620visually, and so that I could run them through C<fmt> easily to reformat
621them (that's F7 in my version of B<vi>, or Esc Q in my version of
622B<emacs>). I wanted the translator to always leave the C<'> and C<`> and
623C<"> quotes alone, in verbatim mode, so I could slurp in a
624working program, shift it over four spaces, and have it print out, er,
625verbatim. And presumably in a monospace font.
626
627The Pod format is not necessarily sufficient for writing a book. Pod
628is just meant to be an idiot-proof common source for nroff, HTML,
629TeX, and other markup languages, as used for online
630documentation. Translators exist for B<pod2text>, B<pod2html>,
631B<pod2man> (that's for nroff(1) and troff(1)), B<pod2latex>, and
632B<pod2fm>. Various others are available in CPAN.
633
a0d0e21e 634
b74bceb9 635=head2 Embedding Pods in Perl Modules
d74e8afc 636X<POD, embedding>
4633a7c4 637
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638You can embed Pod documentation in your Perl modules and scripts. Start
639your documentation with an empty line, a "=head1" command at the
640beginning, and end it with a "=cut" command and an empty line. The
641B<perl> executable will ignore the Pod text. You can place a Pod
642statement where B<perl> expects the beginning of a new statement, but
643not within a statement, as that would result in an error. See any of
644the supplied library modules for examples.
645
646If you're going to put your Pod at the end of the file, and you're using
647an C<__END__> or C<__DATA__> cut mark, make sure to put an empty line there
648before the first Pod command.
cb1a09d0 649
8a93676d 650 __END__
cb1a09d0 651
8a93676d 652 =head1 NAME
cb1a09d0 653
8a93676d 654 Time::Local - efficiently compute time from local and GMT time
cb1a09d0 655
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656Without that empty line before the "=head1", many translators wouldn't
657have recognized the "=head1" as starting a Pod block.
cb1a09d0 658
8a93676d 659=head2 Hints for Writing Pod
1294c5d8 660
8a93676d 661=over
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662
663=item *
d74e8afc 664X<podchecker> X<POD, validating>
1294c5d8 665
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666The B<podchecker> command is provided for checking Pod syntax for errors
667and warnings. For example, it checks for completely blank lines in
668Pod blocks and for unknown commands and formatting codes. You should
669still also pass your document through one or more translators and proofread
670the result, or print out the result and proofread that. Some of the
671problems found may be bugs in the translators, which you may or may not
672wish to work around.
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673
674=item *
675
8a93676d 676If you're more familiar with writing in HTML than with writing in Pod, you
210b36aa 677can try your hand at writing documentation in simple HTML, and converting
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678it to Pod with the experimental L<Pod::HTML2Pod|Pod::HTML2Pod> module,
679(available in CPAN), and looking at the resulting code. The experimental
680L<Pod::PXML|Pod::PXML> module in CPAN might also be useful.
681
682=item *
683
684Many older Pod translators require the lines before every Pod
685command and after every Pod command (including "=cut"!) to be a blank
686line. Having something like this:
687
688 # - - - - - - - - - - - -
689 =item $firecracker->boom()
210b36aa 690
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691 This noisily detonates the firecracker object.
692 =cut
693 sub boom {
694 ...
695
696...will make such Pod translators completely fail to see the Pod block
697at all.
698
699Instead, have it like this:
700
701 # - - - - - - - - - - - -
210b36aa 702
8a93676d 703 =item $firecracker->boom()
210b36aa 704
8a93676d 705 This noisily detonates the firecracker object.
210b36aa 706
8a93676d 707 =cut
210b36aa 708
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709 sub boom {
710 ...
711
712=item *
713
714Some older Pod translators require paragraphs (including command
715paragraphs like "=head2 Functions") to be separated by I<completely>
716empty lines. If you have an apparently empty line with some spaces
717on it, this might not count as a separator for those translators, and
718that could cause odd formatting.
719
720=item *
1294c5d8 721
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722Older translators might add wording around an LE<lt>E<gt> link, so that
723C<LE<lt>Foo::BarE<gt>> may become "the Foo::Bar manpage", for example.
724So you shouldn't write things like C<the LE<lt>fooE<gt>
ac036724 725documentation>, if you want the translated document to read sensibly.
726Instead, write C<the LE<lt>Foo::Bar|Foo::BarE<gt> documentation> or
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727C<LE<lt>the Foo::Bar documentation|Foo::BarE<gt>>, to control how the
728link comes out.
b74bceb9 729
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730=item *
731
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732Going past the 70th column in a verbatim block might be ungracefully
733wrapped by some formatters.
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734
735=back
736
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737=head1 SEE ALSO
738
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739L<perlpodspec>, L<perlsyn/"PODs: Embedded Documentation">,
740L<perlnewmod>, L<perldoc>, L<pod2html>, L<pod2man>, L<podchecker>.
4633a7c4 741
cb1a09d0 742=head1 AUTHOR
a0d0e21e 743
8a93676d 744Larry Wall, Sean M. Burke
a0d0e21e 745
8a93676d 746=cut