Provided by: libpod-eventual-perl_0.094003-1_all bug

NAME

       Pod::Eventual - read a POD document as a series of trivial events

VERSION

       version 0.094003

SYNOPSIS

         package Your::Pod::Parser;
         use base 'Pod::Eventual';

         sub handle_event {
           my ($self, $event) = @_;

           print Dumper($event);
         }

DESCRIPTION

       POD is a pretty simple format to write, but it can be a big pain to deal with reading it
       and doing anything useful with it.  Most existing POD parsers care about semantics, like
       whether a "=item" occurred after an "=over" but before a "back", figuring out how to link
       a "L<>", and other things like that.

       Pod::Eventual is much less ambitious and much more stupid.  Fortunately, stupid is often
       better.  (That's what I keep telling myself, anyway.)

       Pod::Eventual reads line-based input and produces events describing each POD paragraph or
       directive it finds.  Once complete events are immediately passed to the "handle_event"
       method.  This method should be implemented by Pod::Eventual subclasses.  If it isn't,
       Pod::Eventual's own "handle_event" will be called, and will raise an exception.

PERL VERSION

       This library should run on perls released even a long time ago.  It should work on any
       version of perl released in the last five years.

       Although it may work on older versions of perl, no guarantee is made that the minimum
       required version will not be increased.  The version may be increased for any reason, and
       there is no promise that patches will be accepted to lower the minimum required perl.

METHODS

   read_handle
         Pod::Eventual->read_handle($io_handle, \%arg);

       This method iterates through the lines of a handle, producing events and calling the
       "handle_event" method.

       The only valid argument in %arg (for now) is "in_pod", which indicates whether we should
       assume that we are parsing pod when we start parsing the file.  By default, this is false.

       This is useful to behave differently when reading a .pm or .pod file.

       Important: the handle is expected to have an encoding layer so that it will return text,
       not bytes, on reads.

   read_file
       This behaves just like "read_handle", but expects a filename rather than a handle.  The
       file will be assumed to be UTF-8 encoded.

   read_string
       This behaves just like "read_handle", but expects a string containing POD text rather than
       a handle.

   handle_event
       This method is called each time Pod::Eventual finishes scanning for a new POD event.  It
       must be implemented by a subclass or it will raise an exception.

   handle_nonpod
       This method is called each time a non-POD segment is seen -- that is, lines after "=cut"
       and before another command.

       If unimplemented by a subclass, it does nothing by default.

   handle_blank
       This method is called at the end of a sequence of one or more blank lines.

       If unimplemented by a subclass, it does nothing by default.

EVENTS

       There are four kinds of events that Pod::Eventual will produce.  All are represented as
       hash references.

   Command Events
       These events represent commands -- those things that start with an equals sign in the
       first column.  Here are some examples of POD and the event that would be produced.

       A simple header:

         =head1 NAME

         { type => 'command', command => 'head1', content => "NAME\n", start_line => 4 }

       Notice that the content includes the trailing newline.  That's to maintain similarity with
       this possibly-surprising case:

         =for HTML
         We're actually still in the command event, here.

         {
           type    => 'command',
           command => 'for',
           content => "HTML\nWe're actually still in the command event, here.\n",
           start_line => 8,
         }

       Pod::Eventual does not care what the command is.  It doesn't keep track of what it's seen
       or whether you've used a command that isn't defined.  The only special case is "=cut",
       which is never more than one line.

         =cut
         We are no longer parsing POD when this line is read.

         {
           type    => 'command',
           command => 'cut',
           content => "\n",
           start_line => 15,
         }

       Waiving this special case may be an option in the future.

   Text Events
       A text event is just a paragraph of text, beginning after one or more empty lines and
       running until the next empty line (or =cut).  In Perl 5's standard usage of Pod, text
       content that begins with whitespace is a "verbatim" paragraph, and text content that
       begins with non-whitespace is an "ordinary" paragraph.

       Pod::Eventual doesn't care.

       Text events look like this:

         {
           type    => 'text',
           content => "a string of text ending with a\n",
           start_line =>  16,
         }

   Blank events
       These events represent blank lines (or many blank lines) within a Pod section.

       Blank events look like this:

         {
           type    => 'blank',
           content => "\n\n\n\n",
           start_line => 21,
         }

   Non-Pod events
       These events represent non-Pod segments of the input.

       Non-Pod events look like this:

         {
           type    => 'nonpod',
           content => "#!/usr/bin/perl\nuse strict;\n\nuse Acme::ProgressBar\n\n",
           start_line => 1,
         }

AUTHOR

       Ricardo SIGNES <cpan@semiotic.systems>

CONTRIBUTORS

       •   Hans Dieter Pearcey <hdp@weftsoar.net>

       •   Philippe Bruhat (BooK) <book@cpan.org>

       •   Ricardo Signes <rjbs@semiotic.systems>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2022 by Ricardo SIGNES.

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