Provided by: libhtml-tiny-perl_1.08-2_all bug

NAME

       HTML::Tiny - Lightweight, dependency free HTML/XML generation

SYNOPSIS

         use HTML::Tiny;

         my $h = HTML::Tiny->new;

         # Generate a simple page
         print $h->html(
           [
             $h->head( $h->title( 'Sample page' ) ),
             $h->body(
               [
                 $h->h1( { class => 'main' }, 'Sample page' ),
                 $h->p( 'Hello, World', { class => 'detail' }, 'Second para' )
               ]
             )
           ]
         );

         # Outputs
         <html>
           <head>
             <title>Sample page</title>
           </head>
           <body>
             <h1 class="main">Sample page</h1>
             <p>Hello, World</p>
             <p class="detail">Second para</p>
           </body>
         </html>

DESCRIPTION

       "HTML::Tiny" is a simple, dependency free module for generating HTML (and XML). It
       concentrates on generating syntactically correct XHTML using a simple Perl notation.

       In addition to the HTML generation functions utility functions are provided to

       •   encode and decode URL encoded strings

       •   entity encode HTML

       •   build query strings

       •   JSON encode data structures

INTERFACE

       "new"
           Create a new "HTML::Tiny". The constructor takes one optional argument: "mode". "mode"
           can be either 'xml' (default) or 'html'. The difference is that in HTML mode, closed
           tags will not be closed with a forward slash; instead, closed tags will be returned as
           single open tags.

           Example:

             # Set HTML mode.
             my $h = HTML::Tiny->new( mode => 'html' );

             # The default is XML mode, but this can also be defined explicitly.
             $h = HTML::Tiny->new( mode => 'xml' );

           HTML is a dialect of SGML, and is not XML in any way. "Orphan" open tags or unclosed
           tags are legal and in fact expected by user agents. In practice, if you want to
           generate XML or XHTML, supply no arguments. If you want valid HTML, use "mode =>
           'html'".

   HTML Generation
       "tag( $name, ... )"
           Returns HTML (or XML) that encloses each of the arguments in the specified tag. For
           example

             print $h->tag('p', 'Hello', 'World');

           would print

             <p>Hello</p><p>World</p>

           notice that each argument is individually wrapped in the specified tag.  To avoid this
           multiple arguments can be grouped in an anonymous array:

             print $h->tag('p', ['Hello', 'World']);

           would print

             <p>HelloWorld</p>

           The [ and ] can be thought of as grouping a number of arguments.

           Attributes may be supplied by including an anonymous hash as the first element in the
           argument list (after the tag name):

             print $h->tag('p', { class => 'normal' }, 'Foo');

           would print

             <p class="normal">Foo</p>

           Attribute values will be HTML entity encoded as necessary.

           Multiple hashes may be supplied in which case they will be merged:

             print $h->tag('p',
               { class => 'normal' }, 'Bar',
               { style => 'color: red' }, 'Bang!'
             );

           would print

             <p class="normal">Bar</p><p class="normal" style="color: red">Bang!</p>

           Notice that the class="normal" attribute is merged with the style attribute for the
           second paragraph.

           To remove an attribute set its value to undef:

             print $h->tag('p',
               { class => 'normal' }, 'Bar',
               { class => undef }, 'Bang!'
             );

           would print

             <p class="normal">Bar</p><p>Bang!</p>

           An empty attribute - such as 'checked' in a checkbox can be encoded by passing an
           empty array reference:

             print $h->closed( 'input', { type => 'checkbox', checked => [] } );

           would print

             <input checked type="checkbox" />

           Return Value

           In a scalar context "tag" returns a string. In a list context it returns an array each
           element of which corresponds to one of the original arguments:

             my @html = $h->tag('p', 'this', 'that');

           would return

             @html = (
               '<p>this</p>',
               '<p>that</p>'
             );

           That means that when you nest calls to tag (or the equivalent HTML aliases - see
           below) the individual arguments to the inner call will be tagged separately by each
           enclosing call. In practice this means that

             print $h->tag('p', $h->tag('b', 'Foo', 'Bar'));

           would print

             <p><b>Foo</b></p><p><b>Bar</b></p>

           You can modify this behavior by grouping multiple args in an anonymous array:

             print $h->tag('p', [ $h->tag('b', 'Foo', 'Bar') ] );

           would print

             <p><b>Foo</b><b>Bar</b></p>

           This behaviour is powerful but can take a little time to master. If you imagine '['
           and ']' preventing the propagation of the 'tag individual items' behaviour it might
           help visualise how it works.

           Here's an HTML table (using the tag-name convenience methods - see below) that
           demonstrates it in more detail:

             print $h->table(
               [
                 $h->tr(
                   [ $h->th( 'Name', 'Score', 'Position' ) ],
                   [ $h->td( 'Therese',  90, 1 ) ],
                   [ $h->td( 'Chrissie', 85, 2 ) ],
                   [ $h->td( 'Andy',     50, 3 ) ]
                 )
               ]
             );

           which would print the unformatted version of:

               <table>
                   <tr><th>Name</th><th>Score</th><th>Position</th></tr>
                   <tr><td>Therese</td><td>90</td><td>1</td></tr>
                   <tr><td>Chrissie</td><td>85</td><td>2</td></tr>
                   <tr><td>Andy</td><td>50</td><td>3</td></tr>
               </table>

           Note how you don't need a td() for every cell or a tr() for every row.  Notice also
           how the square brackets around the rows prevent tr() from wrapping each individual
           cell.

           Often when generating nested HTML you will find yourself writing corresponding nested
           calls to HTML generation methods. The table generation code above is an example of
           this.

           If you prefer these nested method calls can be deferred like this:

             print $h->table(
               [
                 \'tr',
                 [ \'th', 'Name',     'Score', 'Position' ],
                 [ \'td', 'Therese',  90,      1 ],
                 [ \'td', 'Chrissie', 85,      2 ],
                 [ \'td', 'Andy',     50,      3 ]
               ]
             );

           In general a nested call like

             $h->method( args )

           may be rewritten like this

             [ \'method', args ]

           This allows complex HTML to be expressed as a pure data structure. See the "stringify"
           method for more information.

       "open( $name, ... )"
           Generate an opening HTML or XML tag. For example:

             print $h->open('marker');

           would print

             <marker>

           Attributes can be provided in the form of anonymous hashes in the same way as for
           "tag". For example:

             print $h->open('marker', { lat => 57.0, lon => -2 });

           would print

             <marker lat="57.0" lon="-2">

           As for "tag" multiple attribute hash references will be merged. The example above
           could be written:

             print $h->open('marker', { lat => 57.0 }, { lon => -2 });

       "close( $name )"
           Generate a closing HTML or XML tag. For example:

             print $h->close('marker');

           would print:

             </marker>

       "closed( $name, ... )"
           Generate a closed HTML or XML tag. For example

             print $h->closed('marker');

           would print:

             <marker />

           As for "tag" and "open" attributes may be provided as hash references:

             print $h->closed('marker', { lat => 57.0 }, { lon => -2 });

           would print:

             <marker lat="57.0" lon="-2" />

       "auto_tag( $name, ... )"
           Calls either "tag" or "closed" based on built in rules for the tag. Used internally to
           implement the tag-named methods.

       "stringify( $obj )"
           Called internally to obtain string representations of values.

           It also implements the deferred method call notation (mentioned above) so that

             my $table = $h->table(
               [
                 $h->tr(
                   [ $h->th( 'Name', 'Score', 'Position' ) ],
                   [ $h->td( 'Therese',  90, 1 ) ],
                   [ $h->td( 'Chrissie', 85, 2 ) ],
                   [ $h->td( 'Andy',     50, 3 ) ]
                 )
               ]
             );

           may also be written like this:

             my $table = $h->stringify(
               [
                 \'table',
                 [
                   \'tr',
                   [ \'th', 'Name',     'Score', 'Position' ],
                   [ \'td', 'Therese',  90,      1 ],
                   [ \'td', 'Chrissie', 85,      2 ],
                   [ \'td', 'Andy',     50,      3 ]
                 ]
               ]
             );

           Any reference to an array whose first element is a reference to a scalar

             [ \'methodname', args ]

           is executed as a call to the named method with the specified args.

   Methods named after tags
       In addition to the methods described above "HTML::Tiny" provides all of the following HTML
       generation methods:

         a abbr acronym address applet area article aside audio b base bdi bdo big
         blink blockquote body br button canvas caption center cite code col colgroup
         data datalist dd del details dfn dialog dir div dl dt em embed fieldset
         figcaption figure font footer form frame frameset h1 h2 h3 h4 h5 h6 head
         header hgroup hr html i iframe img input ins kbd keygen label legend li link
         main map mark marquee menu menuitem meta meter nav nobr noframes noscript
         object ol optgroup option output p param picture portal pre progress q rb rp
         rt rtc ruby s samp script section select slot small source spacer span strike
         strong style sub summary sup table tbody td template textarea tfoot th thead
         time title tr track tt u ul var video wbr xmp

       The following methods generate closed XHTML (<br />) tags by default:

         area base br col embed frame hr iframe img input keygen link meta param
         source track wbr

       So:

         print $h->br;   # prints <br />
         print $h->input({ name => 'field1' });
                         # prints <input name="field1" />
         print $h->img({ src => 'pic.jpg' });
                         # prints <img src="pic.jpg" />

       All other tag methods generate tags to wrap whatever content they are passed:

         print $h->p('Hello, World');

       prints:

         <p>Hello, World</p>

       So the following are equivalent:

         print $h->a({ href => 'http://hexten.net' }, 'Hexten');

       and

         print $h->tag('a', { href => 'http://hexten.net' }, 'Hexten');

   Utility Methods
       "url_encode( $str )"
           URL encode a string. Spaces become '+' and non-alphanumeric characters are encoded as
           '%' + their hexadecimal character code.

             $h->url_encode( ' <hello> ' )   # returns '+%3chello%3e+'

       "url_decode( $str )"
           URL decode a string. Reverses the effect of "url_encode".

             $h->url_decode( '+%3chello%3e+' )   # returns ' <hello> '

       "query_encode( $hash_ref )"
           Generate a query string from an anonymous hash of key, value pairs:

             print $h->query_encode({ a => 1, b => 2 })

           would print

             a=1&b=2

       "entity_encode( $str )"
           Encode the characters '<', '>', '&', '\'' and '"' as their HTML entity equivalents:

             print $h->entity_encode( '<>\'"&' );

           would print:

             &lt;&gt;&apos;&quot;&amp;

       "json_encode"
           Encode a data structure in JSON (Javascript) format:

             print $h->json_encode( { ar => [ 1, 2, 3, { a => 1, b => 2 } ] } );

           would print:

             {"ar":[1,2,3,{"a":1,"b":2}]}

           Because JSON is valid Javascript this method can be useful when generating ad-hoc
           Javascript. For example

             my $some_perl_data = {
               score   => 45,
               name    => 'Fred',
               history => [ 32, 37, 41, 45 ]
             };

             # Transfer value to Javascript
             print $h->script( { type => 'text/javascript' },
                 "\nvar someVar = " . $h->json_encode( $some_perl_data ) . ";\n " );

             # Prints
             # <script type="text/javascript">
             # var someVar = {"history":[32,37,41,45],"name":"Fred","score":45};
             # </script>

           If you attempt to json encode a blessed object "json_encode" will look for a "TO_JSON"
           method and, if found, use its return value as the structure to be converted in place
           of the object. An attempt to encode a blessed object that does not implement "TO_JSON"
           will fail.

   Subclassing
       An "HTML::Tiny" is a blessed hash ref.

       "validate_tag( $closed, $name, $attr )"
           Subclass "validate_tag" to throw an error or issue a warning when an attempt is made
           to generate an invalid tag.

AUTHOR

       Andy Armstrong <andy@hexten.net>

       Aristotle Pagaltzis <pagaltzis@gmx.de>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2008 by Andy Armstrong.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
       the Perl 5 programming language system itself.