NAME
PPI::Document - Object representation of a Perl document
INHERITANCE
PPI::Document
isa PPI::Node
isa PPI::Element
SYNOPSIS
use PPI;
# Load a document from a file
my $Document = PPI::Document->load('My/Module.pm');
# Strip out comments
$Document->prune( 'PPI::Token::Comment' );
# Find all the named subroutines
my @subs = $Document->find(
sub { isa($_[1], 'PPI::Statement::Sub') and $_[1]->name }
);
# Save the file
$Document->save('My/Module.pm.stripped');
DESCRIPTION
The PPI::Document
class represents a single Perl "document". A PPI::Document
object acts as a root PPI::Node, with some additional methods for loading and saving, and working with the line/column locations of Elements within a file.
The exemption to its PPI::Node-like behavior this is that a PPI::Document
object can NEVER have a parent node, and is always the root node in a tree.
METHODS
Most of the things you are likely to want to do with a Document are probably going to involve the methods from PPI::Node class, of which this is a subclass.
The methods listed here are the remaining few methods that are truly Document-specific.
new $file, \$source
The new
constructor takes as argument a variety of different sources of Perl code, and attempt to create a single cohesive Perl PPI::Document
for it.
If passed a file name as a normal string, it will attempt to load the document from the file.
If passed a reference to a SCALAR, this is taken to be source code and parsed directly to create the document.
If passed zero arguments, a "blank" document will be created that contains no content at all.
Returns a PPI::Document
object, or undef
if parsing fails.
save $file
The save
method serializes the PPI::Document
object and saves the resulting Perl document to a file. Returns undef
on error.
tab_width [ $width ]
In order to handle support for location
correctly, Documents
need to understand the concept of tabs and tab width. The tab_width
method is used to get and set the size of the tab width.
At the present time, PPI only support "naive" (width 1) tabs, but we do plan on supporting artibtrary, default and auto-sensing tab widths.
Returns the tab width as an integer, or die
s if you attempt to set the tab width.
serialize
Unlike the content
method, which shows only the immediate content within an element, Document objects also have to be able to be written out to a file again.
When doing this we need to take into account some additional factors.
Primarily, we need to handle here-docs correctly, so that are written to the file in the expected place.
The serialize
method generates the actual file content for a given Document object. The resulting string can be written straight to a file.
Returns the serialized document as a string.
index_locations
Within a document, all PPI::Element objects can be considered to have a "location", a line/column position within the document when considered as a file. This position is primarily useful for debugging type activities.
The method for finding the position of a single Element is a bit laborious, and very slow if you need to do it a lot. So the index_locations
method will index and save the locations of every Element within the Document in advance, making future calls to <PPI::Element::location> virtually free.
Please note that this is index should always be cleared using flush_locations
once you are finished with the locations. If content is added to or removed from the file, these indexed locations will be wrong.
flush_locations
When no longer needed, the flush_locations
method clears all location data from the tokens.
normalized
The normalized
method is used to generate a "Layer 1" PPI::Document::Normalized object for the current Document.
A "normalized" Perl Document is an arbitrary structure that removes any irrelevant parts of the document and refactors out variations in style, to attempt to approach something that is closer to the "true meaning" of the Document.
See PPI::Normal for more information on document normalization and the tasks for which it is useful.
Returns a PPI::Document::Normalized object, or undef
on error.
errstr
For error that occur when loading and saving documents, you can use errstr
, as either a static or object method, to access the error message.
If a Document loads or saves without error, errstr
will return false.
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, http://ali.as/, cpan@ali.as
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2004 - 2005 Adam Kennedy. All rights reserved.
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.