bionic (3) PPIx::Regexp::Token::Literal.3pm.gz

Provided by: libppix-regexp-perl_0.055-1_all bug

NAME

       PPIx::Regexp::Token::Literal - Represent a literal character

SYNOPSIS

        use PPIx::Regexp::Dumper;
        PPIx::Regexp::Dumper->new( 'qr{foo}smx' )
            ->print();

INHERITANCE

       "PPIx::Regexp::Token::Literal" is a PPIx::Regexp::Token.

       "PPIx::Regexp::Token::Literal" has no descendants.

DESCRIPTION

       This class represents a literal character, no matter how specified.

METHODS

       This class provides the following public methods. Methods not documented here are private, and
       unsupported in the sense that the author reserves the right to change or remove them without notice.

   ordinal
        print 'The ordinal of ', $token->content(),
            ' is ', $token->ordinal(), "\n";

       This method returns the ordinal of the literal if it can figure it out.  It is analogous to the "ord"
       built-in.

       It will not attempt to determine the ordinal of a unicode name ("\N{...}") unless charnames has been
       loaded, and supports the vianame() function. Instead, it will return "undef". Users of Perl 5.6.2 and
       older may be out of luck here.

       Unicode code points (e.g. "\N{U+abcd}") should work independently of charnames, and just return the value
       of "abcd".

       It will never attempt to return the ordinal of an octet ("\C{...}") because I don't understand the
       syntax.

SUPPORT

       Support is by the author. Please file bug reports at <http://rt.cpan.org>, or in electronic mail to the
       author.

AUTHOR

       Thomas R. Wyant, III wyant at cpan dot org

       Copyright (C) 2009-2018 by Thomas R. Wyant, III

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl
       5.10.0. For more details, see the full text of the licenses in the directory LICENSES.

       This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but without any warranty; without even
       the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.