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NAME
    Filter::Simple - Simplified source filtering

SYNOPSIS
     # in MyFilter.pm:

         package MyFilter;

         use Filter::Simple;

         FILTER { ... };

         # or just:
         #
         # use Filter::Simple sub { ... };

     # in user's code:

         use MyFilter;

         # this code is filtered

         no MyFilter;

         # this code is not

DESCRIPTION
  The Problem
    Source filtering is an immensely powerful feature of recent versions of
    Perl. It allows one to extend the language itself (e.g. the Switch
    module), to simplify the language (e.g. Language::Pythonesque), or to
    completely recast the language (e.g. Lingua::Romana::Perligata).
    Effectively, it allows one to use the full power of Perl as its own,
    recursively applied, macro language.

    The excellent Filter::Util::Call module (by Paul Marquess) provides a
    usable Perl interface to source filtering, but it is often too powerful
    and not nearly as simple as it could be.

    To use the module it is necessary to do the following:

    1.  Download, build, and install the Filter::Util::Call module. (If you
        have Perl 5.7.1 or later, this is already done for you.)

    2.  Set up a module that does a "use Filter::Util::Call".

    3.  Within that module, create an "import" subroutine.

    4.  Within the "import" subroutine do a call to "filter_add", passing it
        either a subroutine reference.

    5.  Within the subroutine reference, call "filter_read" or
        "filter_read_exact" to "prime" $_ with source code data from the
        source file that will "use" your module. Check the status value
        returned to see if any source code was actually read in.

    6.  Process the contents of $_ to change the source code in the desired
        manner.

    7.  Return the status value.

    8.  If the act of unimporting your module (via a "no") should cause
        source code filtering to cease, create an "unimport" subroutine, and
        have it call "filter_del". Make sure that the call to "filter_read"
        or "filter_read_exact" in step 5 will not accidentally read past the
        "no". Effectively this limits source code filters to line-by-line
        operation, unless the "import" subroutine does some fancy
        pre-pre-parsing of the source code it's filtering.

    For example, here is a minimal source code filter in a module named
    BANG.pm. It simply converts every occurrence of the sequence
    "BANG\s+BANG" to the sequence "die 'BANG' if $BANG" in any piece of code
    following a "use BANG;" statement (until the next "no BANG;" statement,
    if any):

        package BANG;

        use Filter::Util::Call ;

        sub import {
            filter_add( sub {
            my $caller = caller;
            my ($status, $no_seen, $data);
            while ($status = filter_read()) {
                if (/^\s*no\s+$caller\s*;\s*?$/) {
                    $no_seen=1;
                    last;
                }
                $data .= $_;
                $_ = "";
            }
            $_ = $data;
            s/BANG\s+BANG/die 'BANG' if \$BANG/g
                unless $status < 0;
            $_ .= "no $class;\n" if $no_seen;
            return 1;
            })
        }

        sub unimport {
            filter_del();
        }

        1 ;

    This level of sophistication puts filtering out of the reach of many
    programmers.

  A Solution
    The Filter::Simple module provides a simplified interface to
    Filter::Util::Call; one that is sufficient for most common cases.

    Instead of the above process, with Filter::Simple the task of setting up
    a source code filter is reduced to:

    1.  Download and install the Filter::Simple module. (If you have Perl
        5.7.1 or later, this is already done for you.)

    2.  Set up a module that does a "use Filter::Simple" and then calls
        "FILTER { ... }".

    3.  Within the anonymous subroutine or block that is passed to "FILTER",
        process the contents of $_ to change the source code in the desired
        manner.

    In other words, the previous example, would become:

        package BANG;
        use Filter::Simple;

        FILTER {
            s/BANG\s+BANG/die 'BANG' if \$BANG/g;
        };

        1 ;

    Note that the source code is passed as a single string, so any regex
    that uses "^" or "$" to detect line boundaries will need the "/m" flag.

  Disabling or changing <no> behaviour
    By default, the installed filter only filters up to a line consisting of
    one of the three standard source "terminators":

        no ModuleName;  # optional comment

    or:

        __END__

    or:

        __DATA__

    but this can be altered by passing a second argument to "use
    Filter::Simple" or "FILTER" (just remember: there's *no* comma after the
    initial block when you use "FILTER").

    That second argument may be either a "qr"'d regular expression (which is
    then used to match the terminator line), or a defined false value (which
    indicates that no terminator line should be looked for), or a reference
    to a hash (in which case the terminator is the value associated with the
    key 'terminator'.

    For example, to cause the previous filter to filter only up to a line of
    the form:

        GNAB esu;

    you would write:

        package BANG;
        use Filter::Simple;

        FILTER {
            s/BANG\s+BANG/die 'BANG' if \$BANG/g;
        }
        qr/^\s*GNAB\s+esu\s*;\s*?$/;

    or:

        FILTER {
            s/BANG\s+BANG/die 'BANG' if \$BANG/g;
        }
        { terminator => qr/^\s*GNAB\s+esu\s*;\s*?$/ };

    and to prevent the filter's being turned off in any way:

        package BANG;
        use Filter::Simple;

        FILTER {
            s/BANG\s+BANG/die 'BANG' if \$BANG/g;
        }
        "";    # or: 0

    or:

        FILTER {
            s/BANG\s+BANG/die 'BANG' if \$BANG/g;
        }
        { terminator => "" };

    Note that, no matter what you set the terminator pattern to, the actual
    terminator itself *must* be contained on a single source line.

  All-in-one interface
    Separating the loading of Filter::Simple:

        use Filter::Simple;

    from the setting up of the filtering:

        FILTER { ... };

    is useful because it allows other code (typically parser support code or
    caching variables) to be defined before the filter is invoked. However,
    there is often no need for such a separation.

    In those cases, it is easier to just append the filtering subroutine and
    any terminator specification directly to the "use" statement that loads
    Filter::Simple, like so:

        use Filter::Simple sub {
            s/BANG\s+BANG/die 'BANG' if \$BANG/g;
        };

    This is exactly the same as:

        use Filter::Simple;
        BEGIN {
            Filter::Simple::FILTER {
                s/BANG\s+BANG/die 'BANG' if \$BANG/g;
            };
        }

    except that the "FILTER" subroutine is not exported by Filter::Simple.

  Filtering only specific components of source code
    One of the problems with a filter like:

        use Filter::Simple;

        FILTER { s/BANG\s+BANG/die 'BANG' if \$BANG/g };

    is that it indiscriminately applies the specified transformation to the
    entire text of your source program. So something like:

        warn 'BANG BANG, YOU'RE DEAD';
        BANG BANG;

    will become:

        warn 'die 'BANG' if $BANG, YOU'RE DEAD';
        die 'BANG' if $BANG;

    It is very common when filtering source to only want to apply the filter
    to the non-character-string parts of the code, or alternatively to
    *only* the character strings.

    Filter::Simple supports this type of filtering by automatically
    exporting the "FILTER_ONLY" subroutine.

    "FILTER_ONLY" takes a sequence of specifiers that install separate (and
    possibly multiple) filters that act on only parts of the source code.
    For example:

        use Filter::Simple;

        FILTER_ONLY
            code      => sub { s/BANG\s+BANG/die 'BANG' if \$BANG/g },
            quotelike => sub { s/BANG\s+BANG/CHITTY CHITTY/g };

    The "code" subroutine will only be used to filter parts of the source
    code that are not quotelikes, POD, or "__DATA__". The "quotelike"
    subroutine only filters Perl quotelikes (including here documents).

    The full list of alternatives is:

    "code"
        Filters only those sections of the source code that are not
        quotelikes, POD, or "__DATA__".

    "code_no_comments"
        Filters only those sections of the source code that are not
        quotelikes, POD, comments, or "__DATA__".

    "executable"
        Filters only those sections of the source code that are not POD or
        "__DATA__".

    "executable_no_comments"
        Filters only those sections of the source code that are not POD,
        comments, or "__DATA__".

    "quotelike"
        Filters only Perl quotelikes (as interpreted by
        &Text::Balanced::extract_quotelike).

    "string"
        Filters only the string literal parts of a Perl quotelike (i.e. the
        contents of a string literal, either half of a "tr///", the second
        half of an "s///").

    "regex"
        Filters only the pattern literal parts of a Perl quotelike (i.e. the
        contents of a "qr//" or an "m//", the first half of an "s///").

    "all"
        Filters everything. Identical in effect to "FILTER".

    Except for "FILTER_ONLY code => sub {...}", each of the component
    filters is called repeatedly, once for each component found in the
    source code.

    Note that you can also apply two or more of the same type of filter in a
    single "FILTER_ONLY". For example, here's a simple macro-preprocessor
    that is only applied within regexes, with a final debugging pass that
    prints the resulting source code:

        use Regexp::Common;
        FILTER_ONLY
            regex => sub { s/!\[/[^/g },
            regex => sub { s/%d/$RE{num}{int}/g },
            regex => sub { s/%f/$RE{num}{real}/g },
            all   => sub { print if $::DEBUG };

  Filtering only the code parts of source code
    Most source code ceases to be grammatically correct when it is broken up
    into the pieces between string literals and regexes. So the 'code' and
    'code_no_comments' component filter behave slightly differently from the
    other partial filters described in the previous section.

    Rather than calling the specified processor on each individual piece of
    code (i.e. on the bits between quotelikes), the 'code...' partial
    filters operate on the entire source code, but with the quotelike bits
    (and, in the case of 'code_no_comments', the comments) "blanked out".

    That is, a 'code...' filter *replaces* each quoted string, quotelike,
    regex, POD, and __DATA__ section with a placeholder. The delimiters of
    this placeholder are the contents of the $; variable at the time the
    filter is applied (normally "\034"). The remaining four bytes are a
    unique identifier for the component being replaced.

    This approach makes it comparatively easy to write code preprocessors
    without worrying about the form or contents of strings, regexes, etc.

    For convenience, during a 'code...' filtering operation, Filter::Simple
    provides a package variable ($Filter::Simple::placeholder) that contains
    a pre-compiled regex that matches any placeholder...and captures the
    identifier within the placeholder. Placeholders can be moved and
    re-ordered within the source code as needed.

    In addition, a second package variable (@Filter::Simple::components)
    contains a list of the various pieces of $_, as they were originally
    split up to allow placeholders to be inserted.

    Once the filtering has been applied, the original strings, regexes, POD,
    etc. are re-inserted into the code, by replacing each placeholder with
    the corresponding original component (from @components). Note that this
    means that the @components variable must be treated with extreme care
    within the filter. The @components array stores the "back- translations"
    of each placeholder inserted into $_, as well as the interstitial source
    code between placeholders. If the placeholder backtranslations are
    altered in @components, they will be similarly changed when the
    placeholders are removed from $_ after the filter is complete.

    For example, the following filter detects concatenated pairs of
    strings/quotelikes and reverses the order in which they are
    concatenated:

        package DemoRevCat;
        use Filter::Simple;

        FILTER_ONLY code => sub {
            my $ph = $Filter::Simple::placeholder;
            s{ ($ph) \s* [.] \s* ($ph) }{ $2.$1 }gx
        };

    Thus, the following code:

        use DemoRevCat;

        my $str = "abc" . q(def);

        print "$str\n";

    would become:

        my $str = q(def)."abc";

        print "$str\n";

    and hence print:

        defabc

  Using Filter::Simple with an explicit "import" subroutine
    Filter::Simple generates a special "import" subroutine for your module
    (see "How it works") which would normally replace any "import"
    subroutine you might have explicitly declared.

    However, Filter::Simple is smart enough to notice your existing "import"
    and Do The Right Thing with it. That is, if you explicitly define an
    "import" subroutine in a package that's using Filter::Simple, that
    "import" subroutine will still be invoked immediately after any filter
    you install.

    The only thing you have to remember is that the "import" subroutine
    *must* be declared *before* the filter is installed. If you use "FILTER"
    to install the filter:

        package Filter::TurnItUpTo11;

        use Filter::Simple;

        FILTER { s/(\w+)/\U$1/ };

    that will almost never be a problem, but if you install a filtering
    subroutine by passing it directly to the "use Filter::Simple" statement:

        package Filter::TurnItUpTo11;

        use Filter::Simple sub{ s/(\w+)/\U$1/ };

    then you must make sure that your "import" subroutine appears before
    that "use" statement.

  Using Filter::Simple and Exporter together
    Likewise, Filter::Simple is also smart enough to Do The Right Thing if
    you use Exporter:

        package Switch;
        use base Exporter;
        use Filter::Simple;

        @EXPORT    = qw(switch case);
        @EXPORT_OK = qw(given  when);

        FILTER { $_ = magic_Perl_filter($_) }

    Immediately after the filter has been applied to the source,
    Filter::Simple will pass control to Exporter, so it can do its magic
    too.

    Of course, here too, Filter::Simple has to know you're using Exporter
    before it applies the filter. That's almost never a problem, but if
    you're nervous about it, you can guarantee that things will work
    correctly by ensuring that your "use base Exporter" always precedes your
    "use Filter::Simple".

  How it works
    The Filter::Simple module exports into the package that calls "FILTER"
    (or "use"s it directly) -- such as package "BANG" in the above example
    -- two automagically constructed subroutines -- "import" and "unimport"
    -- which take care of all the nasty details.

    In addition, the generated "import" subroutine passes its own argument
    list to the filtering subroutine, so the BANG.pm filter could easily be
    made parametric:

        package BANG;

        use Filter::Simple;

        FILTER {
            my ($die_msg, $var_name) = @_;
            s/BANG\s+BANG/die '$die_msg' if \${$var_name}/g;
        };

        # and in some user code:

        use BANG "BOOM", "BAM";  # "BANG BANG" becomes: die 'BOOM' if $BAM

    The specified filtering subroutine is called every time a "use BANG" is
    encountered, and passed all the source code following that call, up to
    either the next "no BANG;" (or whatever terminator you've set) or the
    end of the source file, whichever occurs first. By default, any "no
    BANG;" call must appear by itself on a separate line, or it is ignored.

AUTHOR
    Damian Conway

CONTACT
    Filter::Simple is now maintained by the Perl5-Porters. Please submit bug
    via the "perlbug" tool that comes with your perl. For usage
    instructions, read "perldoc perlbug" or possibly "man perlbug". For
    mostly anything else, please contact <perl5-porters@perl.org>.

    Maintainer of the CPAN release is Steffen Mueller <smueller@cpan.org>.
    Contact him with technical difficulties with respect to the packaging of
    the CPAN module.

    Praise of the module, flowers, and presents still go to the author,
    Damian Conway <damian@conway.org>.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
        Copyright (c) 2000-2014, Damian Conway. All Rights Reserved.
        This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed
        and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself.