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author | Stanley Lim <slim679975@gmail.com> | 2019-11-21 10:54:24 -0500 |
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committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | 2019-11-21 10:54:24 -0500 |
commit | 2b1e1cca08eac0d4dc8f685dbe98d80683ca9d3a (patch) | |
tree | 460bb7d5cbc1141f8e710e3704f6d03dc25ea193 /perl6-pod.html.markdown | |
parent | d4c5ff14cc8a0717f68746b4fe84cfb4efbdecf6 (diff) | |
parent | f1d03b0318a43441bb96bfdaabbd914eaa985879 (diff) |
Merge pull request #1 from adambard/master
Merging from master.
Diffstat (limited to 'perl6-pod.html.markdown')
-rw-r--r-- | perl6-pod.html.markdown | 622 |
1 files changed, 622 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/perl6-pod.html.markdown b/perl6-pod.html.markdown new file mode 100644 index 00000000..80a501b8 --- /dev/null +++ b/perl6-pod.html.markdown @@ -0,0 +1,622 @@ +--- +language: Pod +contributors: + - ["Luis F. Uceta", "https://uzluisf.gitlab.io/"] +filename: learnpod.pod6 +--- + +Pod is an easy-to-use and purely descriptive mark-up language, +with no presentational components. Besides its use for documenting +Raku Perl 6 programs and modules, Pod can be utilized to write language +documentation, blogs, and other types of document composition as well. + +Pod documents can be easily converted to HTML and many other formats +(e.g., Markdown, Latex, plain text, etc.) by using the corresponding +variant of the `Pod::To` modules (e.g. `Pod::To::HTML` for HTML conversion). + +- [General Info](#general-info) +- [Pod Basics](#pod-basics) + - [Basic Text Formatting](#basic-text-formatting) + - [Headings](#headings) + - [Ordinary Paragraphs](#ordinary-paragraphs) + - [Lists](#lists) + - [Code Blocks](#code-blocks) + - [Comments](#comments) + - [Links](#links) + - [Tables](#tables) +- [Block Structures](#block-structures) + - [Abbreviated Blocks](#abbreviated-blocks) + - [Delimited Blocks](#delimited-blocks) + - [Paragraph Blocks](#paragraph-blocks) +- [Configuration Data](#configuration-data) + - [Standard Configuration Options](#standard-configuration-options) + - [Block Pre-configuration](#block-pre-configuration) +- [Semantic Blocks](#semantic-blocks) +- [Miscellaneous](#miscellaneous) + - [Notes](#notes) + - [Keyboard Input](#keyboard-input) + - [Terminal Output](#terminal-output) + - [Unicode](#unicode) +- [Rendering Pod](#rendering-pod) +- [Accessing Pod](#accessing-pod) + +## General Info + +Every Pod document has to begin with `=begin pod` and end with `=end pod`. +Everything between these two delimiters will be processed and used to +generate documentation. + +``` +=begin pod + +A very simple Raku Perl 6 Pod document. All the other directives go here! + +=end pod +``` + +Pod documents usually coexist with Raku Perl 6 code. If by themselves, +Pod files often have the `.pod6` suffix. Moving forward, it's assumed that +the constructs being discussed are surrounded by the `=begin pod ... =end pod` +directives. + +## Pod Basics + +### Basic Text Formatting + +Text can be easily styled as bold, italic, underlined or verbatim (for code +formatting) using the following formatting codes: `B<>`, `I<>`, `U<>` +and `C<>`. + +``` +B<This text is in Bold.> + +I<This text is in Italics.> + +U<This text is Underlined.> + +The function C<sub sum { $^x + $^y}> is treated as verbatim. +``` + +There are more formatting codes (e.g., `L<>`, `T<>`, etc.) but they'll be +discussed later throughout the document. You'll recognize them because they're +just a single capital letter followed immediately by a set of single or double +angle brackets. The Unicode variant («») of the angle brackets can also be +used. + +### Headings + +Headings are created by using the `=headN` directive where `N` is the +heading level. + +``` +=head1 This is level 1 +=head2 This is level 2 +=head3 This is level 3 +=head4 This is level 4 +=head5 This is level 5 +=head6 This is level 6 +``` + +### Ordinary Paragraphs + +Ordinary paragraphs consist of one or more adjacent lines of text, each of +which starts with a non-whitespace character. Any paragraph is terminated +by the first blank line or block directive. + +``` +=head1 First level heading block + +=head2 Paragraph 1 + +This is an ordinary paragraph. Its text will be squeezed and +short lines filled. It is terminated by the first blank line. + +=head2 Paragraph 2 + +This is another ordinary paragraph albeit shorter. +``` + +Alternatively, the `=para` directive can be used to explicitly mark adjacent +lines of text as a paragraph. + +``` +=head1 First level heading block + +=head2 Paragraph 1 + +=para +This is an ordinary paragraph. Its text will be squeezed and +short lines filled. It is terminated by the first blank line. + +=head2 Paragraph 2 + +=para +This is another ordinary paragraph albeit shorter. +``` + +### Lists + +Unordered lists can be created using the `=item` directive. + +``` +=item Item +=item Item +=item Another item +``` + +Sublists are achieved with items at each level specified using the `=item1`, +`=item2`, `=item3`, `...`, `=itemN` etc. directives. The `=item` directive +defaults to `=item1`. + +``` +=item1 Item one +=item1 Item two +=item1 Item three + =item2 Sub-item + =item2 Sub-item +=item1 Item four +``` + +Definition lists that define terms or commands use the `=defn` directive. +This is equivalent to the `<dl>` element in HTML. + +``` +=defn Beast of Bodmin +A large feline inhabiting Bodmin Moor. + +=defn Morgawr +A sea serpent. + +=defn Owlman +A giant owl-like creature. +``` + +### Code Blocks + +A code block is created (which uses the HTML `<code>` element) by starting each +line with one or more whitespace characters. + +``` + #`( this is comment ) + my $sum = -> $x, $y { $x + $y } + say $sum(12, 5); +``` + +As shown in the [Basic Text Formatting](#basic-text-formatting) section, +inline code can be created using the `C<>` code. + +``` +In Raku Perl 6, there are several functions/methods to output text. Some of them +are C<print>, C<put> and C<say>. +``` + +### Comments + +Although Pod blocks are ignored by the Raku Perl 6 compiler, everything +indentified as a Pod block will be read and interpreted by Pod renderers. In +order to prevent Pod blocks from being rendered by any renderer, use the +`=comment` directive. + +``` +=comment Add more here about the algorithm. + +=comment Pod comments are great for documenting the documentation. +``` + +To create inline comments, use the `Z<>` code. + +``` +Pod is awesome Z<Of course it is!>. And Raku Perl 6 too! +``` + +Given that the Perl interpreter never executes embedded Pod blocks, +comment blocks can also be used as an alternative form of nestable block +comments in Raku Perl 6. + +### Links + +Creating links in Pod is quite easy and is done by enclosing them in +a `L<>` code. The general format is `L<Label|Url>` with `Label` +being optional. + +``` +Raku Perl 6 homepage is L<https://perl6.org>. +L<Click me!|http://link.org/>. +``` + +Relative paths work too. + +``` +L<Go to music|/music/>. +``` + +Linking to a section in the same document works as well. + +``` +L<Link to Headings|#Headings> +``` + +### Tables + +The Pod specifications are not completely handled properly yet and this +includes the handling of table. For simplicity's sake, only one way of +constructing tables is shown here. To learn about good practices and see +examples of both good and bad tables, please visit +<https://docs.perl6.org/language/tables>. + +``` +=begin table +Option | Description +============|================ +data | path to data files. +engine | engine to be used for processing templates. +ext | extension to be used for dest files. +=end table +``` + +## Block Structures + +As mentioned earlier, Pod documents are specified using directives, which are +used to delimit blocks of textual content and declare optional +[configuration information](#configuration-data). Every directive starts with +an equals sign (`=`) in the first column. The content of a document is +specified within one or more blocks. Every Pod block may be declared in any of +three equivalent forms: delimited style, paragraph style, or abbreviated style. + +Up to this point, we have only used the abbreviated style for the block +types (e.g., `=head1`, `=para`, `=comment`, `=item`, etc). + +### Abbreviated Blocks + +Abbreviated blocks are introduced by an `=` sign in the first column, which +is followed immediately by the `typename` of the block and then the content. +The rest of the line is treated as block data, rather than as configuration. +The content terminates at the next Pod directive or the first blank line +(which is not part of the block data). The general syntax is + +``` +=BLOCK_TYPE BLOCK_DATA +``` +For example: + +``` +=head1 Top level heading +``` + +### Delimited Blocks + +Delimited blocks are bounded by `=begin` and `=end` markers, both of which are +followed by a valid Pod identifier, which is the `typename` of the block. +The general syntax is + +``` +=begin BLOCK_TYPE +BLOCK_DATA +=end BLOCK_TYPE +``` + +For example: + +``` +=begin head1 +Top level heading +=end head1 +``` + +This type of blocks is useful for creating headings, list items, code blocks, +etc. with multiple paragraphs. For example, + +* a multiline item of a list + +``` +=begin item +This is a paragraph in list item. + +This is another paragraph in the same list item. +=end item +``` + +* a code block + +``` +=begin code +#`( +A non-efficient recursive implementation of a power function using multi subs. +) + +multi pow( Real $base, 0 ) { 1 } + +multi pow( Real $base, Int $exp where * ≥ 0) { + $base * pow($base, $exp - 1) +} + +multi pow( Real $base ) { + pow($base, 2) +} + +say pow(3, 0); #=> 1 +say pow(4.2, 2); #=> 17.64 +say pow(6); #=> 36 +=end code +``` + +### Paragraph Blocks + +Paragraph blocks are introduced by a `=for` marker and terminated by +the next Pod directive or the first blank line (which is not considered to +be part of the block's contents). The `=for` marker is followed by the +`typename` of the block. The general syntax is + +``` +=for BLOCK_TYPE +BLOCK DATA +``` + +For example: + +``` +=for head1 +Top level heading +``` + +## Configuration Data + +Except for abbreviated blocks, both delimited blocks and paragraph +blocks can be supplied with configuration information about their +contents right after the `typename` of the block. Thus the following +are more general syntaxes for these blocks: + +* Delimited blocks + +``` +=begin BLOCK_TYPE OPTIONAL_CONFIG_INFO += ADDITIONAL_CONFIG_INFO +BLOCK_DATA +=end BLOCK_TYPE +``` + +* Paragraph blocks + +``` +=for BLOCK_TYPE OPTIONAL_CONFIG_INFO += ADDITIONAL_CONFIG_INFO +BLOCK DATA +``` + +The configuration information is provided in a format akin to the +["colon pair"](https://docs.perl6.org/language/glossary#index-entry-Colon_Pair) +syntax in Raku Perl 6. The following table is a simplified version of the +different ways in which configuration info can be supplied. Please go to +<https://docs.perl6.org/language/pod#Configuration_information> for a more +thorough treatment of the subject. + +| Value | Specify with... | Example | +| :-------- | :------ | :------ | +| List | :key($elem1, $elem2, ...) | :tags('Pod', 'Perl6') | +| Hash | :key{$key1 => $value1, ...} | :feeds{url => 'perl6.org'} | +| Boolean | :key/:key(True) | :skip-test(True) | +| Boolean | :!key/:key(False) | :!skip-test | +| String | :key('string') | :nonexec-reason('SyntaxError') | +| Int | :key(2) | :post-number(6) | + + +### Standard Configuration Options + +Pod provides a small number of standard configuration options that can +be applied uniformly to built-in block types. Some of them are: + +* `:numbered` + +This option specifies that the block is to be numbered. The most common +use of this option is to create numbered headings and ordered lists, but it +can be applied to any block. + +For example: + +``` +=for head1 :numbered +The Problem +=for head1 :numbered +The Solution +=for head2 :numbered +Analysis +=for head3 :numbered +Overview +``` + +* `:allow` + +The value of the `:allow` option must be a list of the (single-letter) names +of one or more formatting codes. Those codes will then remain active inside +the code block. The option is most often used on `=code` blocks to allow +mark-up within those otherwise verbatim blocks, though it can be used in any +block that contains verbatim text. + +Given the following snippet: + +``` +=begin code :allow('B', 'I') +B<sub> greet( $name ) { + B<say> "Hello, $nameI<!>"; +} +=end code +``` + +we get the following output: + +<pre><strong>sub</strong> greet( $name ) { + <strong>say</strong> "Hello, $name<em>!</em>"; +} +</pre> + +This is highly dependent on the format output. For example, while this works +when Pod is converted to HTML, it might not be preserved when converted +to Markdown. + +### Block Pre-configuration + +The `=config` directive allows you to prespecify standard configuration +information that is applied to every block of a particular type. +The general syntax for configuration directives is: + +``` +=config BLOCK_TYPE CONFIG OPTIONS += ADDITIONAL_CONFIG_INFO +``` + +For example, to specify that every heading level 1 be numbered, bold +and underlined, you preconfigure the `=head1` as follows: + +``` +=config head1 :formatted('B', 'U') :numbered +``` + +## Semantic Blocks + +All uppercase block typenames are reserved for specifying standard +documentation, publishing, source components, or meta-information. +Some of them are: + +``` +=NAME +=AUTHOR +=VERSION +=CREATED +=SYNOPSIS +=DESCRIPTION +=USAGE +``` + +Most of these blocks would typically be used in their full +delimited forms. For example, + +``` +=NAME B<Doc::Magic> + +=begin DESCRIPTION +This module helps you generate documentation automagically. +Not source code needed! Most of it is outsourced from a black hole. +=end DESCRIPTION + +=begin SYNOPSIS +=begin code + use Doc::Magic; + + my Doc::Magic $doc .= new(); + + my $result = $doc.create-documentation($fh); +=end code +=end SYNOPSIS + +=AUTHOR Authorius Docus +=VERSION 42 +``` + +## Miscellaneous + +### Notes + +Notes are rendered as footnotes and created by enclosing a note in a +`N<>` code. + +``` +In addition, the language is also multi-paradigmatic N<According to Wikipedia, +this means that it supports procedural, object-oriented, and functional +programming.> +``` + +### Keyboard Input + +To flag text as keyboard input enclose it in a `K<>` code. + +``` +Enter your name K<John Doe> +``` + +### Terminal Output + +To flag text as terminal output enclose it in `T<>` code. + +``` +Hello, T<John Doe> +``` + +### Unicode + +To include Unicode code points or HTML5 character references in +a Pod document, enclose them in a `E<>` code. + +For example: + +``` +Raku Perl 6 makes considerable use of the E<171> and E<187> characters. +Raku Perl 6 makes considerable use of the E<laquo> and E<raquo> characters. +``` + +is rendered as: + +Raku Perl 6 makes considerable use of the « and » characters. +Raku Perl 6 makes considerable use of the « and » characters. + +## Rendering Pod + +To generate any output (i.e., Markdown, HTML, Text, etc.), you need to +have the Raku Perl 6 compiler installed. In addition, you must install +a module (e.g., `Pod::To::Markdown`, `Pod::To::HTML`, `Pod::To::Text`, etc.) +that generates your desired output from Pod. + +For instructions about installing Raku Perl 6, +[look here](https://perl6.org/downloads/). + +Run the following command to generate a certain output: + +``` +perl6 --doc=TARGET input.pod6 > output.html +``` + +with `TARGET` being `Markdown`, `HTML`, `Text`, etc. Thus to generate +Markdown from Pod, run this: + +``` +perl6 --doc=Markdown input.pod6 > output.html +``` + +## Accessing Pod + +In order to access Pod documentation from within a Raku Perl 6 program, +it is required to use the special `=` twigil (e.g., `$=pod`, `$=SYNOPSIS`,etc). + +The `$=` construct provides the introspection over the Pod structure, +producing a `Pod::Block` tree root from which it is possible to access +the whole structure of the Pod document. + +If we place the following piece of Raku Perl 6 code and the Pod documentation +in the section [Semantic blocks](#semantic-blocks) in the same file: + +``` +my %used-directives; +for $=pod -> $pod-item { + for $pod-item.contents -> $pod-block { + next unless $pod-block ~~ Pod::Block::Named; + %used-directives{$pod-block.name} = True; + } +} + +say %used-directives.keys.join("\n"); +``` + +we get the following output: + +``` +SYNOPSIS +NAME +VERSION +AUTHOR +DESCRIPTION +``` + +## Additional Information + +* <https://docs.perl6.org/language/pod> for the Pod documentation. +* <https://docs.perl6.org/language/tables> for advices about Pod tables. +* <https://design.perl6.org/S26.html> for the Pod specification. |