Provided by: libtext-autoformat-perl_1.740000-1_all bug

NAME

       Text::Autoformat - Automatic text wrapping and reformatting

VERSION

       This document describes version 1.72 of Text::Autoformat

SYNOPSIS

        # Minimal use: read from STDIN, format to STDOUT...

           use Text::Autoformat;
           autoformat;

        # In-memory formatting...

           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext;

        # Configuration...

           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { %options };

        # Margins (1..72 by default)...

           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { left=>8, right=>70 };

        # Justification (left by default)...

           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { justify => 'left' };
           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { justify => 'right' };
           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { justify => 'full' };
           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { justify => 'centre' };

        # Filling (does so by default)...

           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { fill=>0 };

        # Squeezing whitespace (does so by default)...

           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { squeeze=>0 };

        # Select appropriate tabspacing (default is 8 spaces per tab):

           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { tabspace=>4 };

        # Case conversions...

           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { case => 'lower' };
           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { case => 'upper' };
           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { case => 'sentence' };
           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { case => 'title' };
           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { case => 'highlight' };
           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { case => \&my_case_func };

        # Selective reformatting

           $formatted = autoformat $rawtext, { ignore=>qr/^\t/ };

BACKGROUND

   The problem
       Perl plaintext formatters just aren't smart enough. Given a typical piece of plaintext in
       need of formatting:

               In comp.lang.perl.misc you wrote:
               : > <CN = Clooless Noobie> writes:
               : > CN> PERL sux because:
               : > CN>    * It doesn't have a switch statement and you have to put $
               : > CN>signs in front of everything
               : > CN>    * There are too many OR operators: having |, || and 'or'
               : > CN>operators is confusing
               : > CN>    * VB rools, yeah!!!!!!!!!
               : > CN> So anyway, how can I stop reloads on a web page?
               : > CN> Email replies only, thanks - I don't read this newsgroup.
               : >
               : > Begone, sirrah! You are a pathetic, Bill-loving, microcephalic
               : > script-infant.
               : Sheesh, what's with this group - ask a question, get toasted! And how
               : *dare* you accuse me of Ianuphilia!

       both the venerable Unix fmt tool and Perl's standard Text::Wrap module produce:

               In comp.lang.perl.misc you wrote:  : > <CN = Clooless Noobie>
               writes:  : > CN> PERL sux because:  : > CN>    * It doesn't
               have a switch statement and you have to put $ : > CN>signs in
               front of everything : > CN>    * There are too many OR
               operators: having |, || and 'or' : > CN>operators is confusing
               : > CN>    * VB rools, yeah!!!!!!!!!  : > CN> So anyway, how
               can I stop reloads on a web page?  : > CN> Email replies only,
               thanks - I don't read this newsgroup.  : > : > Begone, sirrah!
               You are a pathetic, Bill-loving, microcephalic : >
               script-infant.  : Sheesh, what's with this group - ask a
               question, get toasted! And how : *dare* you accuse me of
               Ianuphilia!

       Other formatting modules -- such as Text::Correct and Text::Format -- provide more control
       over their output, but produce equally poor results when applied to arbitrary input. They
       simply don't understand the structural conventions of the text they're reformatting.

   The solution
       The Text::Autoformat module provides a subroutine named "autoformat" that wraps text to
       specified margins. However, "autoformat" reformats its input by analysing the text's
       structure, so it wraps the above example like so:

               In comp.lang.perl.misc you wrote:
               : > <CN = Clooless Noobie> writes:
               : > CN> PERL sux because:
               : > CN>    * It doesn't have a switch statement and you
               : > CN>      have to put $ signs in front of everything
               : > CN>    * There are too many OR operators: having |, ||
               : > CN>      and 'or' operators is confusing
               : > CN>    * VB rools, yeah!!!!!!!!! So anyway, how can I
               : > CN>      stop reloads on a web page? Email replies
               : > CN>      only, thanks - I don't read this newsgroup.
               : >
               : > Begone, sirrah! You are a pathetic, Bill-loving,
               : > microcephalic script-infant.
               : Sheesh, what's with this group - ask a question, get toasted!
               : And how *dare* you accuse me of Ianuphilia!

       Note that the various quoting conventions have been observed. In fact, their structure has
       been used to determine where some paragraphs begin.  Furthermore "autoformat" correctly
       distinguished between the leading '*' bullets of the nested list (which were outdented)
       and the leading emphatic '*' of "*dare*" (which was inlined).

DESCRIPTION

   Paragraphs
       The fundamental task of the "autoformat" subroutine is to identify and rearrange
       independent paragraphs in a text. Paragraphs typically consist of a series of lines
       containing at least one non-whitespace character, followed by one or more lines containing
       only optional whitespace.  This is a more liberal definition than many other formatters
       use: most require an empty line to terminate a paragraph. Paragraphs may also be denoted
       by bulleting, numbering, or quoting (see the following sections).

       Once a paragraph has been isolated, "autoformat" fills and re-wraps its lines according to
       the margins that are specified in its argument list.  These are placed after the text to
       be formatted, in a hash reference:

               $tidied = autoformat($messy, {left=>20, right=>60});

       By default, "autoformat" uses a left margin of 1 (first column) and a right margin of 72.

       You can also control whether (and how) "autoformat" breaks words at the end of a line,
       using the 'break' option:

           # Turn off all hyphenation
           use Text::Autoformat qw(autoformat break_wrap);
               $tidied = autoformat($messy, {break=>break_wrap});

           # Default hyphenation
           use Text::Autoformat qw(autoformat break_at);
               $tidied = autoformat($messy, {break=>break_at('-')});

           # Use TeX::Hyphen module's hyphenation (module must be installed)
           use Text::Autoformat qw(autoformat break_TeX);
               $tidied = autoformat($messy, {break=>break_TeX});

       Normally, "autoformat" only reformats the first paragraph it encounters, and leaves the
       remainder of the text unaltered. This behaviour is useful because it allows a one-liner
       invoking the subroutine to be mapped onto a convenient keystroke in a text editor, to
       provide one-paragraph-at-a-time reformatting:

               % cat .exrc

               map f !Gperl -MText::Autoformat -e'autoformat'

       (Note that to facilitate such one-liners, if "autoformat" is called in a void context
       without any text data, it takes its text from "STDIN" and writes its result to "STDOUT").

       To enable "autoformat" to rearrange the entire input text at once, the "all" argument is
       used:

               $tidied_all = autoformat($messy, {left=>20, right=>60, all=>1});

       "autoformat" can also be directed to selectively reformat paragraphs, using the "ignore"
       argument:

               $tidied_some = autoformat($messy, {ignore=>qr/^[ \t]/});

       The value for "ignore" may be a "qr"'d regex, a subroutine reference, or the special
       string 'indented'.

       If a regex is specified, any paragraph whose original text matches that regex will not be
       reformatted (i.e. it will be printed verbatim).

       If a subroutine is specified, that subroutine will be called once for each paragraph (with
       $_ set to the paragraph's text). The subroutine is expected to return a true or false
       value. If it returns true, the paragraph will not be reformatted.

       If the value of the "ignore" option is the string 'indented', "autoformat" will ignore any
       paragraph in which every line begins with a whitespace.

       You may also specify multiple "ignore" options by including them in an array-ref:

               $tidied_mesg = autoformat($messy, {ignore=>[qr/1/,'indented']});

       One other special case of ignorance is ignoring mail headers and signature.  This option
       is specified using the "mail" argument:

               $tidied_mesg = autoformat($messy_mesg, {mail=>1});

       Note that the "ignore" or "mail" options automatically imply "all".

   Bulleting and (re-)numbering
       Often plaintext will include lists that are either:

               * bulleted,
               * simply numbered (i.e. 1., 2., 3., etc.), or
               * hierarchically numbered (1, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 2, 2.1. and so forth).

       In such lists, each bulleted item is implicitly a separate paragraph, and is formatted
       individually, with the appropriate indentation:

               * bulleted,
               * simply numbered (i.e. 1., 2., 3.,
                 etc.), or
               * hierarchically numbered (1, 1.1,
                 1.2, 1.3, 2, 2.1. and so forth).

       More importantly, if the points are numbered, the numbering is checked and reordered. For
       example, a list whose points have been rearranged:

               1. Analyze problem
               3. Design algorithm
               1. Code solution
               5. Test
               4. Ship

       would be renumbered automatically by "autoformat":

               1. Analyze problem
               2. Design algorithm
               3. Code solution
               4. Test
               5. Ship

       The same reordering would be performed if the "numbering" was by letters ("a." "b." "c."
       etc.) or Roman numerals ("i." "ii." "iii.)" or by some combination of these ("1a." "1b."
       "2a." "2b." etc.) Handling disordered lists of letters and Roman numerals presents an
       interesting challenge. A list such as:

               A. Put cat in box.
               D. Close lid.
               E. Activate Geiger counter.

       should be reordered as "A." "B." "C.," whereas:

               I. Put cat in box.
               D. Close lid.
               XLI. Activate Geiger counter.

       should be reordered "I." "II." "III."

       The "autoformat" subroutine solves this problem by always interpreting alphabetic bullets
       as being letters, unless the full list consists only of valid Roman numerals, at least one
       of which is two or more characters long.

       Note that renumbering starts at the first number actually given, rather than restarting at
       the first possible number. To renumber from 1 (or A.) you must change the first numbered
       bullet to that.

       If automatic renumbering isn't wanted, just specify the 'renumber' option with a false
       value.

       Note that normal numbers above 1000 at the start of a line are no longer considered to be
       paragraph numbering. Numbered paragraphs running that high are exceptionally rare, and
       much rarer than paragraphs that look like these:

               Although it has long been popular (especially in the year
               2001) to point out that we now live in the Future, many
               of the promised miracles of Future Life have failed to
               eventuate. This is a new phenomenon (it didn't happen in
               1001) because the idea that the future might be different
               is a new phenomenon.

       which the former numbering rules caused to be formatted like this:

               Although it has long been popular (especially in the year

               2001) to point out that we now live in the Future, many of the
                     promised miracles of Future Life have failed to eventuate.
                     This is a new phenomenon (it didn't happen in

               2002) because the idea that the future might be different is a
                     new phenomenon.

       but which are now formatted:

               Although it has long been popular (especially in the year 2001)
               to point out that we now live in the Future, many of the
               promised miracles of Future Life have failed to eventuate. This
               is a new phenomenon (it didn't happen in 1001) because the idea
               that the future might be different is a new phenomenon.

       If you want numbers less than 1000 (or other characters strings currently treated as
       bullets) to be ignored in this way, you can turn of list formatting entirely by setting
       the 'lists' option to a false value.

       You can also select which kinds of lists are recognized, by using a string as the value of
       lists:

           # Don't recognize Roman numerals or alphabetics as list markers...
           autoformat { lists => 'number, bullet' }, $text;

           # Don't recognize bullets or numbers as list markers...
           autoformat { lists => 'roman, alpha' }, $text;

           # Recognize everything except Roman numerals as list markers...
           autoformat { lists => 'number, bullet, alpha' }, $text;

       The string should contain one or more of the following words: "number", "bullet", "alpha",
       "roman". "autoformat()" will ignore any list type that doesn't appear in the 'lists'
       string.

   Quoting
       Another case in which contiguous lines may be interpreted as belonging to different
       paragraphs, is where they are quoted with distinct quoters.  For example:

               : > CN> So anyway, how can I stop reloads on a web page? Email
               : > CN> replies only, thanks - I don't read this newsgroup.
               : > Begone, sirrah! You are a pathetic, Bill-loving,
               : > microcephalic script-infant.
               : Sheesh, what's with this group - ask a question, get toasted!
               : And how *dare* you accuse me of Ianuphilia!

       "autoformat" recognizes the various quoting conventions used in this example and treats it
       as three paragraphs to be independently reformatted.

       You may also override the default set of recognized quoters by specifying a 'quoter'
       argument when calling "autoformat()". For example, to format lines such as:

               // This is a comment
               // in the standard C(++)
               // comment-to-EOL
               // format

       specify:

           autoformat($text, { quoter =E<gt> qr{//} })

       Instead of completely replacing the existing set of quoters, you can extend them by
       specifying a pattern that includes the metasequence "<QUOTER>", which is then replaced by
       the module's standard pattern for quoters. So, for example, to add "//" to the set of
       existing quoters:

           autoformat($text, { quoter =E<gt> qr{//|<QUOTER>} })

       Block quotations present a different challenge. A typical formatter would render the
       following quotation:

               "We are all of us in the gutter, but some of us are looking at
                the stars"
                                       -- Oscar Wilde

       like so:

               "We are all of us in the gutter, but some of us are looking at
               the stars" -- Oscar Wilde

       "autoformat" recognizes the quotation structure by matching the following regular
       expression against the text component of each paragraph:

               / \A(\s*) # leading whitespace for quotation (["']|``) # opening
               quotemark (.*) # quotation (''|\2) # closing quotemark \s*?\n #
               trailing whitespace after quotation (\1[ ]+) # leading
               whitespace for attribution
                                       #   (must be indented more than
                                       #   quotation)
                 (--|-) # attribution introducer ([^\n]*?\n) # first
                 attribution line ((\5[^\n]*?$)*) # other attribution lines
                                       #   (indented no less than first line)
                 \s*\Z # optional whitespace to end of paragraph /xsm

       When reformatted (see below), the indentation and the attribution structure will be
       preserved:

               "We are all of us in the gutter, but some of us are looking
                at the stars"
                                       -- Oscar Wilde

   Widow control
       Note that in the last example, "autoformat" broke the line at column 68, four characters
       earlier than it should have. It did so because, if the full margin width had been used,
       the formatting would have left the last two words by themselves on an oddly short last
       line:

               "We are all of us in the gutter, but some of us are looking at
               the stars"

       This phenomenon is known as "widowing" and is heavily frowned upon in typesetting circles.
       It looks ugly in plaintext too, so "autoformat" avoids it by stealing extra words from
       earlier lines in a paragraph, so as to leave enough for a reasonable last line. The
       heuristic used is that final lines must be at least 10 characters long (though this number
       may be adjusted by passing a "widow => minlength" argument to "autoformat").

       If the last line is too short, the paragraph's right margin is reduced by one column, and
       the paragraph is reformatted. This process iterates until either the last line exceeds
       nine characters or the margins have been narrowed by 10% of their original separation. In
       the latter case, the reformatter gives up and uses its original formatting.

   Justification
       The "autoformat" subroutine also takes a named argument: "{justify => type}", which
       specifies how each paragraph is to be justified.  The options are: 'left' (the default),
       "'right'," 'centre' (or 'center'), and 'full'. These act on the complete paragraph text
       (but not on any quoters before that text). For example, with 'right' justification:

               R3>     Now is the Winter of our discontent made
               R3> glorious Summer by this son of York. And all
               R3> the clouds that lour'd upon our house In the
               R3>              deep bosom of the ocean buried.

       Full justification is interesting in a fixed-width medium like plaintext because it
       usually results in uneven spacing between words. Typically, formatters provide this by
       distributing the extra spaces into the first available gaps of each line:

               R3> Now  is  the  Winter  of our discontent made
               R3> glorious Summer by this son of York. And all
               R3> the  clouds  that  lour'd  upon our house In
               R3> the deep bosom of the ocean buried.

       This produces a rather jarring visual effect, so "autoformat" reverses the strategy and
       inserts extra spaces at the end of lines:

               R3> Now is the  Winter of  our  discontent  made
               R3> glorious Summer by this son of York. And all
               R3> the clouds that lour'd  upon  our  house  In
               R3> the deep bosom of the ocean buried.

       Most readers find this less disconcerting.

   Implicit centring
       Even if explicit centring is not specified, "autoformat" will attempt to automatically
       detect centred paragraphs and preserve their justification. It does this by examining each
       line of the paragraph and asking: "if this line were part of a centred paragraph, where
       would the centre line have been?"

       The answer can be determined by adding the length of leading whitespace before the first
       word, plus half the length of the full set of words on the line. That is, for a single
       line:

               $line =~ /^(\s*)(.*?)(\s*)$/ $centre =
               length($1)+0.5*length($2);

       By making the same estimate for every line, and then comparing the estimates, it is
       possible to deduce whether all the lines are centred with respect to the same axis of
       symmetry (with an allowance of X1 to cater for the inevitable rounding when the centre
       positions of even-length rows were originally computed). If a common axis of symmetry is
       detected, "autoformat" assumes that the lines are supposed to be centred, and switches to
       centre-justification mode for that paragraph.

       Note that this behaviour can to switched off entirely by setting the "autocentre" argument
       false.

   Case transformations
       The "autoformat" subroutine can also optionally perform case conversions on the text it
       processes. The "{case => type}" argument allows the user to specify six different
       conversions:

       'upper'
           This mode unconditionally converts every letter in the reformatted text to upper-case;

       'lower'
           This mode unconditionally converts every letter in the reformatted text to lower-case;

       'sentence'
           This mode attempts to generate correctly-cased sentences from the input text. That is,
           the first letter after a sentence-terminating punctuator is converted to upper-case.
           Then, each subsequent word in the sentence is converted to lower-case, unless that
           word is originally mixed-case or contains punctuation. For example, under "{case =>
           'sentence'}":

                   'POVERTY, MISERY, ETC. are the lot of the PhD candidate. alas!'

           becomes:

                   'Poverty, misery, etc. are the lot of the PhD candidate. Alas!'

           Note that "autoformat" is clever enough to recognize that the period after
           abbreviations such as "etc." is not a sentence terminator.

           If the argument is specified as 'sentence ' (with one or more trailing whitespace
           characters) those characters are used to replace the single space that appears at the
           end of the sentence. For example, "autoformat($text, {case=>'sentence '}") would
           produce:

                   'Poverty, misery, etc. are the lot of the PhD candidate. Alas!'

       'title'
           This mode behaves like 'sentence' except that the first letter of every word is
           capitalized:

                   'What I Did On My Summer Vacation In Monterey'

       'highlight'
           This mode behaves like 'title' except that trivial words are not capitalized:

                   'What I Did on my Summer Vacation in Monterey'

       "sub{...}"
           If the argument for 'case' is a subroutine reference, that subroutine is applied to
           each word and the result replaces the word in the text.

           For example, to convert a string to hostage-case:

               my $ransom_note = sub {
                   return join "",                    # ^  Reconcatenate
                          map {/[aeiou]/i ? lc : uc}  # |  uPPeR aND LoWeR each
                          split //,                   # |  Break into chars
                          shift;                      # |  Take argument
               };

               $text = autoformat($text, {case => $ransom_note });
               # "FoR eXaMPLe, To CoNVeRT a STRiNG To HoSTaGe-CaSe:"

           Or to highlight particular words:

               my @SPECIAL = qw( perl camel wall );
               sub highlight_specials {
                   my ($word) = @_;
                   return $word ~~ @SPECIAL ? uc($word) : $word;
               }

               $text = autoformat($text, {case => \&highlight_specials});
               # "It is easier for a CAMEL to pass through a WALL of PERL..."

   Selective reformatting
       You can select which paragraphs "autoformat" actually reformats (or, rather, those it
       doesn't reformat) using the "ignore" flag.

       For example:

               # Reformat all paras except those containing "verbatim"...
               print autoformat { all => 1, ignore => qr/verbatim/i }, $text;

               # Reformat all paras except those less that 3 lines long...
               print autoformat { all => 1, ignore => sub { tr/\n/\n/ < 3
               } }, $text;

               # Reformat all paras except those that are indented...
               print autoformat { all => 1, ignore => qr/^\s/m }, $text;

               # Reformat all paras except those that are indented (easier)...
               print autoformat { all => 1, ignore => 'indented' }, $text;

   Handling tabs
       Text::Autoformat replaces any tabs in the text it's formatting with the appropriate number
       of spaces (using Text::Tabs to do its dirty work). It normally assumes that each tab is
       equivalent to 8 space characters, but you can change that default using the 'tabspace'
       option:

               print autoformat { tabspace => 4 }, $text;

SEE ALSO

       Text::Reform - provides functions for manual text wrapping and reformatting.

       Text::Aligner - provides a single function for justifying strings according to various
       styles.

       Text::Format - a class that provides methods for formatting text in various ways.

       Data::Formatter::Text - format various Perl data structures as text, in different ways
       according to the type of data.

REPOSITORY

       <https://github.com/neilb/Text-Autoformat>

AUTHOR

       Damian Conway (damian@conway.org)

BUGS

       There are undoubtedly serious bugs lurking somewhere in code this funky :-) Bug reports
       and other feedback are most welcome.

LICENCE AND COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 1997-2007, Damian Conway "<DCONWAY@CPAN.org>". All rights reserved.

       This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.

DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY

       BECAUSE THIS SOFTWARE IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE SOFTWARE,
       TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE
       COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE SOFTWARE "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF
       ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED
       WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO
       THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE SOFTWARE IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE SOFTWARE PROVE
       DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR, OR CORRECTION.

       IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING WILL ANY COPYRIGHT
       HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR REDISTRIBUTE THE SOFTWARE AS PERMITTED BY
       THE ABOVE LICENCE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL,
       INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE
       SOFTWARE (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR
       LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE SOFTWARE TO OPERATE WITH ANY
       OTHER SOFTWARE), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
       SUCH DAMAGES.