NAME display - script to display fragments of text on the web and elsewhere DESCRIPTION display started life as a way to concatenate fragments of handwritten HTML by date. While the script has since haphazardly accumulated several of the usual weblog features (comments, lightweight markup, feed generation, embedded Perl, poetry tools, stupid dependencies), it hasn't changed much in six years. The current version is intended to support FastCGI via CGI::Fast, if available, and otherwise operate as a traditional CGI or commandline utility. It may have some distance to go towards this goal. Entries are stored in a simple directory tree under $DISPLAY_CONF{ROOT_DIR}. Like: archives/2001/1/1 archives/2001/1/1/sub_entry An entry may be either a plain text file, or a directory containing several such files + whatever else you'd like to store. If it's a directory, the file called "index" will be treated as the text of the entry, and all other lower case filenames without extensions will be treated as sub-entries or documents within that entry, and displayed accordingly. Directories may be nested to an arbitrary depth, though I don't promise that this won't break on you. A PNG or JPEG file with a name like 2001/1/1.icon.png 2001/1/1/index.icon.png 2001/1/1/whatever.icon.png will be treated as an icon for the appropriate entry file. MARKUP Entries may consist of hand-written HTML (to be passed along without further interpretation), a supported form of lightweight markup, or some combination thereof. Actually, an entry may consist of any darn thing you please, as long as Perl will agree that it is text, but presumably you're going to be feeding this to a browser. Special markup is indicated by a variety of XML-style container tags. Embedded Perl - evaluated and replaced by whatever value you return (evaluated in a scalar context): my $dog = "Ralph."; return $dog; This code is evaluated before any other processing is done, so you can return any other markup understood by the script and have it handled appropriately. Interpolated variables - actually keys to %TEMPLATE, for the moment: $TEMPLATE{dog} = "Ralph"; return '';

My dog is named ${dog}.

Embedded code and variables are mostly intended for use in header and footer files, where it's handy to drop in titles or conditionalize aspects of a layout. You want to be careful with this sort of thing - it's useful in small doses, but it's also a maintainability nightmare waiting to happen. (WordPress, I am looking at you.) Several forms of lightweight markup: Wala::Markup, via Wala.pm - very basic wiki syntax Dean Allen's Textile, via Brad Choate's Text::Textile. An easy way to get properly broken lines -- en and em dashes --- for poetry and such. And a couple of shortcuts: filename.ext alt text, if any one list item another list item As it stands, freeverse, image, and list are not particularly robust. SUBROUTINES For no bigger than this thing is, it gets a little convoluted. handle() Handle queries. dir_list() Return a $sort_order sorted list of files matching $pattern in a directory. Called by year_print(), month_print(), and entry_print(). calls $sort_order, which can be one of alpha - alphabetical reverse_alpha - alphabetical, reversed (might not work yet) high_to_low - numeric, high to low low_to_high - numeric, low to high year_print() List out the updates for a year. Calls dir_list(), entry_print(). month_print() Prints the entries in a given month (nnnn/nn). Calls dir_list(), datestamp(). entry_print() Prints the contents of a given entry. Calls datestamp, fragment_print, dir_list, and icon_markup. Recursively calls itself. icon_markup() Check if an icon exists for a given entry if so, return markup to include it. Icons are PNG or JPEG image files following a specific naming convention: index.icon.[png|jp(e)g] for directories [filename].icon.[png|jp(e)g] for flat text files Called by entry_print, calls image_size, uses filename to determine type. datestamp() Returns a nice html datestamp for a given entry, including a wikilink for discussion and suchlike. Called by entry_print. fragment_print() Print a text fragment - a header, footer, update, etc. Called by main routines, used to print headers and footers. Calls fragment_slurp to get the fragment it's supposed to print. Returns 1 on successful completion, 0 otherwise. fragment_slurp() Read a text fragment, call line_parse to take care of funky markup and interpreting embedded code, and then return it as a string. Takes one parameter, the name of the file, and returns '' if it's not an extant text file. Called by entry_print, at least line_parse() Performs substitutions on lines called by fragment_slurp, at least. Calls image_markup, Text::Textile, Wala::wiki_page_to_html, eval_perl. Returns string. Parses some special markup, specifically: embedded perl ${variable} interpolation from %DISPLAY_CONF - Text::Textile to HTML - Wala::wikify(); filename.ext eval_perl() Evaluate embedded Perl, replacing blocks enclosed with tags with whatever they return (well, evaluated in a scalar context). image markup() Parse out an image tag and return the appropriate html. Calls image_size. Called by line_parse. month_name() Turn numeric dates into English. feed_print() Dump out an Atom feed of entries for a month. Called from handle(), calls entry_print, requires XML::Atom::SimpleFeed. entry_markup() Return text wrapped in the appropriate markup for an entry. Just a wrapper around div() at the moment. div() Return text wrapped in a div of the specified class. a() Returns an HTML link. Called all over the place. ornament() Returns a type ornament. image_size() Returns (width, height) of a variety of image files. Called by icon_markup and line_parse. Uses Image::Size if available, otherwise uses a couple of built-in routines munged together from pngsize and jpegsize in wwwis, by Alex Knowles and Andrew Tong. SEE ALSO walawiki.org, Blosxom, rassmalog, Text::Textile, XML::Atom::SimpleFeed, Image::Size, CGI::Fast. AUTHOR Copyright 2001-2007 Brennen Bearnes Image sizing code (in image_size) derived from wwwis, by Alex Knowles and Andrew Tong. display.pl is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.