Subject: CVS commit: pkgsrc/devel/p5-Perl-Tidy
From: Thomas Klausner
Date: 2005-02-04 15:35:19
Message id: 20050204143519.BAFED2DA1D@cvs.netbsd.org

Log Message:
Update to 20031021:
  2003 10 21
     -The default has been changed to not do syntax checking with perl.
       Use -syn if you want it.  Perltidy is very robust now, and the -syn
       flag now causes more problems than it's worth because of BEGIN blocks
       (which get executed with perl -c).  For example, perltidy will never
       return when trying to beautify this code if -syn is used:

            BEGIN { 1 while { }; }

      Although this is an obvious error, perltidy is often run on untested
      code which is more likely to have this sort of problem.  A more subtle
      example is:

            BEGIN { use FindBin; }

      which may hang on some systems using -syn if a shared file system is
      unavailable.

     -Changed style -gnu to use -cti=1 instead of -cti=2 (see next item).
      In most cases it looks better.  To recover the previous format, use
      '-gnu -cti=2'

     -Added flags B<-cti=n> for finer control of closing token indentation.
       -cti = 0 no extra indentation (default; same as -nicp)
       -cti = 1 enough indentation so that the closing token
            aligns with its opening token.
       -cti = 2 one extra indentation level if the line has the form
              C<);>, C<];>, or <};> (same as -icp).

       The new option -cti=1 works well with -lp:

       EXAMPLES:

        # perltidy -lp -cti=1
        @month_of_year = (
                           'Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun',
                           'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct', 'Nov', 'Dec'
                         );

        # perltidy -lp -cti=2
        @month_of_year = (
                           'Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun',
                           'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct', 'Nov', 'Dec'
                           );
      This is backwards compatible with -icp. See revised manual for
      details.  Suggested by Mike Pennington.

     -Added flag '--preserve-line-endings' or '-ple' to cause the output
      line ending to be the same as in the input file, for unix, dos,
      or mac line endings.  Only works under unix. Suggested by
      Rainer Hochschild.

     -Added flag '--output-line-ending=s' or '-ole=s' where s=dos or win,
      unix, or mac.  Only works under unix.

     -Files with Mac line endings should now be handled properly under unix
      and dos without being passed through a converter.

     -You may now include 'and', 'or', and 'xor' in the list following
      '--want-break-after' to get line breaks after those keywords rather than
      before them.  Suggested by Rainer Hochschild.

     -Corrected problem with command line option for -vtc=n and -vt=n. The
      equals sign was being eaten up by the Windows shell so perltidy didn't
      see it.

  2003 07 26
     -Corrected cause of warning message with recent versions of Perl:
        "Possible precedence problem on bitwise & operator at ..."
      Thanks to Jim Files.

     -fixed bug with -html with '=for pod2html' sections, in which code/pod
     output order was incorrect.  Thanks to Tassilo von Parseval.

     -fixed bug when the -html flag is used, in which the following error
     message, plus others, appear:
         did not see <body> in pod2html output
     This was caused by a change in the format of html output by pod2html
     VERSION 1.04 (included with perl 5.8).  Thanks to Tassilo von Parseval.

     -Fixed bug where an __END__ statement would be mistaken for a label
     if it is immediately followed by a line with a leading colon. Thanks
     to John Bayes.

     -Implemented guessing logic for brace types when it is ambiguous.  This
     has been on the TODO list a long time.  Thanks to Boris Zentner for
     an example.

     -Long options may now be negated either as '--nolong-option'
     or '--no-long-option'.  Thanks to Philip Newton for the suggestion.

     -added flag --html-entities or -hent which controls the use of
     Html::Entities for html formatting.  Use --nohtml-entities or -nhent to
     prevent the use of Html::Entities to encode special symbols.  The
     default is -hent.  Html::Entities when formatting perl text to escape
     special symbols.  This may or may not be the right thing to do,
     depending on browser/language combinations.  Thanks to Gurak Bursoy for
     this suggestion.

     -Bareword strings with leading '-', like, '-foo' now count as 1 token
     for horizontal tightness.  This way $a{'-foo'}, $a{foo}, and $a{-foo}
     are now all treated similarly.  Thus, by default, OLD: $a{ -foo } will
     now be NEW: $a{-foo}.  Suggested by Mark Olesen.

     -added 2 new flags to control spaces between keywords and opening parens:
       -sak=s  or --space-after-keyword=s,  and
       -nsak=s or --nospace-after-keyword=s, where 's' is a list of keywords.

     The new default list of keywords which get a space is:

       "my local our and or eq ne if else elsif until unless while for foreach
         return switch case given when"

     Use -sak=s and -nsak=s to add and remove keywords from this list,
        respectively.

     Explanation: Stephen Hildrey noted that perltidy was being inconsistent
     in placing spaces between keywords and opening parens, and sent a patch
     to give user control over this.  The above list was selected as being
     a reasonable default keyword list.  Previously, perltidy
     had a hardwired list which also included these keywords:

            push pop shift unshift join split die

     but did not have 'our'.  Example: if you prefer to make perltidy behave
     exactly as before, you can include the following two lines in your
     .perltidyrc file:

       -sak="push pop local shift unshift join split die"
       -nsak="our"

     -Corrected html error in .toc file when -frm -html is used (extra ");
      browsers were tolerant of it.

     -Improved alignment of chains of binary and ?/: operators. Example:
      OLD:
        $leapyear =
          $year % 4     ? 0
          : $year % 100 ? 1
          : $year % 400 ? 0
          : 1;
      NEW:
        $leapyear =
            $year % 4   ? 0
          : $year % 100 ? 1
          : $year % 400 ? 0
          : 1;

     -improved breakpoint choices involving '->'

     -Corrected tokenization of things like ${#} or ${©}. For example,
      ${©} is valid, but ${© } is a syntax error.

     -Corrected minor tokenization errors with indirect object notation.
      For example, 'new A::()' works now.

     -Minor tokenization improvements; all perl code distributed with perl 5.8
      seems to be parsed correctly except for one instance (lextest.t)
      of the known bug.

Files:
RevisionActionfile
1.3modifypkgsrc/devel/p5-Perl-Tidy/Makefile
1.2modifypkgsrc/devel/p5-Perl-Tidy/distinfo