POD2TEXT(1) Perl Programmers Reference Guide POD2TEXT(1)
NAME
pod2text - Convert POD data to formatted ASCII text
SYNOPSIS
pod2text [-aclostu] [--code] [--errors=style] [-i indent]
[-qquotes] [--nourls] [--stderr] [-wwidth]
[input [output ...]]
pod2text -h
DESCRIPTION
pod2text is a front-end for Pod::Text and its subclasses. It uses them
to generate formatted ASCII text from POD source. It can optionally
use either termcap sequences or ANSI color escape sequences to format
the text.
input is the file to read for POD source (the POD can be embedded in
code). If input isn't given, it defaults to "STDIN". output, if
given, is the file to which to write the formatted output. If output
isn't given, the formatted output is written to "STDOUT". Several POD
files can be processed in the same pod2text invocation (saving module
load and compile times) by providing multiple pairs of input and output
files on the command line.
OPTIONS
-a, --alt
Use an alternate output format that, among other things, uses a
different heading style and marks "=item" entries with a colon in
the left margin.
--code
Include any non-POD text from the input file in the output as well.
Useful for viewing code documented with POD blocks with the POD
rendered and the code left intact.
-c, --color
Format the output with ANSI color escape sequences. Using this
option requires that Term::ANSIColor be installed on your system.
--errors=style
Set the error handling style. "die" says to throw an exception on
any POD formatting error. "stderr" says to report errors on
standard error, but not to throw an exception. "pod" says to
include a POD ERRORS section in the resulting documentation
summarizing the errors. "none" ignores POD errors entirely, as
much as possible.
The default is "die".
-i indent, --indent=indent
Set the number of spaces to indent regular text, and the default
indentation for "=over" blocks. Defaults to 4 spaces if this
option isn't given.
-h, --help
Print out usage information and exit.
-l, --loose
Print a blank line after a "=head1" heading. Normally, no blank
line is printed after "=head1", although one is still printed after
"=head2", because this is the expected formatting for manual pages;
if you're formatting arbitrary text documents, using this option is
recommended.
-m width, --left-margin=width, --margin=width
The width of the left margin in spaces. Defaults to 0. This is
the margin for all text, including headings, not the amount by
which regular text is indented; for the latter, see -i option.
--nourls
Normally, L<> formatting codes with a URL but anchor text are
formatted to show both the anchor text and the URL. In other
words:
L<foo|http://example.com/>
is formatted as:
foo <http://example.com/>
This flag, if given, suppresses the URL when anchor text is given,
so this example would be formatted as just "foo". This can produce
less cluttered output in cases where the URLs are not particularly
important.
-o, --overstrike
Format the output with overstrike printing. Bold text is rendered
as character, backspace, character. Italics and file names are
rendered as underscore, backspace, character. Many pagers, such as
less, know how to convert this to bold or underlined text.
-q quotes, --quotes=quotes
Sets the quote marks used to surround C<> text to quotes. If
quotes is a single character, it is used as both the left and right
quote. Otherwise, it is split in half, and the first half of the
string is used as the left quote and the second is used as the
right quote.
quotes may also be set to the special value "none", in which case
no quote marks are added around C<> text.
-s, --sentence
Assume each sentence ends with two spaces and try to preserve that
spacing. Without this option, all consecutive whitespace in non-
verbatim paragraphs is compressed into a single space.
--stderr
By default, pod2text dies if any errors are detected in the POD
input. If --stderr is given and no --errors flag is present,
errors are sent to standard error, but pod2text does not abort.
This is equivalent to "--errors=stderr" and is supported for
backward compatibility.
-t, --termcap
Try to determine the width of the screen and the bold and underline
sequences for the terminal from termcap, and use that information
in formatting the output. Output will be wrapped at two columns
less than the width of your terminal device. Using this option
requires that your system have a termcap file somewhere where
Term::Cap can find it and requires that your system support
termios. .
POD2TEXT(1) Perl Programmers Reference Guide POD2TEXT(1)
NAME
pod2text - Convert POD data to formatted ASCII text
SYNOPSIS
pod2text [-aclostu] [--code] [--errors=style] [-i indent]
[-qquotes] [--nourls] [--stderr] [-wwidth]
[input [output ...]]
pod2text -h
DESCRIPTION
pod2text is a front-end for Pod::Text and its subclasses. It uses them
to generate formatted ASCII text from POD source. It can optionally
use either termcap sequences or ANSI color escape sequences to format
the text.
input is the file to read for POD source (the POD can be embedded in
code). If input isn't given, it defaults to "STDIN". output, if
given, is the file to which to write the formatted output. If output
isn't given, the formatted output is written to "STDOUT". Several POD
files can be processed in the same pod2text invocation (saving module
load and compile times) by providing multiple pairs of input and output
files on the command line.
OPTIONS
-a, --alt
Use an alternate output format that, amo
perl v5.36.0 2025-04-12 POD2TEXT(1)
Czas wygenerowania: 0.00011 sek.
Created with the man page lookup class by Andrew Collington.
Based on a C man page viewer by Vadim Pavlov
Unicode soft-hyphen fix (as used by RedHat) by Dan Edwards
Some optimisations by Eli Argon
Caching idea and code contribution by James Richardson
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