NAME

OODoc::Format::Html - Produce HTML pages using Template::Magic

INHERITANCE

OODoc::Format::Html
  is a OODoc::Format
  is a OODoc::Object

OODoc::Format::Html
  is a OODoc::Format::TemplateMagic

SYNOPSIS

my $doc = OODoc->new(...);
$doc->createManual
  ( 'html'   # or 'OODoc::Format::Html'
  , format_options => [show_examples => 'NO']
  );

DESCRIPTION

Create manual pages in the HTML syntax, using the Template::Magic template system. Producing HTML is more complicated than producing POD, because one manual page may be spread over multiple output files.

OVERLOADED

METHODS

$obj->zoneGetParameters(ZONE|STRING)

Constructors

OODoc::Format::Html->new(OPTIONS)

    Option        --Defined in     --Default
    html_meta_data                   ''
    html_root                        '/'
    jump_script                      <html_root>/jump.cgi
    manifest        OODoc::Format    undef
    project         OODoc::Format    <required>
    version         OODoc::Format    <required>
    workdir         OODoc::Format    <required>

    . html_meta_data => STRING

      Will be (usually) be added to the header, and may contain links to Cascading Style Sheets, and such.

    . html_root => URI

    . jump_script => URI

    . manifest => OBJECT

    . project => STRING

    . version => STRING

    . workdir => DIRECTORY

Inheritance knowledge

$obj->extends([OBJECT])

Attributes

$obj->manifest

$obj->project

$obj->version

$obj->workdir

Page generation

$obj->cleanup(MANUAL, STRING)

$obj->cleanupString(MANUAL, OBJECT)

    The general cleanup() is too over eager: it turns all pieces of text into paragraphs. So things, like names of chapters, are not paragraphs at all: these simple strings are to be cleaned from paragraph information.

$obj->createManual(OPTIONS)

    Option        --Defined in     --Default
    append          OODoc::Format    undef
    format_options  OODoc::Format    []
    manual          OODoc::Format    <required>
    project         OODoc::Format    <required>
    template                         "html/manual/"

    . append => STRING|CODE

    . format_options => ARRAY

    . manual => MANUAL

    . project => STRING

    . template => DIRECTORY|HASH

      A DIRECTORY containing all template files which have to be filled-in and copied per manual page created. You may also specify an HASH of file- and directory names and format options for each of those files. These options overrule the general createManual(format_options) values and the defaults. These options can be overruled by values specified in the template file.

    example: template specification

    Default:

    template => "html/manual/"

    Complex:

    template => { "man_index/"    => [ show_examples => 'NO' ]
                , "man_main.html" => [ show_examples => 'EXPAND' ]
                }

$obj->createOtherPages(OPTIONS)

    Option --Defined in     --Default
    process  OODoc::Format    qr/\.(s?html|cgi)$/
    source   OODoc::Format    "html/other/"
    verbose  OODoc::Format    0

    . process => REGEXP

    . source => DIRECTORY

    . verbose => INTEGER

$obj->expandTemplate(LOCATION, [FORMAT])

    Translate a filename, directory name or hash with file/directory names which are specified as LOCATION for templates into hash of filenames names and related formatting options. The FORMAT is an array of options which can be overruled by values which the LOCATION is specified as hash.

    example: expanding template specification into files

    my $exp = $self->expandTemplate("html/manual", [show => 'NO']);
    while(my ($fn,$opts) = each %$exp) {print "$fn @$opts\n"}
    # may print something like
    #   index.html show NO
    #   main.html show NO
    
    my $exp = $self->expandTemplate(
      { "html/manual/index.html" => [show => 'YES']
        "html/manual/main.html"  => []
      } , [show => 'NO']);
    # will print something like
    #   index.html show YES
    #   main.html show NO

$obj->link(MANUAL, OBJECT, [TEXT])

    Create the html for a link which refers to the OBJECT. The link will be shown somewhere in the MANUAL. The TEXT is displayed as link, and defaults to the name of the OBJECT.

$obj->mark(MANUAL, ID)

    Write a marker to items file. This locates an item to a frameset.

$obj->showChapter(OPTIONS)

$obj->showExamples(OPTIONS)

$obj->showOptionExpand(OPTIONS)

$obj->showOptionTable(OPTIONS)

$obj->showOptionUse(OPTIONS)

$obj->showOptionalChapter(NAME, OPTIONS)

$obj->showOptions(OPTIONS)

$obj->showRequiredChapter(NAME, OPTIONS)

$obj->showStructureExpanded(OPTIONS)

$obj->showStructureRefer(OPTIONS)

$obj->showSubroutine((@))

$obj->showSubroutineDescription(OPTIONS)

$obj->showSubroutineName(OPTIONS)

$obj->showSubroutineUse(OPTIONS)

$obj->showSubroutines(OPTIONS)

$obj->writeTable

    Option--Default
    ARRAY   <required>
    header  <required>
    output  <required>

    . ARRAY => -OF-ARRAYS

      An array of arrays, each describing a row for the output. The first row is the header.

    . header => ARRAY

    . output => FILE

Template processing

$obj->format(OPTIONS)

    Option--Default
    manual  undef

    . manual => MANUAL

$obj->templateChapter

$obj->templateDate(ZONE, ARGS)

$obj->templateDistribution(ZONE, ARGS)

    The name of the distribution which contains the manual page at hand.

$obj->templateHref(ZONE, ARGS)

$obj->templateIndex(ZONE, ARGS)

    The index template is called with one keyword, which tells the kind of index to be built. Valid values are MANUALS, SUBROUTINES, DIAGNOSTICS, and DETAILS. In the future, more names may get defined.

    The tag produces a list of columns which should be put in a table container to produce valid html.

    Option       --Default
    starting_with  'ALL'
    table_columns  2
    type           'ALL'

    . starting_with => 'ALL'|STRING

      Only selects the objects which have names which start with the STRING (case-insensitive match). Underscores in the string are interpreted as any non-word character or underscore.

    . table_columns => INTEGER

      Produce a table with that number of columns.

    . type => 'ALL'|STRING

      The types of objects which are to be selected, which is not applicable to all kinds of indexes. The STRING may contain an underscore or pipe separated list of types, for instance method|tie when subroutines are listed or error for diagnostics.

    example: use of the template tag "index"

    <table cellspacing="10">
    <!--{index DIAGNOSTICS type error starting_with A}-->
    </table>

$obj->templateInheritance(ZONE, ARGS)

$obj->templateList(ZONE, ARGS)

    The ZONE (which originate from the template file) start with the name of a chapter or 'ALL'. The rest of the ZONE are interpreted as argument list which overrule the OPTIONS.

    Option          --Default
    manual            <required>
    show_sections     'LINK'
    show_subroutines  'LIST'
    subroutine_types  'ALL'

    . manual => MANUAL

    . show_sections => 'NO'|'NAME'|'LINK'

      This option is only used when a chapter name is specified. It tells how to treat sections within the chapter: must they be shown expanded or should the subroutines be listed within the chapter.

    . show_subroutines => 'NO'|'COUNT'|'LIST'

    . subroutine_types => 'ALL'|LIST

      The LIST contains a underscore separated set of subroutine types which are selected to be displayed, for instance method_tie_function. The separator underscore is used because Template::Magic does not accept commas in the tag parameter list, which is a pity.

$obj->templateManual(ZONE, ARGS)

$obj->templateMeta(ZONE, ARGS)

    ARGS is a reference to a hash with options. ZONE contains the attributes in the template. Use new(html_meta_data) to set the result of this method, or extend its implementation.

$obj->templateName(ZONE, ARGS)

$obj->templateTitle(ZONE, ARGS)

$obj->templateVersion(ZONE, ARGS)

    The version is taken from the manual (which means that you may have a different version number per manual) when a manual is being formatted, and otherwise the project total version.

Commonly used functions

$obj->filenameToPackage(FILENAME)

OODoc::Format::Html->filenameToPackage(FILENAME)

$obj->mkdirhier(DIRECTORY)

OODoc::Format::Html->mkdirhier(DIRECTORY)

Manual Repository

$obj->addManual(MANUAL)

$obj->mainManual(NAME)

$obj->manual(NAME)

$obj->manuals

$obj->manualsForPackage(NAME)

$obj->packageNames

DETAILS

Configuring

DIAGNOSTICS

Error: cannot find chapter NAME in manual $name

Error: cannot find template source $name

    Somewhere was specified to use $name (a file or directory) as source for a template. However, it does not seem to exist. Unfortunately, the location where the source is specified is not known when the error is produced.

Error: cannot write html manual at $filename: $!

Error: chapter NAME in manual $name has illegal shape

Error: chapter without name in template.

    In your template file, a {chapter} statement is used, which is erroneous, because it requires a chapter name.

Error: html source directory $source does not exist.

Error: illegal value to show_sections: $show_sec

Error: manual definition requires manual object

Warning: missing required chapter $name in $manual

Error: no directory to put other html pages in.

Error: no group named as attribute for index

    In your template file, an {index} statement is used without a chapter name or 'ALL'. Therefore, it is unclear which kind of index has to be built.

Error: no group named as attribute for list

Warning: no meaning for container $contained in list block

Warning: no meaning for container $container in chapter block

Warning: no meaning for container $container in index block

Error: no package name for html production

Error: not a manual, so no automatic title in $template

Error: not a manual, so no manual name for $template

Error: not a manual, so no name for $template

Error: unknown group $name as list attribute

Warning: unknown subroutine type $type for $name in $manual

SEE ALSO

This module is part of OODoc distribution version 1.02, built on November 09, 2007. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/oodoc/

LICENSE

Copyrights 2003-2007 by Mark Overmeer. For other contributors see ChangeLog.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html