Perl6::Bible::S26(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Perl6::Bible::S26(3)NAME
Synopsis_26 - Perl Documentation [DRAFT]
AUTHOR
Brian Ingerson <ingy@cpan.org>
VERSION
Maintainer: Brian Ingerson <ingy@cpan.org>
Date: 9 Apr 2005
Last Modified: 9 Apr 2005
This document attempts to describe the documentation capabilities of
Perl 6. It assumes familiarity with Perl 5 and the Pod (Plain Old
Documentation) format.
NOTE: This document is based heavily on the ideas and discussions of
those involved in the Perldoc project, and lightly on the views
of
the Perl 6 design team proper. In other words, expect things to
change when Larry gets more involved.
OVERVIEW
Throughout this document, the term "Perldoc" will be used as the
generic term to describe Perl Documentation rather than the original
name "Pod". Pod now refers to a specific dialect of Perldoc. With
Perldoc, there's more than one way to do documentation (TMTOWTDD).
This document covers the following major areas:
Perldoc Object Model (PDOM)
In Perl 6 there is a Document Object Model for Perldoc. This refers
to both the fact that all Perl documentation is modeled in a
certain fashion (or schema), and also to the runtime API for
accessing the content of documents.
Syntax Containment
How Perl syntax is distinguished from Perldoc syntax.
Syntax Dialects
Various Perldoc syntax formats that map to the same PDOM.
Escaping and Embedding
Each Perldoc dialect syntax must provide mechanisms for escaping
markup as actual content, and for embedding other dialects within
itself.
Changes in Pod
There are slight changes to the Perl 5 Pod structure, to make it
consistent and unambiguous.
The Kwid Dialect
Kwid is a completely new syntax based on experience from more
modern internet social communication.
PDOM Extensions
The PDOM can be extended to support structures that are beyond the
scope of traditional Pod.
THE PERLDOC OBJECT MODEL (PDOM)
Perldoc is centered on the notion of allowing multiple documentation
dialects, but insisting that they are parsed into a consistent
information model. The information can then be exposed or transformed
in a consistent, well known manner. This will facilitate the creation
of powerful Perldoc tools.
This information model (known as the Perldoc Object Model or PDOM) is
almost exactly the one that Perl 5's Pod implicitly defines.
The PDOM can be thought of as a tree of nodes. There are 4 kinds of
nodes:
Text Nodes
Leaf nodes containing content text.
Collection Nodes
Nodes that contain other nodes.
Opaque Nodes
Leaf nodes that represent something that is not part of the PDOM,
but may be resolved by some other process at some other time. This
might include tables, images, diagrams or raw html. Opaque nodes
are typically handled by PDOM extensions, described later on.
Ignorable Nodes
Nodes for text in the syntax presentation that has no bearing on
the document's intended content, but must be preserved for
applications like editors and syntax hilighting. This typically
includes extra whitespace and throwaway comments.
There are two categories of collection nodes:
Block Nodes
These are nodes that correspond in nature to HTML "DIV"s. They
represent things like paragraphs, verbatim blocks, lists and list
items.
Phrase Nodes
These are nodes that correspond in nature to HTML "SPAN"s. They
represent things like bold, italic, inline code and links.
Each node has a type that indicates what type of data it holds. The
following is a list of nodes that exist in the PDOM model:
- heading1_block
- heading2_block
- heading3_block
- heading4_block
- paragraph_block
- verbatim_block
- comment_block
- opaque_block
- unordered_list
- ordered_list
- definition_list
- list_item
- item_term
- item_definition
- bold_phrase
- italic_phrase
- code_phrase
- file_phrase
- opaque_phrase
- document_link
- hyper_link
- plain_text
PDOM Serial API
Perldoc allows for SAX-style streaming parsing and emission of
documents. The serial API looks something like this:
- start_document(title) - Start a new Perldoc document
- end_document() - End a Perdoc document
- start_element(type) - Start a new node
- end_element(type) - End a node
- characters(text) - Content text as unicode chars
- ignorable(text) - Non-content text
PDOM Random Access API
This API consists of functions that would likely look similar to
XML/DOM.
Larry has also stated that the documentation of a program will be
available through the global variable %*POD which I would humbly
suggest be changed or (at least aliased) to %*DOC. It has not yet been
determined how all the parts of the PDOM would be accessed through this
hash.
Perhaps the variable $*DOC could hold a reference to the programs PDOM
object.
SYNTAX CONTAINMENT
The first thing to tackle is how various interpreters (including the
Perl interpreter) distinguish which characters in a file or stream are
actual Perl code and which ones are Perldoc.
Perldoc attempts to stay within the same bounds as those imposed by the
Perl 5 interpreter, namely that a section of Perldoc begins with a line
matching the regexp:
/^=\w.*$/m
and ends with the next line matching:
/^=cut.*$/m
Perldoc currently keeps this same restriction for two reasons:
# Backwards compatability with Perl 5. There is no reason why Perldoc
dialects and tools cannot be used with Perl 5 today, without any
need to change the interpreter.
# To gain acceptance with the Perl 6 design team, by not asking for
anything special to accomplish its goals. That said, the
containment rules could and should be made smarter by the Perl 6
team.
Pod has a generic identifier to start a Pod section:
/^=pod.*$/m
Note that the "=pod" and "=cut" lines are not considered part of the
Pod, but simply as containment markers.
However Pod also allows a section to begin with any number of block
identifiers as long as it starts with an equals sign.
So the line:
=head2 Something To Say
acts not only as a containment starting marker, but also as part of the
content (a heading).
Containment Differences in Perldoc
In general Perldoc is backwards compatible with Pod. This gives the Pod
dialect a slight advantage in being able to start a section with actual
content. Any other dialect that wanted this feature would need to have
similar block markup.
Perldoc extends the notion of containment while still fitting inside
the Perl5/Pod restrictions. Perldoc offers a generic starting marker
of:
=doc
This is a dialect agnostic version of the traditional:
=pod
which is still valid in Perldoc but is a shortcut for:
=doc.pod
and
=doc.kwid
is long for:
=kwid
The term "doc" is more readily understood by those readers not familiar
with Pod or Kwid.
If "=doc" has no dialect qualifier, it is assumed to be the dialect of
the previous section. If there is no previous section, the dialect
should be autodetected.
All of the text following the "=doc" marker but on the same line is
considered to be the first line of the actual content. This allows Kwid
to do some thing like this:
=doc - Something
Some interesting point.
=cut
to be a synonym for:
=doc.kwid
- Something
Some interesting point.
=cut
which is semantically equivalent to Pod's
=item Something
Some interesting point.
=cut
File Containment
The above describes how to divine the Perl from the Doc, which assumes
they are intertwingled in a Perl source code file. Documentation can
also live in a file by itself.
Perldoc considers files ending with ".pod" to be documentation in the
Pod dialect and files ending with ".kwid" to be in the Kwid dialect,
etc. A perldoc parser can look to the file extension for a dialect
hint, if no other clue is provided.
This implies that the lines like:
=pod
=kwid
=doc
=cut
are not necessary in pure Perldoc files. In fact, in a Kwid file, they
would just be plain text.
SYNTAX DIALECTS
In the spirit of TMTOWTDI, Perldoc allows an author to chose a
documentation syntax of their choice without needing to worry whether
downstream processes and tools will be able to use it properly. These
variations of syntax are referred to as Perldoc Dialects.
Background and Rationale
Pod was created in a time before modern day phenomenons like wikis
existed. Wikis are similar to Pod in that that they ask authors to
write content prose and structural/formatting markup in an all text
format that is simpler and less foreboding than HTML. Then some program
converts the text into a nicely readable format like HTML.
Wiki syntax comes in dozens of varieties, but the main theme is "make
the unformatted text feel as close as possible to the formatted text,
because most of the people using wikis will not be technical". Normal
non-programmmer folk aren't all that good at picking out cryptic markup
from content. And while the authors of most Perldoc are very technical,
some of them wonder why they can't just use the friendlier markup.
Other Dialects
"Pod" is now the Perldoc dialect that looks exactly like Pod.
"Kwid" is one Perldoc dialect that takes the best ideas from the
various wiki syntaxes that correspond to ideas in the Pod model.
Other dialects should be created by people who are neither fond of Pod
nor Kwid.
An XML dialect would be trivial to define since the PDOM can be thought
of as being an XML schema.
Likewise an HTML dialect would be useful as a formal syntax for
creating Pod from HTML.
A WYSIWYG Perldoc editor could be thought of as just another dialect.
ESCAPING AND EMBEDDING
In addition to providing syntactical constructs for all the nodes of
the PDOM, a Perldoc dialect must provide forms for escaping plain text
and embedding other Perldoc dialects (as well as opaque structures).
Escaping
Escaping means to mark characters which are semantically part of the
content of the document but might otherwise be construed as markup.
Here are some examples where the first line is ambiguous or wrong and
the following line(s) fixes it.
In the Pod dialect:
=head1 Not a heading
E<eq>head1 Not a heading
This equation C<a > b>
This equation C<a E<gt> b>
This equation C<< a > b >>
This is verbatim X<<< >>>X
This is verbatim XE<lt><< >>>X
Perldoc(tm) is fun
PerldocE<trade> is fun
In the Kwid dialect:
= Not a heading
\= Not a heading
Not a link: [title|page/section]
Not a link: \[title|page/section]
This is not huggy but should be *bold*/italic/
This is not huggy but should be {*bold*}{/italic/}
This is verbatim {*zyz*}
This is verbatim {\*zyz*}
This is verbatim { {*zyz*} }
Perldoc(tm) is fun
Perldoc™ is fun
Note that none of these is purported to be elegant, but a complete
syntax requires such mechanisms.
Embedding
Each dialect must have a mechanism to switch parsing to another dialect
and back again.
Using Pod and Kwid again, here is an example of Pod embedding Kwid:
=doc.pod
=head2 Here is a list
=begin kwid
* one
* two
* three
=end kwid
That was a B<list>!
=cut
and here is the opposite:
=doc.kwid
== Here is a list
.pod
=over
=item *
one
=item *
two
=item *
three
=back
..pod
That was a *list*!
=cut
CHANGES IN POD
In order to make POD more consistent, the following minor details will
change:
Allow named hyperlinks
Pod allows this syntax:
L<text to show|document_name>
for named links to other documents. It should also allow:
L<text to show|http://example.com/foo.html>
for named hyperlinks.
"=over" and "=back" will be deprecated.
This markers are ambiguous as indenters and list markers.
Instead we will have:
=begin list
=end list
with special syntax to make them less verbose.
For more information on how the Pod dialect might change, see
<http://www.nntp.perl.org/group/perl.perl6.language/19851>.
If the Pod dialect is changed significantly by the Perl 6 design team,
it is suggested that there remain a legacy Perl 5 dialect. Hopefully
the legacy dialect would be called "Pod", and the improved version
something else. "Mod"??
THE KWID DIALECT
The Kwid dialect is more formally described here:
<http://autrijus.org/tmp/perlkwid.kwid>
The quickest way to explain Kwid is simply to show a side by side
Pod/Kwid cheat sheet:
=head1 Big Thing = Big Thing
=head4 Small Thing ==== Small Thing
A paragraph of A paragraph of
plain text. plain text.
# verbatim # verbatim
sub v { sub v {
shift; shift;
} }
=over * foo
* bar
=item *
foo
=item *
bar
=back
=over - foo
=item foo Foo is free
- bar Bar is he
Foo is free
=item bar
Bar is he
=over
Something B<bold>! Something *bold*!
Something I<italic>! Something /italic/!
Some code C<E = M * C ^ 2>! Some code `E = M * C ^ 2`!
=begin opaque .opaque
=end opaque ..opaque
=for opaque .:opaque
This is just a small example to give you an idea. Kwid is really nice
for nested lists:
* This
++ One
--- One Is the /lonelist/ integer
--- Won The Race
++ Two
--- Two For the show
--- Too Far from here
* That
* The Other
The above in Pod would be horribly long.
PDOM EXTENSIONS
All Perldoc dialects and tools are required to support all of the core
constructs defined in the PDOM schema. It is assumed that data in any
dialect should be able to round trip semantically when converted to any
other dialect and back.
It is also intended that there will be extension libraries to add
syntax parsing, schema definition, and formatting/conversion
capabilities for various constructs that fall outside of the core PDOM.
Tables are a prime example. While too unweildy to impose on every tool,
tables are useful in many documentation applications. So there will be
an extension that handle tables.
If tools are not available at a particular stage of processing an
extension construct, that construct will be reported as an opaque
object by the PDOM. It is entirely possible that a further stage of
proceesing will be able to move the opaque object into some
representation dictated by the extension's schema.
Pod and Kwid define marker syntax for block level extensions.
=begin foo
=end foo
.foo
..foo
Kwid also defines syntax for phrase level extensions.
This was written: {date: 2005-04-09}
So dates can have extension processors to do fancy things. Pod should
have such a generic phrase syntax:
This was written: <DATE><2005-04-09>
or something similar.
perl v5.14.0 2005-12-22 Perl6::Bible::S26(3)