NAME
Pod::Cpandoc - perldoc that works for modules you don't have installed
SYNOPSIS
cpandoc File::Find
-- shows the documentation of your installed File::Find
cpandoc Acme::BadExample
-- works even if you don't have Acme::BadExample installed!
cpandoc -c Text::Xslate
-- shows the changelog file for Text::Xslate
cpandoc -v '$?'
-- passes everything through to regular perldoc
cpandoc -m Acme::BadExample | grep system
-- options are respected even if the module was scraped
vim `cpandoc -l Web::Scraper`
-- getting the idea yet?
cpandoc http://darkpan.org/Eval::WithLexicals::AndGlobals
-- URLs work too!
DESCRIPTION
"cpandoc" is a perl script that acts like "perldoc" except that if it
would have bailed out with "No documentation found for
"Uninstalled::Module"", it will instead scrape a CPAN index for the
module's documentation.
One important feature of "cpandoc" is that it *only* scrapes the live
index if you do not have the module installed. So if you use "cpandoc"
on a module you already have installed, then it will just read the
already-installed documentation. This means that the version of the
documentation matches up with the version of the code you have. As a
fringe benefit, "cpandoc" will be fast for modules you've installed. :)
All this means that you should be able to drop in "cpandoc" in place of
"perldoc" and have everything keep working. See "SNEAKY INSTALL" for how
to do this.
If you set the environment variable "CPANDOC_FETCH" to a true value,
then we will print a message to STDERR telling you that "cpandoc" is
going to make a request against the live CPAN index.
TRANSLATIONS
Japanese
Japanese documentation can be found at
L<http://perldoc.jp/docs/modules/Pod-Cpandoc-0.09/Cpandoc.pod>,
contributed by @bayashi.
SNEAKY INSTALL
cpanm Pod::Cpandoc
then: alias perldoc=cpandoc
or: function perldoc () { cpandoc "$@" }
Now `perldoc Acme::BadExample` works!
"perldoc" should continue to work for everything that you're used to,
since "cpandoc" passes all options through to it. "cpandoc" is merely a
subclass that falls back to scraping a CPAN index when it fails to find
your queried file in @INC.
SEE ALSO
The sneaky install was inspired by <https://github.com/defunkt/hub>.
<http://tech.bayashi.jp/archives/entry/perl-module/2011/003305.html>
<http://perladvent.org/2011/2011-12-15.html>
<http://sartak.org/talks/yapc-na-2011/cpandoc/>
AUTHOR
Shawn M Moore "code@sartak.org"
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2011-2013 Shawn M Moore.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.