PERLPOINT(1) User Contributed Perl Documentation PERLPOINT(1)NAME
perlpoint - a very general PerlPoint converter, using the generator
interface
VERSION
This manual describes version 0.03.
DESCRIPTION
This general converter translates PerlPoint in any target language you
have PerlPoint::Generator subclasses installed for.
These classes can be installed in the usual Perl library pathes or in a
template. To get a list of available generators in the Perl path, call
this script with option "-generators". To see if a template provides an
additional generator, scan its "lib" subdirectory.
Usually, if you are working with a template, just start the converter
as described below. If there are libraries missing it will be notified.
SYNOPSIS
perlpoint [<options>] <PerlPoint sources>
Options
All options can be abbreviated uniqly.
Please note that there are more options than described below.
"perlpoint" just defines bootstrap options. For a complete option list
please call "perlpoint" with "-help" and the appropriate "-target",
"-formatter" and "-template" options, the help displayed will be
adapted to this call.
-help
displays a help and terminates. The help adapts itself to further
options, so for best results it is recommended to enter all options
that are intended to used, and to add "-help" additionally.
-target <format>
The format that should be produced. The argument is automatically
uppercased.
To produce a format "FORMAT", "PerlPoint::Generator::FORMAT" needs
to be installed.
Examples:
-format sdf
-format HTML
-formatter
The generator type to be used. This setting chooses a formatter for
the target format.
-formatter nice
Formatter names can be build hierarchically, delimiting hierarchy
levels by double colons:
-formatter nice::impression
The arguments first letter of each hierarchy level is automatically
uppercased.
-formatter nice::impression is equivalent to
-formatter Nice::Impression.
To produce a format "FORMAT" using a formatter "Nice",
"PerlPoint::Generator::FORMAT::Nice" needs to be installed.
This option defaults to "Default". By convention there is a
"Default" formatter for each supported target format.
-styledir
The directory to be searched for styles. Defaults to the start
directory.
-style
The layout to be used. A layout defines the result format.
-version
displays the current program version and the versions of generator,
formatter and template modules that are loaded according to the
remaining options.
Option files
Options may be loaded from files where they are stored exactly as you
write them in the command line, but may be spread to several lines and
extended by comment lines which start with a "#" character. To mark an
option file in the commandline, simply enter its (path and) name
prededed by a "@" character, for example
perlpoint @myOptions ppfile
where the file myOptions could look like
# suppress infos
-noinfo
Option files may be nested. To avoid endless recursion, every option
file is resolved only the first time it is detected.
# this is an option file which
# refers to another option file
-noinfo @moreOptions
The script also takes care of default option files which means that
usual options can be stored in files named ".perlpoint". If such a file
is placed in the directory where the script itself resides, options in
the file are read in automatically by all perlpoint calls. These are
global settings. If you place such a file in your home directory, it is
read automatically as well but only if perlpoint is called under your
account, so this is for personal preferences.
A personal default option file overwrites global settings, and all
default options are overwritten by options passed to the script call.
ENVIRONMENTNOTESFILESSEE ALSO
PerlPoint::Generator
AUTHOR
Copyright (c) Jochen Stenzel (perl@jochen-stenzel.de), 2003-2006. All
rights reserved.
This script is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the terms of the Artistic License distributed with Perl version
5.003 or (at your option) any later version. Please refer to the
Artistic License that came with your Perl distribution for more
details.
The Artistic License should have been included in your distribution of
Perl. It resides in the file named "Artistic" at the top-level of the
Perl source tree (where Perl was downloaded/unpacked - ask your system
administrator if you dont know where this is). Alternatively, the
current version of the Artistic License distributed with Perl can be
viewed on-line on the World-Wide Web (WWW) from the following URL:
http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html.
DISCLAIMER
This software is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but is
provided "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either expressed or
implied, INCLUDING, without limitation, the implied warranties of
MERCHANTABILITY and FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
The ENTIRE RISK as to the quality and performance of the software IS
WITH YOU (the holder of the software). Should the software prove
defective, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR
CORRECTION.
IN NO EVENT WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY
CREATE, MODIFY, OR DISTRIBUTE THE SOFTWARE BE LIABLE OR RESPONSIBLE TO
YOU OR TO ANY OTHER ENTITY FOR ANY KIND OF DAMAGES (no matter how awful
- not even if they arise from known or unknown flaws in the software).
Please refer to the Artistic License that came with your Perl
distribution for more details.
perl v5.20.2 2006-04-22 PERLPOINT(1)