Provided by: libtext-micromason-perl_2.13-2_all 

NAME
Text::MicroMason::DoubleQuote - Minimalist Interpolation Engine
SYNOPSIS
Instead of using this class directly, pass its name to be mixed in:
use Text::MicroMason;
my $mason = Text::MicroMason::Base->new( -DoubleQuote );
Templates can be written using Perl's double-quote interpolation syntax:
$coderef = $mason->compile( text => 'Hello $ARGS{name}!' );
print $coderef->( name => 'World' );
DESCRIPTION
Text::MicroMason::DoubleQuote uses Perl's double-quoting interpolation as a minimalist syntax for
templating.
Of course you don't need this module for simple cases of interpolation, but if you're already using the
MicroMason framework to process template files from disk, this module should allow you to make your
simplest templates run even faster.
To embed values other than simple scalars in a double-quoted expression you can use the ${ expr } syntax.
For example, you can interpolate a function call with "${ \( time() ) }" or "@{[mysub(1,2,3)]}". As noted
in perldaq4, "this is fraught with quoting and readability problems, but it is possible." In particular,
this can quickly become a mess once you start adding loops or conditionals. If you do find yourself
making use of this feature, please consider switching to one of the more powerful template syntaxes like
Text::MicroMason::HTMLMason.
SEE ALSO
To refer to arguments as $name rather than as $ARGS{name}, see Text::MicroMason::PassVariables.
For an overview of this distribution, see Text::MicroMason.
This is a subclass intended for use with Text::MicroMason::Base.
For distribution, installation, support, copyright and license information, see
Text::MicroMason::Docs::ReadMe.
perl v5.14.2 2007-01-29 MicroMason::DoubleQuote(3pm)