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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers General Purpose XML Processing Post 302973809 by RavinderSingh13 on Sunday 22nd of May 2016 03:30:29 AM
Old 05-22-2016
Hello Corona688(One of the Gems of this forum),

First of all a big THANK YOU for writing this brilliant code Smilie(fan of you always). Could you please post a example or complex example for a Input_file and code too here, I apologies to bother you on same but it will be helpful for us to understand the code more clearly. I will be grateful to you if you could do so.

Thanks,
R. Singh
This User Gave Thanks to RavinderSingh13 For This Post:
 

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CHRONICLE-ENTRY-FILTER(1)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				 CHRONICLE-ENTRY-FILTER(1)

NAME
chronicle-entry-filter - Convert blog files to HTML, if required. SYNOPSIS
Help Options --help Show a brief help overview. --version Show the version of this script. Options --format The global format of all entries. --filename The name of the single file to process. Filters --pre-filter A filter to run before convertion to HTML. --post-filter A filter to run after HTML conversion. ABOUT
This script is designed to receive a filename and a global formatting type upon the command line. The formatting type specifies how the blog entry file will be processed: 1. If the format is "textile" the file will be converted from textile to HTML. 2. If the format is "markdown" the file will be converted from markdown to HTML. The related format "multimarkdown" is also recognised. 3. If the format is "html" no changes will be made. Once the conversion has been applied the code will also be scanned for <code> tags to expand via the Text::VimColour module, if it is installed, which allows the pretty-printing of source code. To enable the syntax highlighting of code fragments you should format your code samples as follows: Subject: Some highlighted code. Date: 25th December 2009 Tags: chronicle, perl, blah <p>Here is some code which will look pretty ..</p> <code lang="perl"> #!/usr/bin/perl -w ... .. </code> Notice the use of lang="perl", which provides a hint as to the type of syntax highlighting to apply. Additionally you may make use of the pre-filter and post-filter pseudo-headers which allow you to transform the entry in further creative fashions. For example you might wish the blog to be upper-case only for some reason, and this could be achieved via: Subject: I DONT LIKE LOWER CASE Tags: meta, random, silly Date: 25th December 2009 Pre-Filter: perl -pi -e "s/__USER__/`whoami`/g" Post-filter: tr [a-z] [A-Z] <p>This post, written by __USER__ will have no lower-case values.</p> <p>Notice how my username was inserted too?</p> You may chain arbitrarily complex filters together via the filters. Each filter should read the entry on STDIN and return the updated content to STDOUT. (If you wish to apply a global filter simply pass that as an argument to chronicle, or in your chroniclerc file.) AUTHOR
Steve -- http://www.steve.org.uk/ LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2009-2010 by Steve Kemp. All rights reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The LICENSE file contains the full text of the license. perl v5.12.3 2011-05-03 CHRONICLE-ENTRY-FILTER(1)
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