Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch - phpMan

Command: man perldoc info search(apropos)  


Sections
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION MAIN METHODS NOTES ON CUSTOMIZATION SEE ALSO SUPPORT COPYRIGHT AND DISCLAIMERS AUTHOR
NAME
    Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch - convert several Pod files to several HTML files

SYNOPSIS
      perl -MPod::Simple::HTMLBatch -e 'Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch::go' in out

DESCRIPTION
    This module is used for running batch-conversions of a lot of HTML
    documents

    This class is NOT a subclass of Pod::Simple::HTML (nor of bad old
    Pod::Html) -- although it uses Pod::Simple::HTML for doing the
    conversion of each document.

    The normal use of this class is like so:

      use Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch;
      my $batchconv = Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch->new;
      $batchconv->some_option( some_value );
      $batchconv->some_other_option( some_other_value );
      $batchconv->batch_convert( \@search_dirs, $output_dir );

  FROM THE COMMAND LINE
    Note that this class also provides (but does not export) the function
    Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch::go. This is basically just a shortcut for
    "Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch->batch_convert(@ARGV)". It's meant to be handy
    for calling from the command line.

    However, the shortcut requires that you specify exactly two command-line
    arguments, "indirs" and "outdir".

    Example:

      % mkdir out_html
      % perl -MPod::Simple::HTMLBatch -e Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch::go @INC out_html
          (to convert the pod from Perl's @INC
           files under the directory ./out_html)

    (Note that the command line there contains a literal atsign-I-N-C. This
    is handled as a special case by batch_convert, in order to save you
    having to enter the odd-looking "" as the first command-line parameter
    when you mean "just use whatever's in @INC".)

    Example:

      % mkdir ../seekrut
      % chmod og-rx ../seekrut
      % perl -MPod::Simple::HTMLBatch -e Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch::go . ../seekrut
          (to convert the pod under the current dir into HTML
           files under the directory ./seekrut)

    Example:

      % perl -MPod::Simple::HTMLBatch -e Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch::go happydocs .
          (to convert all pod from happydocs into the current directory)

MAIN METHODS
    $batchconv = Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch->new;
        This creates a new batch converter. The method doesn't take
        parameters. To change the converter's attributes, use the "ACCESSOR
        METHODS"" in " below.

    $batchconv->batch_convert( *indirs*, *outdir* );
        This searches the directories given in *indirs* and writes HTML
        files for each of these to a corresponding directory in *outdir*.
        The directory *outdir* must exist.

    $batchconv->batch_convert( undef , ...);
    $batchconv->batch_convert( q{@INC}, ...);
        These two values for *indirs* specify that the normal Perl @INC

    $batchconv->batch_convert( \@dirs , ...);
        This specifies that the input directories are the items in the
        arrayref "\@dirs".

    $batchconv->batch_convert( "somedir" , ...);
        This specifies that the director "somedir" is the input. (This can
        be an absolute or relative path, it doesn't matter.)

        A common value you might want would be just "." for the current
        directory:

             $batchconv->batch_convert( "." , ...);

    $batchconv->batch_convert( 'somedir:someother:also' , ...);
        This specifies that you want the dirs "somedir", "someother", and
        "also" scanned, just as if you'd passed the arrayref "[qw( somedir
        someother also)]". Note that a ":"-separator is normal under Unix,
        but Under MSWin, you'll need 'somedir;someother;also' instead, since
        the pathsep on MSWin is ";" instead of ":". (And *that* is because
        ":" often comes up in paths, like "c:/perl/lib".)

        (Exactly what separator character should be used, is gotten from
        $Config::Config{'path_sep'}, via the Config module.)

    $batchconv->batch_convert( ... , undef );
        This specifies that you want the HTML output to go into the current
        directory.

        (Note that a missing or undefined value means a different thing in
        the first slot than in the second. That's so that "batch_convert()"
        with no arguments (or undef arguments) means "go from @INC, into the
        current directory.)

    $batchconv->batch_convert( ... , 'somedir' );
        This specifies that you want the HTML output to go into the
        directory 'somedir'. (This can be an absolute or relative path, it
        doesn't matter.)

    Note that you can also call "batch_convert" as a class method, like so:

      Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch->batch_convert( ... );

    That is just short for this:

      Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch-> new-> batch_convert(...);

    That is, it runs a conversion with default options, for whatever
    inputdirs and output dir you specify.

  ACCESSOR METHODS
    The following are all accessor methods -- that is, they don't do
    anything on their own, but just alter the contents of the conversion
    object, which comprises the options for this particular batch
    conversion.

    We show the "put" form of the accessors below (i.e., the syntax you use
    for setting the accessor to a specific value). But you can also call
    each method with no parameters to get its current value. For example,
    "$self->contents_file()" returns the current value of the contents_file
    attribute.

    $batchconv->verbose( *nonnegative_integer* );
        This controls how verbose to be during batch conversion, as far as
        notes to STDOUT (or whatever is "select"'d) about how the conversion
        is going. If 0, no progress information is printed. If 1 (the
        default value), some progress information is printed. Higher values
        print more information.

    $batchconv->index( *true-or-false* );
        This controls whether or not each HTML page is liable to have a
        little table of contents at the top (which we call an "index" for
        historical reasons). This is true by default.

    $batchconv->contents_file( *filename* );
        If set, should be the name of a file (in the output directory) to
        write the HTML index to. The default value is "index.html". If you
        set this to a false value, no contents file will be written.

    $batchconv->contents_page_start( *HTML_string* );
        This specifies what string should be put at the beginning of the
        contents page. The default is a string more or less like this:

          <html>
          <head><title>Perl Documentation</title></head>
          <body class='contentspage'>
          <h1>Perl Documentation</h1>

    $batchconv->contents_page_end( *HTML_string* );
        This specifies what string should be put at the end of the contents
        page. The default is a string more or less like this:

          <p class='contentsfooty'>Generated by
          Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch v3.01 under Perl v5.008
          <br >At Fri May 14 22:26:42 2004 GMT,
          which is Fri May 14 14:26:42 2004 local time.</p>

    $batchconv->add_css( $url );
        TODO

    $batchconv->add_javascript( $url );
        TODO

    $batchconv->css_flurry( *true-or-false* );
        If true (the default value), we autogenerate some CSS files in the
        output directory, and set our HTML files to use those. TODO:
        continue

    $batchconv->javascript_flurry( *true-or-false* );
        If true (the default value), we autogenerate a JavaScript in the
        output directory, and set our HTML files to use it. Currently, the
        JavaScript is used only to get the browser to remember what
        stylesheet it prefers. TODO: continue

    $batchconv->no_contents_links( *true-or-false* );
        TODO

    $batchconv->html_render_class( *classname* );
        This sets what class is used for rendering the files. The default is
        "Pod::Simple::HTML". If you set it to something else, it should
        probably be a subclass of Pod::Simple::HTML, and you should
        "require" or "use" that class so that's it's loaded before
        Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch tries loading it.

    $batchconv->search_class( *classname* );
        This sets what class is used for searching for the files. The
        default is "Pod::Simple::Search". If you set it to something else,
        it should probably be a subclass of Pod::Simple::Search, and you
        should "require" or "use" that class so that's it's loaded before
        Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch tries loading it.

NOTES ON CUSTOMIZATION
    TODO

      call add_css($someurl) to add stylesheet as alternate
      call add_css($someurl,1) to add as primary stylesheet

      call add_javascript

      subclass Pod::Simple::HTML and set $batchconv->html_render_class to
        that classname
      and maybe override
        $page->batch_mode_page_object_init($self, $module, $infile, $outfile, $depth)
      or maybe override
        $batchconv->batch_mode_page_object_init($page, $module, $infile, $outfile, $depth)
      subclass Pod::Simple::Search and set $batchconv->search_class to
        that classname

SEE ALSO
    Pod::Simple, Pod::Simple::HTMLBatch, perlpod, perlpodspec

SUPPORT
    Questions or discussion about POD and Pod::Simple should be sent to the
    pod-people AT perl.org mail list. Send an empty email to
    pod-people-subscribe AT perl.org to subscribe.

    This module is managed in an open GitHub repository,
    <https://github.com/perl-pod/pod-simple/>. Feel free to fork and
    contribute, or to clone <git://github.com/perl-pod/pod-simple.git> and
    send patches!

    Patches against Pod::Simple are welcome. Please send bug reports to
    <bug-pod-simple AT rt.org>.

COPYRIGHT AND DISCLAIMERS
    Copyright (c) 2002 Sean M. Burke.

    This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
    under the same terms as Perl itself.

    This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
    without any warranty; without even the implied warranty of
    merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.

AUTHOR
    Pod::Simple was created by Sean M. Burke <sburke AT cpan.org>. But don't
    bother him, he's retired.

    Pod::Simple is maintained by:

    *   Allison Randal "allison AT perl.org"

    *   Hans Dieter Pearcey "hdp AT cpan.org"

    *   David E. Wheeler "dwheeler AT cpan.org"


Generated by phpMan Author: Che Dong On Apache Under GNU General Public License - MarkDown Format
2026-05-23 05:57 @216.73.217.24 CrawledBy Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Valid XHTML 1.0 TransitionalValid CSS!

^_back to top