07-10-2018
Restriction of adding links is too restrictive
I am trying to write a shell script that generates links to a website. Not to spam it. The code necessarily adds things that are links, and so get rejected.
In the end I have up, and have not written the post.
Whilst I apprecaite you want to avoid spam, could you not implement something so any page with a link has a noindex, nofollow, and advise people that links will not be followed?
Apache often often runs on unix systems, and people will want to write scripts that do things related to Apache and websites.
Also, the Google capture thing is getting very hard for a human. Often 1% of a screen sign for example will be in one square.
I know spammers are a problem, but the restrictions make this site unusable for me.
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LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
perl::critic::policy::documentation::requirepodlinksincludetext
Perl::Critic::Policy::Documentation::RequirePodLinksInclUsereContributed Perl DoPerl::Critic::Policy::Documentation::RequirePodLinksIncludeText(3)
NAME
Perl::Critic::Policy::Documentation::RequirePodLinksIncludeText - Provide text to display with your pod links.
AFFILIATION
This Policy is part of the core Perl::Critic distribution.
DESCRIPTION
This Policy requires your POD links to contain text to override your POD translator's default link text, where this is possible. Failure
to provide your own text leaves you at the mercy of the POD translator, which may display something like "L<Foo>" as "the Foo manpage".
By default, links that specify a documentation section (for example, "L<Foo/bar>", or "L</bar>") are exempt from this Policy.
CONFIGURATION
This Policy has two boolean options to configure the handling of links that specify a documentation section.
The "allow_external_sections" option configures the handling of links of the form "L<Foo/bar>". If true, such links are accepted even
without a text specification. Such links tend to be turned into something like "bar in Foo".
By default, this option is asserted. If you want to prohibit things like "L<Foo/bar>" (while allowing things like "L<< Foo->bar()|Foo/bar
>>"), put something like this in your .perlcriticrc:
[Documentation::RequirePodLinksIncludeText]
allow_external_sections = 0
The "allow_internal_sections" option configures the handling of links of the form "L</bar>". If true, such links are accepted even without
a text specification. Such links tend to be turned into something like "bar".
By default, this option is asserted. If you want to prohibit things like "L</bar>" (while allowing things like "L<bar()|/bar>"), put
something like this in your .perlcriticrc:
[Documentation::RequirePodLinksIncludeText]
allow_internal_sections = 0
AUTHOR
Thomas R. Wyant, III wyant at cpan dot org
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Thomas R. Wyant, III.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of this license
can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module
perl v5.16.3 2014-06-09 Perl::Critic::Policy::Documentation::RequirePodLinksIncludeText(3)