table of contents
Text::Xslate::Bridge::Star(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Text::Xslate::Bridge::Star(3pm) |
NAME¶
Text::Xslate::Bridge::Star - Selection of common utilities for templates
SYNOPSIS¶
use Text::Xslate; my $tx = Text::Xslate->new( module => ['Text::Xslate::Bridge::Star'], );
DESCRIPTION¶
This module provides a selection of utilities for templates.
FUNCTIONS¶
"lc($str)"¶
Returns a lower-cased version of $str. The same as "CORE::lc()", but returns undef if $str is undef.
See "lc" in perldoc for details.
"uc($str)"¶
Returns a upper-cased version of $str. The same as "CORE::uc()", but returns undef if $str is undef.
See "uc" in perldoc for details.
"substr($str, $offset, $len)"¶
Extracts a substring out of $str and returns it. The same as "CORE::substr()", but returns undef if $str is undef.
See "substr" in perldoc for details.
"sprintf($fmt, args...)"¶
Returns a string formatted by the "CORE::sprintf()". $fmt must be a defined value.
See "sprintf" in perldoc for details.
"rx($regex_pattern)"¶
Compiles $regex_patter as a regular expression and return the regex object. You can pass a regex object to "match()" or "replace()" described below. The same as "qr//" operator in Perl.
"match($str, $pattern)"¶
Tests if $str matches $pattern. $pattern may be a string or a regex object.
Like "$str =~ $pattern" in Perl but you have to pass a regex object explicitly if you can use regular expressions.
Examples:
: match("foo bar baz", "foo") ? "true" : "false" # true : match("foo bar baz", "f..") ? "true" : "false" # false : match("foo bar baz", rx("f..")) ? "true" : "false" # true
"replace($str, $pattern, $replacement)"¶
Replaces all the $patterns in $str with $replacements. Like as "$str =~ s/$pattern/$replacement/g" but you have to pass a regex object explicitly if you can use regular expressions.
"split($str [, $pattern [, $limit]])"¶
Splits the string $str into a list of strings and returns the list.
SEE ALSO¶
Text::Xslate
Text::Xslate::Bridge
perlfunc
2022-10-20 | perl v5.36.0 |