NAME

Posy::Plugin::RandQuote - Posy plugin to give a random quote from a file.

VERSION

This describes version 0.41 of Posy::Plugin::RandQuote.

SYNOPSIS

    @plugins = qw(Posy::Core
	...
	Posy::Plugin::RandQuote));
    @entry_actions = qw(header
	    ...
	    parse_entry
	    rand_quote
	    render_entry
	    ...
	);

    And in the entry file:

    <pre>
    <!--quote(fortunes)-->
    </pre>

DESCRIPTION

Sticks a random quote from a file into the body of the entry. This replaces a string in the format of <!--quote(filename)--> with a "quote" grabbed from the file, where quotes are defined by text between $rand_quote_delim.

This looks for the quote-file first in the local (data) directory, then relative to the top of the data directory, then in the local HTML directory, then relative to the top of the HTML directory.

This creates a 'rand_quote' entry action, which should be placed after 'parse_entry' in the entry_action list and before 'render_entry'. If you are using the Posy::Plugin::ShortBody plugin, this should be placed after 'short_body' in the entry_action list, not before it.

Configuration

This expects configuration settings in the $self->{config} hash, which, in the default Posy setup, can be defined in the main "config" file in the data directory.

rand_quote_delim

The delimiter which defines quotes in the quote-file. (default: "%\n", which is what is used in "fortune" data files)

OBJECT METHODS

Documentation for developers and those wishing to write plugins.

init

Do some initialization; make sure that default config values are set.

Entry Action Methods

Methods implementing per-entry actions.

rand_quote

$self->rand_quote($flow_state, $current_entry, $entry_state)

Alters $current_entry->{body} by adding a random quote wherever the "rand_quote_anchor" string is in the body.

Private Methods

_get_random_quote

Return the quote to be substituted from the given file.

INSTALLATION

Installation needs will vary depending on the particular setup a person has.

Administrator, Automatic

If you are the administrator of the system, then the dead simple method of installing the modules is to use the CPAN or CPANPLUS system.

cpanp -i Posy::Plugin::RandQuote

This will install this plugin in the usual places where modules get installed when one is using CPAN(PLUS).

Administrator, By Hand

If you are the administrator of the system, but don't wish to use the CPAN(PLUS) method, then this is for you. Take the *.tar.gz file and untar it in a suitable directory.

To install this module, run the following commands:

perl Build.PL
./Build
./Build test
./Build install

Or, if you're on a platform (like DOS or Windows) that doesn't like the "./" notation, you can do this:

perl Build.PL
perl Build
perl Build test
perl Build install

User With Shell Access

If you are a user on a system, and don't have root/administrator access, you need to install Posy somewhere other than the default place (since you don't have access to it). However, if you have shell access to the system, then you can install it in your home directory.

Say your home directory is "/home/fred", and you want to install the modules into a subdirectory called "perl".

Download the *.tar.gz file and untar it in a suitable directory.

perl Build.PL --install_base /home/fred/perl
./Build
./Build test
./Build install

This will install the files underneath /home/fred/perl.

You will then need to make sure that you alter the PERL5LIB variable to find the modules, and the PATH variable to find the scripts (posy_one, posy_static).

Therefore you will need to change: your path, to include /home/fred/perl/script (where the script will be)

PATH=/home/fred/perl/script:${PATH}

the PERL5LIB variable to add /home/fred/perl/lib

PERL5LIB=/home/fred/perl/lib:${PERL5LIB}

REQUIRES

Posy
Posy::Core

Test::More

SEE ALSO

perl(1). Posy

BUGS

Please report any bugs or feature requests to the author.

AUTHOR

Kathryn Andersen (RUBYKAT)
perlkat AT katspace dot com
http://www.katspace.com

COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE

Copyright (c) 2004-2005 by Kathryn Andersen

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