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<TITLE>VarPrint - display complex variables on STDOUT</TITLE>
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<LI><A HREF="#name">NAME</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#synopsis">SYNOPSIS</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#description">DESCRIPTION</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#options">OPTIONS</A></LI>
<LI><A HREF="#author">AUTHOR</A></LI>
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<H1><A NAME="name">NAME</A></H1>
<P>VarPrint - display complex variables on STDOUT</P>
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<H1><A NAME="synopsis">SYNOPSIS</A></H1>
<PRE>
use Data::VarPrint;
VarPrint($var1, $var2,... );</PRE>
<P>or</P>
<PRE>
use Data::VarPrint;
VarPrint( { var1 => $var1, var2 => $var2,... } );</PRE>
<P>or</P>
<PRE>
use Data::VarPrint;
my $var_string = VarPrintAsString(...);</PRE>
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<H1><A NAME="description">DESCRIPTION</A></H1>
<P><STRONG>Data::VarPrint</STRONG> module contains two functions: <STRONG>VarPrint</STRONG> and <STRONG>VarPrintAsString</STRONG>.</P>
<P>Function <STRONG>VarPrint</STRONG> displays its <EM>arguments'</EM> values. The output is structured, so
that complex structures (combinations of hash and array references) are presented in a
way which makes them easy to read.</P>
<P>Function <STRONG>VarPrintAsString</STRONG> returns the same output as a string, which can be usefull
with error logs.</P>
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<H1><A NAME="options">OPTIONS</A></H1>
<P><STRONG>VarPrint</STRONG> and <STRONG>VarPrintAsString</STRONG> take list of variables as arguments.</P>
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<H1><A NAME="author">AUTHOR</A></H1>
<P>Copyright (c) 2002 V. Sego, <A HREF="mailto:vsego@math.hr.">vsego@math.hr.</A> All rights reserved. This program is free
software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.</P>
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