
HTML::AA - The function to undergo plastic operation on the character string displayed in a browser is possessed though it is a MS P Gothic font of 12 points

use HTML::AA;
my $aart = new HTML::AA;
$aart -> code('euc');
my $dot;
my $str = 'Character string';
my @str = ('Character string','Length adjustment');
print "Content-type: text/html; charset=EUC-JP\n\n";
print "<body>\n";
print "HTML::AA Sample of usage<br>\n";
$dot = $aart -> calcu($str);
printf "Number of dots of [%s] %d<br>\n", $str, $dot;
printf "|%s|<br>\n", $aart -> adjust($str, q{}, 'R', 350);
printf "|%s|<br>\n", $aart -> adjust($str, q{}, 'L', 350);
printf "|%s|<br>\n", $aart -> adjust(q{}, $str, 'R', 350);
printf "|%s|<br>\n", $aart -> adjust(q{}, $str, 'L', 350);
printf "|%s|<br>\n", $aart -> adjust($str, $str, 'R', 350);
printf "|%s|<br>\n", $aart -> adjust($str, $str, 'L', 350);
$dot = $aart -> shorter(@str);
printf "|%s|<br>\n", $aart -> adjust($_, q{}, 'R', $dot) foreach @str;
printf "|%s|<br>\n", $aart -> adjust($_, q{}, 'L', $dot) foreach @str;
printf "|%s|<br>\n", $aart -> adjust(q{}, $_, 'R', $dot) foreach @str;
printf "|%s|<br>\n", $aart -> adjust(q{}, $_, 'L', $dot) foreach @str;
print "</body>\n";

HTML::AA Sample of usage Number of dots of [Character string] 111 |Character string@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@. | |Character string. @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@| |@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@. Character string| |. @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@Character string| |Character string@@@@@@@@ @ @ .Character string| |Character string. @ @ @@@@@@@@Character string| |Character string.....| |Length adjustment| |Character string.....| |Length adjustment| |.....Character string| |Length adjustment| |.....Character string| |Length adjustment| Please replace "@" with \xa1\xa1 of EUC-JP. The explanation of Japanese is here. http://penlabo.oh.land.to/HTML-AA.html
None by default.

I think finding when "ASCII art" is retrieved in Japanese.

satoshi ishikawa <penguin5@u01.gate01.com>

Copyright (C) 2006 satoshi ishikawa and Companions of lounge thread of bulletin board of "2 channel" The explanation of "2 channnel" is here. http://2ch.net/
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.