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Full Discussion: How Will the World End?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? How Will the World End? Post 302525167 by Neo on Thursday 26th of May 2011 02:44:51 AM
Old 05-26-2011
I think it might be easier to live under the ocean in vast (yet created) undersea ocean habitats than colonize outer space, unless astronomers discover a planet or moon suitable for human habitation. Undersea can be very beautiful and it could be made sustainable giving the proper research, development and funding. Space gets a lot of funding and attention because of the influence of national militarism. Yet, the ocean is vast and beautiful (and full of life and interesting creatures!) and the more time spent in the marine environment, the more interesting it becomes.
 

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PPI::Token::Whitespace(3)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 PPI::Token::Whitespace(3)

NAME
PPI::Token::Whitespace - Tokens representing ordinary white space INHERITANCE
PPI::Token::Whitespace isa PPI::Token isa PPI::Element DESCRIPTION
As a full "round-trip" parser, PPI records every last byte in a file and ensure that it is included in the PPI::Document object. This even includes whitespace. In fact, Perl documents are seen as "floating in a sea of whitespace", and thus any document will contain vast quantities of "PPI::Token::Whitespace" objects. For the most part, you shouldn't notice them. Or at least, you shouldn't have to notice them. This means doing things like consistently using the "S for significant" series of PPI::Node and PPI::Element methods to do things. If you want the nth child element, you should be using "schild" rather than "child", and likewise "snext_sibling", "sprevious_sibling", and so on and so forth. METHODS
Again, for the most part you should really not need to do anything very significant with whitespace. But there are a couple of convenience methods provided, beyond those provided by the parent PPI::Token and PPI::Element classes. null Because PPI sees documents as sitting on a sort of substrate made of whitespace, there are a couple of corner cases that get particularly nasty if they don't find whitespace in certain places. Imagine walking down the beach to go into the ocean, and then quite unexpectedly falling off the side of the planet. Well it's somewhat equivalent to that, including the whole screaming death bit. The "null" method is a convenience provided to get some internals out of some of these corner cases. Specifically it create a whitespace token that represents nothing, or at least the null string ''. It's a handy way to have some "whitespace" right where you need it, without having to have any actual characters. tidy "tidy" is a convenience method for removing unneeded whitespace. Specifically, it removes any whitespace from the end of a line. Note that this doesn't include POD, where you may well need to keep certain types of whitespace. The entire POD chunk lives in its own PPI::Token::Pod object. SUPPORT
See the support section in the main module. AUTHOR
Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org> COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2001 - 2011 Adam Kennedy. This program 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. perl v5.16.3 2011-02-26 PPI::Token::Whitespace(3)
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