NAME

perlsh - one-line perl evaluator with line editing function and variable name completion function

SYNOPSIS

perlsh

DESCRIPTION

This program reads input a line, and evaluates it by perl interpreter, and prints the result. If the result is a list value then each value of the list is printed line by line. This program can be used as a very strong calculator which has whole perl functions.

This is a sample program Term::ReadLine::Gnu module. When you input a line, the line editing function of GNU Readline Library is available. Perl symbol name completion function is also available.

Before invoking, this program reads ~/.perlshrc and evaluates the content of the file.

When this program is terminated, the content of the history buffer is saved in a file ~/.perlsh_history, and it is read at next invoking.

VARIABLES

You can customize the behavior of perlsh by setting following variables in ~/.perlshrc;

$PerlSh::PS1

The primary prompt string. The following backslash-escaped special characters can be used.

\h: host name
\u: user name
\w: package name
\!: history number

The default value is `\w[\!]$ '.

$PerlSh::PS2

The secondary prompt string. The default value is `> '.

$PerlSh::HISTFILE

The name of the file to which the command history is saved. The default value is ~/.perlsh_history.

$PerlSh::HISTSIZE

If not undef, this is the maximum number of commands to remember in the history. The default value is 256.

$PerlSh::STRICT

If true, restrict unsafe constructs. See use strict in perl man page. The default value is 0;

FILES

~/.perlshrc

This file is eval-ed at initialization. If a subroutine afterinit is defined in this file, it will be eval-ed after initialization. Here is a sample.

# -*- mode: perl -*-
# decimal to hexa
sub h { map { sprintf("0x%x", $_ ) } @_;}

sub tk {
    $t->tkRunning(1);
    use Tk;
    $mw = MainWindow->new();
}

# for debugging Term::ReadLine::Gnu
sub afterinit {
    *t = \$PerlSh::term;
    *a = \$PerlSh::attribs;
}
~/.perlsh_history
~/.inputrc

A initialization file for the GNU Readline Library. Refer its manual for details.

SEE ALSO

Term::ReadLine::Gnu

GNU Readline Library

AUTHOR

Hiroo Hayashi <hiroo.hayashi@computer.org>