Provided by: libreply-perl_0.42-2_all bug

NAME

       Reply - read, eval, print, loop, yay!

VERSION

       version 0.42

SYNOPSIS

         use Reply;

         Reply->new(config => "$ENV{HOME}/.replyrc")->run;

DESCRIPTION

       NOTE: This is an early release, and implementation details of this module are still very
       much in flux. Feedback is welcome!

       Reply is a lightweight, extensible REPL for Perl. It is plugin-based (see Reply::Plugin),
       and through plugins supports many advanced features such as coloring and pretty printing,
       readline support, and pluggable commands.

METHODS

   new(%opts)
       Creates a new Reply instance. Valid options are:

       config
           Name of a configuration file to load. This should contain INI-style configuration for
           plugins as described above.

       plugins
           An arrayref of additional plugins to load.

   run
       Runs the repl. Will continue looping until the "read_line" callback returns undef
       (typically when the user presses "Ctrl+D"), or the "loop" callback returns false (by
       default, the "#q" command quits the repl in this way).

   step($line, $verbose)
       Runs a single iteration of the repl. If $line is given, it will be used as the string to
       evaluate (and the "prompt" and "read_line" callbacks will not be called). If $verbose is
       true, the prompt and line will be displayed as though they were typed. Returns true if the
       repl can continue, and false if it was requested to quit.

CONFIGURATION

       Configuration uses an INI-style format similar to the configuration format of Dist::Zilla.
       Section names are used as the names of plugins, and any options within a section are
       passed as arguments to that plugin. Plugins are loaded in order as they are listed in the
       configuration file, which can affect the results in some cases where multiple plugins are
       hooking into a single callback (see Reply::Plugin for more information).

       In addition to plugin configuration, there are some additional options recognized. These
       must be specified at the top of the file, before any section headers.

       script_file
           This contains a filename whose contents will be evaluated as perl code once the
           configuration is done being loaded.

       script_line<n>
           Any options that start with "script_line" will be sorted by their key and then each
           value will be evaluated individually once the configuration is done being loaded.

           NOTE: this is currently a hack due to the fact that Config::INI doesn't support
           multiple keys with the same name in a section. This may be fixed in the future to just
           allow specifying "script_line" multiple times.

BUGS

       No known bugs.

       Please report any bugs to GitHub Issues at <https://github.com/doy/reply/issues>.

SEE ALSO

       Devel::REPL

SUPPORT

       You can find this documentation for this module with the perldoc command.

           perldoc Reply

       You can also look for information at:

       •   MetaCPAN

           <https://metacpan.org/release/Reply>

       •   Github

           <https://github.com/doy/reply>

       •   RT: CPAN's request tracker

           <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Reply>

       •   CPAN Ratings

           <http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/Reply>

AUTHOR

       Jesse Luehrs <doy@tozt.net>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is Copyright (c) 2016 by Jesse Luehrs.

       This is free software, licensed under:

         The MIT (X11) License