perldoc - Look up Perl documentation in Pod format. |
perldoc - Look up Perl documentation in Pod format.
perldoc [-h] [-v] [-t] [-u] [-m] [-l] [-F] [-i] [-V] [-T] [-r] [-ddestination_file] [-oformatname] [-MFormatterClassName] [-wformatteroption:value] [-nnroff-replacement] [-X] PageName|ModuleName|ProgramName
perldoc -f BuiltinFunction
perldoc -q FAQ Keyword
See below for more description of the switches.
perldoc looks up a piece of documentation in .pod format that is embedded
in the perl installation tree or in a perl script, and displays it via
pod2man | nroff -man | $PAGER
. (In addition, if running under HP-UX,
col -x
will be used.) This is primarily used for the documentation for
the perl library modules.
Your system may also have man pages installed for those modules, in
which case you can probably just use the man(1)
command.
If you are looking for a table of contents to the Perl library modules documentation, see the the perltoc manpage page.
Example:
perldoc -f sprintf
perldoc -q shuffle
perldoc -oLaTeX -dtextwrapdocs.tex Text::Wrap
-oman
. This is actually just a wrapper around the -M
switch;
using -oformatname
just looks for a loadable class by adding
that format name (with different capitalizations) to the end of
different classname prefixes.
For example, -oLaTeX
currently tries all of the following classes:
Pod::Perldoc::ToLaTeX Pod::Perldoc::Tolatex Pod::Perldoc::ToLatex
Pod::Perldoc::ToLATEX Pod::Simple::LaTeX Pod::Simple::latex
Pod::Simple::Latex Pod::Simple::LATEX Pod::LaTeX Pod::latex Pod::Latex
Pod::LATEX.
parse_from_file
method.
For example: perldoc -MPod::Perldoc::ToChecker
.
You can specify several classes to try by joining them with commas
or semicolons, as in -MTk::SuperPod;Tk::Pod
.
-w textsize:15
will call
$formatter->textsize(15)
on the formatter object before it is
used to format the object. For this to be valid, the formatter class
must provide such a method, and the value you pass should be valid.
(So if textsize
expects an integer, and you do -w textsize:big
,
expect trouble.)
You can use -w optionname
(without a value) as shorthand for
-w optionname:TRUE
. This is presumably useful in cases of on/off
features like: -w page_numbering
.
You can use a ``='' instead of the ``:'', as in: -w textsize=15
. This
might be more (or less) convenient, depending on what shell you use.
$Config{archlib}/pod.idx
. The pod.idx file should contain fully
qualified filenames, one per line.
File::Basename
)
are specified either as File::Basename
or File/Basename
. You may also
give a descriptive name of a page, such as perlfunc
.
Because perldoc does not run properly tainted, and is known to have security issues, when run as the superuser it will attempt to drop privileges by setting the effective and real IDs to nobody's or nouser's account, or -2 if unavailable. If it cannot relinquish its privileges, it will not run.
Any switches in the PERLDOC
environment variable will be used before the
command line arguments.
Useful values for PERLDOC
include -oman
, -otext
, -otk
, -ortf
,
-oxml
, and so on, depending on what modules you have on hand; or
exactly specify the formatter class with -MPod::Perldoc::ToMan
or the like.
perldoc
also searches directories
specified by the PERL5LIB
(or PERLLIB
if PERL5LIB
is not
defined) and PATH
environment variables.
(The latter is so that embedded pods for executables, such as
perldoc
itself, are available.)
perldoc
will use, in order of preference, the pager defined in
PERLDOC_PAGER
, MANPAGER
, or PAGER
before trying to find a pager
on its own. (MANPAGER
is not used if perldoc
was told to display
plain text or unformatted pod.)
One useful value for PERLDOC_PAGER
is less -+C -E
.
Having PERLDOCDEBUG set to a positive integer will make perldoc emit
even more descriptive output than the -v
switch does -- the higher the
number, the more it emits.
Current maintainer: Sean M. Burke, <sburke@cpan.org>
Past contributors are: Kenneth Albanowski <kjahds@kjahds.com>, Andy Dougherty <doughera@lafayette.edu>, and many others.
perldoc - Look up Perl documentation in Pod format. |