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data::section::simple(3pm) [debian man page]

Data::Section::Simple(3pm)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				Data::Section::Simple(3pm)

NAME
Data::Section::Simple - Read data from __DATA__ SYNOPSIS
use Data::Section::Simple qw(get_data_section); # Functional interface -- reads from caller package __DATA__ my $all = get_data_section; # All data in hash reference my $foo = get_data_section('foo.html'); # OO - allows reading from other packages my $reader = Data::Section::Simple->new($package); my $all = $reader->get_data_section; __DATA__ @@ foo.html <html> <body>Hello</body> </html> @@ bar.tt [% IF true %] Foo [% END %] DESCRIPTION
Data::Section::Simple is a simple module to extract data from "__DATA__" section of the file. LIMITATIONS
As the name suggests, this module is a simpler version of the excellent Data::Section. If you want more functionalities such as merging data sections or changing header patterns, use Data::Section instead. This module does not implement caching (yet) which means in every "get_data_section" or "get_data_section($name)" this module seeks and re- reads the data section. If you want to avoid doing so for the better performance, you should implement caching in your own caller code. BUGS
__DATA__ appearing elsewhere If you data section has literal "__DATA__" in the data section, this module might be tricked by that. Although since its pattern match is greedy, "__DATA__" appearing before the actual data section (i.e. in the code) might be okay. This is by design -- in theory you can "tell" the DATA handle before reading it, but then reloading the data section of the file (handy for developing inline templates with PSGI web applications) would fail because the pos would be changed. If you don't like this design, again, use the superior Data::Section. utf8 pragma If you enable utf8 pragma in the caller's package (or the package you're inspecting with the OO interface), the data retrieved via "get_data_section" is decoded, but otherwise undecoded. There's no reliable way for this module to programmatically know whether utf8 pragma is enabled or not: it's your responsibility to handle them correctly. AUTHOR
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa <miyagawa@bulknews.net> COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2010- Tatsuhiko Miyagawa The code to read DATA section is based on Mojo::Command get_all_data: Copyright 2008-2010 Sebastian Riedel LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
Data::Section Inline::Files perl v5.12.4 2011-09-18 Data::Section::Simple(3pm)

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Data::Format::HTML(3pm) 				User Contributed Perl Documentation				   Data::Format::HTML(3pm)

NAME
Data::Format::HTML - Format Perl data structures into simple HTML SYNOPSIS
use Data::Format::HTML; my $f = Data::Format::HTML->new; my %hash = (simple => 'hash'); # Of course it's very unlikely that you won't deal ever with this # kind of structure, but HTML is able to hand it all anyway :) my $struct = { foo => 'bar', 1 => 2, 'hello' => 'goodbye', array_ref => [qw/one two three/], nested_hash => \%hash, [qw/1 2/] => sub { die; }, even_more => { arr => { 1 => [2, 3, 4], this_is_insane => { a => { b => { c => { d => { e => 'z'}}}}} }, }, }; $struct->{'Data::Format::HTML handles it all'} = $f; print $f->format(); And that will output the following insane, but possible, for the sake of showing, HTML: In theory you can pass any kind of Perl data structure to "format" and you will get its data HTML-formatted. TODO
o A LOT. ;) o Explain how CSS can prettify the tables (specification for everything) o Get CSS. o Better support for GLOB, CODE, REF and company. o Extend this documentation. SEE MORE
The author keeps the versioned code at GitHub at: http://github.com/damog/data-format-html/tree/master <http://github.com/damog/data- format-html/tree/master>. AUTHOR
David Moreno Garza, <david@axiombox.com> - <http://damog.net/> THANKS
To Raquel (<http://www.maggit.com.mx/>), who makes me happy every single day of my life. COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2008 by David Moreno Garza This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available. The Do What The Fuck You Want To public license also applies. It's really up to you. perl v5.12.3 2009-07-17 Data::Format::HTML(3pm)
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