=pod =head1 NAME Pod::Simple::XHTML -- format Pod as validating XHTML =head1 SYNOPSIS use Pod::Simple::XHTML; my $parser = Pod::Simple::XHTML->new(); ... $parser->parse_file('path/to/file.pod'); =head1 DESCRIPTION This class is a formatter that takes Pod and renders it as XHTML validating HTML. This is a subclass of L and inherits all its methods. The implementation is entirely different than L, but it largely preserves the same interface. =cut package Pod::Simple::XHTML; use strict; use vars qw( $VERSION @ISA $HAS_HTML_ENTITIES ); $VERSION = '3.04'; use Carp (); use Pod::Simple::Methody (); @ISA = ('Pod::Simple::Methody'); BEGIN { $HAS_HTML_ENTITIES = eval "require HTML::Entities; 1"; } my %entities = ( q{>} => 'gt', q{<} => 'lt', q{'} => '#39', q{"} => 'quot', q{&} => 'amp', ); sub encode_entities { return HTML::Entities::encode_entities( $_[0] ) if $HAS_HTML_ENTITIES; my $str = $_[0]; my $ents = join '', keys %entities; $str =~ s/([$ents])/'&' . $entities{$1} . ';'/ge; return $str; } #~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ =head1 METHODS Pod::Simple::XHTML offers a number of methods that modify the format of the HTML output. Call these after creating the parser object, but before the call to C: my $parser = Pod::PseudoPod::HTML->new(); $parser->set_optional_param("value"); $parser->parse_file($file); =head2 perldoc_url_prefix In turning L into http://whatever/Foo%3a%3aBar, what to put before the "Foo%3a%3aBar". The default value is "http://search.cpan.org/perldoc?". =head2 perldoc_url_postfix What to put after "Foo%3a%3aBar" in the URL. This option is not set by default. =head2 title_prefix, title_postfix What to put before and after the title in the head. The values should already be &-escaped. =head2 html_css $parser->html_css('path/to/style.css'); The URL or relative path of a CSS file to include. This option is not set by default. =head2 html_javascript The URL or relative path of a JavaScript file to pull in. This option is not set by default. =head2 html_doctype A document type tag for the file. This option is not set by default. =head2 html_header_tags Additional arbitrary HTML tags for the header of the document. The default value is just a content type header tag: Add additional meta tags here, or blocks of inline CSS or JavaScript (wrapped in the appropriate tags). =head2 default_title Set a default title for the page if no title can be determined from the content. The value of this string should already be &-escaped. =head2 force_title Force a title for the page (don't try to determine it from the content). The value of this string should already be &-escaped. =head2 html_header, html_footer Set the HTML output at the beginning and end of each file. The default header includes a title, a doctype tag (if C is set), a content tag (customized by C), a tag for a CSS file (if C is set), and a tag for a Javascript file (if C is set). The default footer simply closes the C and C tags. The options listed above customize parts of the default header, but setting C or C completely overrides the built-in header or footer. These may be useful if you want to use template tags instead of literal HTML headers and footers or are integrating converted POD pages in a larger website. If you want no headers or footers output in the HTML, set these options to the empty string. =head2 index TODO -- Not implemented. Whether to add a table-of-contents at the top of each page (called an index for the sake of tradition). =cut __PACKAGE__->_accessorize( 'perldoc_url_prefix', 'perldoc_url_postfix', 'title_prefix', 'title_postfix', 'html_css', 'html_javascript', 'html_doctype', 'html_header_tags', 'title', # Used internally for the title extracted from the content 'default_title', 'force_title', 'html_header', 'html_footer', 'index', 'batch_mode', # whether we're in batch mode 'batch_mode_current_level', # When in batch mode, how deep the current module is: 1 for "LWP", # 2 for "LWP::Procotol", 3 for "LWP::Protocol::GHTTP", etc ); #~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ =head1 SUBCLASSING If the standard options aren't enough, you may want to subclass Pod::Simple::XHMTL. These are the most likely candidates for methods you'll want to override when subclassing. =cut sub new { my $self = shift; my $new = $self->SUPER::new(@_); $new->{'output_fh'} ||= *STDOUT{IO}; $new->accept_targets( 'html', 'HTML' ); $new->perldoc_url_prefix('http://search.cpan.org/perldoc?'); $new->html_header_tags(''); $new->nix_X_codes(1); $new->codes_in_verbatim(1); $new->{'scratch'} = ''; return $new; } #~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ =head2 handle_text This method handles the body of text within any element: it's the body of a paragraph, or everything between a "=begin" tag and the corresponding "=end" tag, or the text within an L entity, etc. You would want to override this if you are adding a custom element type that does more than just display formatted text. Perhaps adding a way to generate HTML tables from an extended version of POD. So, let's say you want add a custom element called 'foo'. In your subclass's C method, after calling C you'd call: $new->accept_targets_as_text( 'foo' ); Then override the C method in the subclass to check for when "$flags->{'target'}" is equal to 'foo' and set a flag that marks that you're in a foo block (maybe "$self->{'in_foo'} = 1"). Then override the C method to check for the flag, and pass $text to your custom subroutine to construct the HTML output for 'foo' elements, something like: sub handle_text { my ($self, $text) = @_; if ($self->{'in_foo'}) { $self->{'scratch'} .= build_foo_html($text); } else { $self->{'scratch'} .= $text; } } =cut sub handle_text { # escape special characters in HTML (<, >, &, etc) $_[0]{'scratch'} .= $_[0]{'in_verbatim'} ? encode_entities( $_[1] ) : $_[1] } sub start_Para { $_[0]{'scratch'} = '

' } sub start_Verbatim { $_[0]{'scratch'} = '

'; $_[0]{'in_verbatim'} = 1}

sub start_head1 {  $_[0]{'scratch'} = '

' } sub start_head2 { $_[0]{'scratch'} = '

' } sub start_head3 { $_[0]{'scratch'} = '

' } sub start_head4 { $_[0]{'scratch'} = '

' } sub start_item_bullet { $_[0]{'scratch'} = '
  • ' } sub start_item_number { $_[0]{'scratch'} = "
  • $_[1]{'number'}. " } sub start_item_text { $_[0]{'scratch'} = '
  • ' } sub start_over_bullet { $_[0]{'scratch'} = '
      '; $_[0]->emit } sub start_over_text { $_[0]{'scratch'} = '
        '; $_[0]->emit } sub start_over_block { $_[0]{'scratch'} = '
          '; $_[0]->emit } sub start_over_number { $_[0]{'scratch'} = '
            '; $_[0]->emit } sub end_over_bullet { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '
        '; $_[0]->emit } sub end_over_text { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '
      '; $_[0]->emit } sub end_over_block { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '
    '; $_[0]->emit } sub end_over_number { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= ''; $_[0]->emit } # . . . . . Now the actual formatters: sub end_Para { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '

    '; $_[0]->emit } sub end_Verbatim { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '
  • '; $_[0]{'in_verbatim'} = 0; $_[0]->emit; } sub end_head1 { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= ''; $_[0]->emit } sub end_head2 { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= ''; $_[0]->emit } sub end_head3 { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= ''; $_[0]->emit } sub end_head4 { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= ''; $_[0]->emit } sub end_item_bullet { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= ''; $_[0]->emit } sub end_item_number { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= ''; $_[0]->emit } sub end_item_text { $_[0]->emit } # This handles =begin and =for blocks of all kinds. sub start_for { my ($self, $flags) = @_; $self->{'scratch'} .= '{'scratch'} .= ' class="'.$flags->{'target'}.'"' if ($flags->{'target'}); $self->{'scratch'} .= '>'; $self->emit; } sub end_for { my ($self) = @_; $self->{'scratch'} .= ''; $self->emit; } sub start_Document { my ($self) = @_; if (defined $self->html_header) { $self->{'scratch'} .= $self->html_header; $self->emit unless $self->html_header eq ""; } else { my ($doctype, $title, $metatags); $doctype = $self->html_doctype || ''; $title = $self->force_title || $self->title || $self->default_title || ''; $metatags = $self->html_header_tags || ''; if ($self->html_css) { $metatags .= "\n"; } if ($self->html_javascript) { $metatags .= "\n"; } $self->{'scratch'} .= <<"HTML"; $doctype $title $metatags HTML $self->emit; } } sub end_Document { my ($self) = @_; if (defined $self->html_footer) { $self->{'scratch'} .= $self->html_footer; $self->emit unless $self->html_footer eq ""; } else { $self->{'scratch'} .= "\n"; $self->emit; } } # Handling code tags sub start_B { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '' } sub end_B { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '' } sub start_C { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '' } sub end_C { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '' } sub start_E { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '&' } sub end_E { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= ';' } sub start_F { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '' } sub end_F { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '' } sub start_I { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '' } sub end_I { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '' } sub start_L { my ($self, $flags) = @_; my $url; if ($flags->{'type'} eq 'url') { $url = $flags->{'to'}; } elsif ($flags->{'type'} eq 'pod') { $url .= $self->perldoc_url_prefix || ''; $url .= $flags->{'to'} || ''; $url .= '/' . $flags->{'section'} if ($flags->{'section'}); $url .= $self->perldoc_url_postfix || ''; # require Data::Dumper; # print STDERR Data::Dumper->Dump([$flags]); } $self->{'scratch'} .= ''; } sub end_L { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '' } sub start_S { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '' } sub end_S { $_[0]{'scratch'} .= '' } sub emit { my($self) = @_; my $out = $self->{'scratch'} . "\n"; print {$self->{'output_fh'}} $out, "\n"; $self->{'scratch'} = ''; return; } # Bypass built-in E<> handling to preserve entity encoding sub _treat_Es {} 1; __END__ =head1 SEE ALSO L, L =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (c) 2003-2005 Allison Randal. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module. This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but without any warranty; without even the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. =head1 AUTHOR Allison Randal =cut