Linux and UNIX Man Pages

Linux & Unix Commands - Search Man Pages

ppi::lexer(3) [centos man page]

PPI::Lexer(3)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					     PPI::Lexer(3)

NAME
PPI::Lexer - The PPI Lexer SYNOPSIS
use PPI; # Create a new Lexer my $Lexer = PPI::Lexer->new; # Build a PPI::Document object from a Token stream my $Tokenizer = PPI::Tokenizer->load('My/Module.pm'); my $Document = $Lexer->lex_tokenizer($Tokenizer); # Build a PPI::Document object for some raw source my $source = "print 'Hello World!'; kill(Humans->all);"; $Document = $Lexer->lex_source($source); # Build a PPI::Document object for a particular file name $Document = $Lexer->lex_file('My/Module.pm'); DESCRIPTION
The is the PPI Lexer. In the larger scheme of things, its job is to take token streams, in a variety of forms, and "lex" them into nested structures. Pretty much everything in this module happens behind the scenes at this point. In fact, at the moment you don't really need to instantiate the lexer at all, the three main methods will auto-instantiate themselves a "PPI::Lexer" object as needed. All methods do a one-shot "lex this and give me a PPI::Document object". In fact, if you are reading this, what you probably want to do is to just "load a document", in which case you can do this in a much more direct and concise manner with one of the following. use PPI; $Document = PPI::Document->load( $filename ); $Document = PPI::Document->new( $string ); See PPI::Document for more details. For more unusual tasks, by all means forge onwards. METHODS
new The "new" constructor creates a new "PPI::Lexer" object. The object itself is merely used to hold various buffers and state data during the lexing process, and holds no significant data between ->lex_xxxxx calls. Returns a new "PPI::Lexer" object lex_file $filename The "lex_file" method takes a filename as argument. It then loads the file, creates a PPI::Tokenizer for the content and lexes the token stream produced by the tokenizer. Basically, a sort of all-in-one method for getting a PPI::Document object from a file name. Returns a PPI::Document object, or "undef" on error. lex_source $string The "lex_source" method takes a normal scalar string as argument. It creates a PPI::Tokenizer object for the string, and then lexes the resulting token stream. Returns a PPI::Document object, or "undef" on error. lex_tokenizer $Tokenizer The "lex_tokenizer" takes as argument a PPI::Tokenizer object. It lexes the token stream from the tokenizer into a PPI::Document object. Returns a PPI::Document object, or "undef" on error. errstr For any error that occurs, you can use the "errstr", as either a static or object method, to access the error message. If no error occurs for any particular action, "errstr" will return false. TO DO
- Add optional support for some of the more common source filters - Some additional checks for blessing things into various Statement and Structure subclasses. 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::Lexer(3)

Check Out this Related Man Page

PPI::Document::File(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				    PPI::Document::File(3)

NAME
PPI::Document::File - A Perl Document located in a specific file DESCRIPTION
WARNING: This class is experimental, and may change without notice PPI::Document::File provides a PPI::Document subclass that represents a Perl document stored in a specific named file. METHODS
new my $file = PPI::Document::File->new( 'Module.pm' ); The "new" constructor works the same as for the regular one, except that the only params allowed is a file name. You cannot create an "anonymous" PPI::Document::File object, not can you create an empty one. Returns a new PPI::Document::File object, or "undef" on error. filename The "filename" accessor returns the name of the file in which the document is stored. save # Save to the file we were loaded from $file->save; # Save a copy to somewhere else $file->save( 'Module2.pm' ); The "save" method works similarly to the one in the parent PPI::Document class, saving a copy of the document to a file. The difference with this subclass is that if "save" is not passed any filename, it will save it back to the file it was loaded from. Note: When saving to a different file, it is considered to be saving a copy and so the value returned by the "filename" accessor will stay the same, and not change to the new filename. TO DO
- May need to overload some methods to forcefully prevent Document objects becoming children of another Node. 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 v5.18.2 2011-02-25 PPI::Document::File(3)
Man Page