#!/home/perldoc/perldoc-browser/perls/5.6.2/bin/perl eval 'exec /home/perldoc/perldoc-browser/perls/5.6.2/bin/perl -S $0 ${1+"$@"}' if $running_under_some_shell; # pod2latex conversion program use Pod::LaTeX; use Pod::Find qw/ pod_find /; use Pod::Usage; use Getopt::Long; use File::Basename; # Read command line arguments my %options = ( "help" => 0, "man" => 0, "sections" => [], "full" => 0, "out" => undef, "verbose" => 0, "modify" => 0, ); GetOptions(\%options, "help", "man", "verbose", "full", "sections=s@", "out=s", "modify", ) || pod2usage(2); pod2usage(1) if ($options{help}); pod2usage(-verbose => 2) if ($options{man}); # Read all the files from the command line my @files = @ARGV; # Now find which ones are real pods and convert # directories to their contents. # Extract the pods from each arg since some of them might # be directories # This is not as efficient as using pod_find to search through # everything at once but it allows us to preserve the order # supplied by the user my @pods; foreach my $arg (@files) { my %pods = pod_find($arg); push(@pods, sort keys %pods); } # Abort if nothing to do if ($#pods == -1) { warn "None of the supplied Pod files actually exist\n"; exit; } # If $options{'out'} is set we are processing to a single output file my $multi_documents; if (exists $options{'out'} && defined $options{'out'}) { $multi_documents = 0; } else { $multi_documents = 1; } # If the output file is not specified it is assumed that # a single output file is required per input file using # a .tex extension rather than any exisiting extension if ($multi_documents) { # Case where we just generate one input per output foreach my $pod (@pods) { if (-f $pod) { my $output = $pod; $output = basename($output, '.pm', '.pod','.pl') . '.tex'; # Create a new parser object my $parser = new Pod::LaTeX( AddPreamble => $options{'full'}, AddPostamble => $options{'full'}, MakeIndex => $options{'full'}, TableOfContents => $options{'full'}, ReplaceNAMEwithSection => $options{'modify'}, UniqueLabels => $options{'modify'}, ); # Select sections if supplied $parser->select(@{ $options{'sections'}}) if @{$options{'sections'}}; # Derive the input file from the output file $parser->parse_from_file($pod, $output); print "Written output to $output\n" if $options{'verbose'}; } else { warn "File $pod not found\n"; } } } else { # Case where we want everything to be in a single document # Need to open the output file ourselves my $output = $options{'out'}; $output .= '.tex' unless $output =~ /\.tex$/; # Use auto-vivified file handle in perl 5.6 use Symbol; my $outfh = gensym; open ($outfh, ">$output") || die "Could not open output file: $!\n"; # Flag to indicate whether we have converted at least one file # indicates how many files have been converted my $converted = 0; # Loop over the input files foreach my $pod (@pods) { if (-f $pod) { warn "Converting $pod\n" if $options{'verbose'}; # Open the file (need the handle) # Use auto-vivified handle in perl 5.6 my $podfh = gensym; open ($podfh, "<$pod") || die "Could not open pod file $pod: $!\n"; # if this is the first file to be converted we may want to add # a preamble (controlled by command line option) if ($converted == 0 && $options{'full'}) { $preamble = 1; } else { $preamble = 0; } # if this is the last file to be converted may want to add # a postamble (controlled by command line option) # relies on a previous pass to check existence of all pods we # are converting. my $postamble = ( ($converted == $#pods && $options{'full'}) ? 1 : 0 ); # Open parser object # May want to start with a preamble for the first one and # end with an index for the last my $parser = new Pod::LaTeX( MakeIndex => $options{'full'}, TableOfContents => $preamble, ReplaceNAMEwithSection => $options{'modify'}, UniqueLabels => $options{'modify'}, StartWithNewPage => $options{'full'}, AddPreamble => $preamble, AddPostamble => $postamble, ); # Store the file name for error messages # This is a kluge that breaks the data hiding of the object $parser->{_INFILE} = $pod; # Select sections if supplied $parser->select(@{ $options{'sections'}}) if @{$options{'sections'}}; # Parse it $parser->parse_from_filehandle($podfh, $outfh); # We have converted at least one file $converted++; } else { warn "File $pod not found\n"; } } # Should unlink the file if we didn't convert anything! # dont check for return status of unlink # since there is not a lot to be done if the unlink failed # and the program does not rely upon it. unlink "$output" unless $converted; # If verbose warn "Converted $converted files\n" if $options{'verbose'}; } exit; __END__ =head1 NAME pod2latex - convert pod documentation to latex format =head1 SYNOPSIS pod2latex *.pm pod2latex -out mytex.tex *.pod pod2latex -full -sections 'DESCRIPTION|NAME' SomeDir =head1 DESCRIPTION C is a program to convert POD format documentation (L) into latex. It can process multiple input documents at a time and either generate a latex file per input document or a single combined output file. =head1 OPTIONS AND ARGUMENTS This section describes the supported command line options. Minium matching is supported. =over 4 =item B<-out> Name of the output file to be used. If there are multiple input pods it is assumed that the intention is to write all translated output into a single file. C<.tex> is appended if not present. If the argument is not supplied, a single document will be created for each input file. =item B<-full> Creates a complete C file that can be processed immediately (unless C<=for/=begin> directives are used that rely on extra packages). Table of contents and index generation commands are included in the wrapper C code. =item B<-sections> Specify pod sections to include (or remove if negated) in the translation. See L for the format to use for I. This option may be given multiple times on the command line.This is identical to the similar option in the C command. =item B<-modify> This option causes the output C to be slightly modified from the input pod such that when a C<=head1 NAME> is encountered a section is created containing the actual pod name (rather than B) and all subsequent C<=head1> directives are treated as subsections. This has the advantage that the description of a module will be in its own section which is helpful for including module descriptions in documentation. Also forces C label and index entries to be prefixed by the name of the module. =item B<-help> Print a brief help message and exit. =item B<-man> Print the manual page and exit. =item B<-verbose> Print information messages as each document is processed. =back =head1 BUGS Known bugs are: =over 4 =item * Cross references between documents are not resolved when multiple pod documents are converted into a single output C file. =item * Functions and variables are not automatically recognized and they will therefore not be marked up in any special way unless instructed by an explicit pod command. =back =head1 SEE ALSO L =head1 AUTHOR Tim Jenness Et.jenness@jach.hawaii.eduE This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. Copyright (C) 2000 Tim Jenness. =cut