Text::FindIndent(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Text::FindIndent(3)NAMEText::FindIndent - Heuristically determine the indent style
SYNOPSIS
use Text::FindIndent;
my $indentation_type = Text::FindIndent->parse($text, skip_pod => 1);
if ($indentation_type =~ /^s(\d+)/) {
print "Indentation with $1 spaces\n";
}
elsif ($indentation_type =~ /^t(\d+)/) {
print "Indentation with tabs, a tab should indent by $1 characters\n";
}
elsif ($indentation_type =~ /^m(\d+)/) {
print "Indentation with $1 characters in tab/space mixed mode\n";
}
else {
print "Indentation style unknown\n";
}
DESCRIPTION
This is a module that attempts to intuit the underlying indent "policy"
for a text file (most likely a source code file).
METHODS
parse
The class method "parse" tries to determine the indentation style of
the given piece of text (which must start at a new line and can be
passed in either as a string or as a reference to a scalar containing
the string).
Returns a letter followed by a number. If the letter is "s", then the
text is most likely indented with spaces. The number indicates the
number of spaces used for indentation. A "t" indicates tabs. The number
after the "t" indicates the number characters each level of indentation
corresponds to. A "u" indicates that the indenation style could not be
determined. Finally, an "m" followed by a number means that this many
characters are used for each indentation level, but the indentation is
an arbitrary number of tabs followed by 0-7 spaces. This can happen if
your editor is stupid enough to do smart indentation/whitespace
compression. (I.e. replaces all indentations many tabs as possible but
leaves the rest as spaces.)
The function supports parsing of "vim" modelines. Those settings
override the heuristics. The modeline's options that are recognized are
"sts"/"softtabstob", "et"/"noet"/"expandtabs"/"noexpandtabs", and
"ts"/"tabstop".
Similarly, parsing of "emacs" Local Variables is somewhat supported.
"parse" use explicit settings to override the heuristics but uses style
settings only as a fallback. The following options are recognized:
"tab-width", "indent-tabs-mode", "c-basic-offset", and "style".
There is one named option that you can pass to "parse()": "skip_pod".
When set to true, any section of POD (see perlpod) will be ignored for
indentation finding. This is because verbatim paragraphs and examples
embedded in POD or quite often indented differently from normal Perl
code around the POD section. Defaults to false. Example:
my $mode = Text::FindIndent->parse(\$text, skip_pod => 1);
to_vim_commands
A class method that converts the output of "parse(\$text)" into a
series of vi(m) commands that will configure vim to use the detected
indentation setting. Returns zero (failure) or more lines of text that
are suitable for passing to "VIM::DoCommand()" one by one.
As a convenience, if the argument to "to_vim_commands" doesn't look
like the output of "parse", it is redirected to "parse" first.
To use this, you can put the following line in your .vimrc if your vim
has Perl support. Suggestions on how to do this in a more elegant way
are welcome. The code should be on one line but is broken up for
displaying:
map <F5> <Esc> :perl use Text::FindIndent;VIM::DoCommand($_) for
Text::FindIndent->to_vim_commands(join "\n", $curbuf->Get(1..$curbuf->Count()));<CR>
(Patches to implement the equivalent for emacs would be welcome as
well.)
SUPPORT
Bugs should be reported via the CPAN bug tracker at
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Text-FindIndent
<http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Text-FindIndent>
For other issues, contact the author.
AUTHOR
Steffen Mueller <smueller@cpan.org>
Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2008 - 2010 Steffen Mueller.
Copyright 2008 - 2010 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 v5.14.0 2011-01-04 Text::FindIndent(3)