NAME¶
perlpodstyle - Perl POD style guide
DESCRIPTION¶
These are general guidelines for how to write POD documentation for Perl scripts
and modules, based on general guidelines for writing good UNIX man pages. All
of these guidelines are, of course, optional, but following them will make
your documentation more consistent with other documentation on the system.
The name of the program being documented is conventionally written in bold
(using B<>) wherever it occurs, as are all program options. Arguments
should be written in italics (I<>). Function names are traditionally
written in italics; if you write a function as
function(), Pod::Man
will take care of this for you. Literal code or commands should be in
C<>. References to other man pages should be in the form
"manpage(section)" or "L<manpage(section)>", and
Pod::Man will automatically format those appropriately. The second form, with
L<>, is used to request that a POD formatter make a link to the man page
if possible. As an exception, one normally omits the section when referring to
module documentation since it's not clear what section module documentation
will be in; use "L<Module::Name>" for module references
instead.
References to other programs or functions are normally in the form of man page
references so that cross-referencing tools can provide the user with links and
the like. It's possible to overdo this, though, so be careful not to clutter
your documentation with too much markup. References to other programs that are
not given as man page references should be enclosed in B<>.
The major headers should be set out using a "=head1" directive, and
are historically written in the rather startling ALL UPPER CASE format; this
is not mandatory, but it's strongly recommended so that sections have
consistent naming across different software packages. Minor headers may be
included using "=head2", and are typically in mixed case.
The standard sections of a manual page are:
- NAME
- Mandatory section; should be a comma-separated list of
programs or functions documented by this POD page, such as:
foo, bar - programs to do something
Manual page indexers are often extremely picky about the format of this
section, so don't put anything in it except this line. Every program or
function documented by this POD page should be listed, separated by a
comma and a space. For a Perl module, just give the module name. A single
dash, and only a single dash, should separate the list of programs or
functions from the description. Do not use any markup such as C<> or
B<> anywhere in this line. Functions should not be qualified with
"()" or the like. The description should ideally fit on a single
line, even if a man program replaces the dash with a few tabs.
- SYNOPSIS
- A short usage summary for programs and functions. This
section is mandatory for section 3 pages. For Perl module documentation,
it's usually convenient to have the contents of this section be a verbatim
block showing some (brief) examples of typical ways the module is
used.
- DESCRIPTION
- Extended description and discussion of the program or
functions, or the body of the documentation for man pages that document
something else. If particularly long, it's a good idea to break this up
into subsections "=head2" directives like:
=head2 Normal Usage
=head2 Advanced Features
=head2 Writing Configuration Files
or whatever is appropriate for your documentation.
For a module, this is generally where the documentation of the interfaces
provided by the module goes, usually in the form of a list with an
"=item" for each interface. Depending on how many interfaces
there are, you may want to put that documentation in separate METHODS,
FUNCTIONS, CLASS METHODS, or INSTANCE METHODS sections instead and save
the DESCRIPTION section for an overview.
- OPTIONS
- Detailed description of each of the command-line options
taken by the program. This should be separate from the description for the
use of parsers like Pod::Usage. This is normally presented as a list, with
each option as a separate "=item". The specific option string
should be enclosed in B<>. Any values that the option takes should
be enclosed in I<>. For example, the section for the option
--section= manext would be introduced with:
=item B<--section>=I<manext>
Synonymous options (like both the short and long forms) are separated by a
comma and a space on the same "=item" line, or optionally listed
as their own item with a reference to the canonical name. For example,
since --section can also be written as -s, the above would
be:
=item B<-s> I<manext>, B<--section>=I<manext>
Writing the short option first is recommended because it's easier to read.
The long option is long enough to draw the eye to it anyway and the short
option can otherwise get lost in visual noise.
- RETURN VALUE
- What the program or function returns, if successful. This
section can be omitted for programs whose precise exit codes aren't
important, provided they return 0 on success and non-zero on failure as is
standard. It should always be present for functions. For modules, it may
be useful to summarize return values from the module interface here, or it
may be more useful to discuss return values separately in the
documentation of each function or method the module provides.
- ERRORS
- Exceptions, error return codes, exit statuses, and errno
settings. Typically used for function or module documentation; program
documentation uses DIAGNOSTICS instead. The general rule of thumb is that
errors printed to "STDOUT" or "STDERR" and intended
for the end user are documented in DIAGNOSTICS while errors passed
internal to the calling program and intended for other programmers are
documented in ERRORS. When documenting a function that sets errno, a full
list of the possible errno values should be given here.
- DIAGNOSTICS
- All possible messages the program can print out and what
they mean. You may wish to follow the same documentation style as the Perl
documentation; see perldiag(1) for more details (and look at the
POD source as well).
If applicable, please include details on what the user should do to correct
the error; documenting an error as indicating "the input buffer is
too small" without telling the user how to increase the size of the
input buffer (or at least telling them that it isn't possible) aren't very
useful.
- EXAMPLES
- Give some example uses of the program or function. Don't
skimp; users often find this the most useful part of the documentation.
The examples are generally given as verbatim paragraphs.
Don't just present an example without explaining what it does. Adding a
short paragraph saying what the example will do can increase the value of
the example immensely.
- ENVIRONMENT
- Environment variables that the program cares about,
normally presented as a list using "=over", "=item",
and "=back". For example:
=over 6
=item HOME
Used to determine the user's home directory. F<.foorc> in this
directory is read for configuration details, if it exists.
=back
Since environment variables are normally in all uppercase, no additional
special formatting is generally needed; they're glaring enough as it
is.
- FILES
- All files used by the program or function, normally
presented as a list, and what it uses them for. File names should be
enclosed in F<>. It's particularly important to document files that
will be potentially modified.
- CAVEATS
- Things to take special care with, sometimes called
WARNINGS.
- BUGS
- Things that are broken or just don't work quite right.
- RESTRICTIONS
- Bugs you don't plan to fix. :-)
- NOTES
- Miscellaneous commentary.
- AUTHOR
- Who wrote it (use AUTHORS for multiple people). It's a good
idea to include your current e-mail address (or some e-mail address to
which bug reports should be sent) or some other contact information so
that users have a way of contacting you. Remember that program
documentation tends to roam the wild for far longer than you expect and
pick a contact method that's likely to last.
- HISTORY
- Programs derived from other sources sometimes have this.
Some people keep a modification log here, but that usually gets long and
is normally better maintained in a separate file.
- COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
- For copyright
Copyright YEAR(s) YOUR NAME(s)
(No, (C) is not needed. No, "all rights reserved" is not needed.)
For licensing the easiest way is to use the same licensing as Perl itself:
This library is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify
it under the same terms as Perl itself.
This makes it easy for people to use your module with Perl. Note that this
licensing example is neither an endorsement or a requirement, you are of
course free to choose any licensing.
- SEE ALSO
- Other man pages to check out, like man(1),
man(7), makewhatis(8), or catman(8). Normally a
simple list of man pages separated by commas, or a paragraph giving the
name of a reference work. Man page references, if they use the standard
"name(section)" form, don't have to be enclosed in L<>
(although it's recommended), but other things in this section probably
should be when appropriate.
If the package has a mailing list, include a URL or subscription
instructions here.
If the package has a web site, include a URL here.
Documentation of object-oriented libraries or modules may want to use
CONSTRUCTORS and METHODS sections, or CLASS METHODS and INSTANCE METHODS
sections, for detailed documentation of the parts of the library and save the
DESCRIPTION section for an overview. Large modules with a function interface
may want to use FUNCTIONS for similar reasons. Some people use OVERVIEW to
summarize the description if it's quite long.
Section ordering varies, although NAME must always be the first section (you'll
break some man page systems otherwise), and NAME, SYNOPSIS, DESCRIPTION, and
OPTIONS generally always occur first and in that order if present. In general,
SEE ALSO, AUTHOR, and similar material should be left for last. Some systems
also move WARNINGS and NOTES to last. The order given above should be
reasonable for most purposes.
Some systems use CONFORMING TO to note conformance to relevant standards and
MT-LEVEL to note safeness for use in threaded programs or signal handlers.
These headings are primarily useful when documenting parts of a C library.
Finally, as a general note, try not to use an excessive amount of markup. As
documented here and in Pod::Man, you can safely leave Perl variables, function
names, man page references, and the like unadorned by markup and the POD
translators will figure it out for you. This makes it much easier to later
edit the documentation. Note that many existing translators will do the wrong
thing with e-mail addresses when wrapped in L<>, so don't do that.
SEE ALSO¶
For additional information that may be more accurate for your specific system,
see either
man(5) or
man(7) depending on your system manual
section numbering conventions.
This documentation is maintained as part of the podlators distribution. The
current version is always available from its web site at
<
http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/software/podlators/>.
AUTHOR¶
Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu>, with large portions of this documentation
taken from the documentation of the original
pod2man implementation by
Larry Wall and Tom Christiansen.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
Copyright 1999, 2000, 2001, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010 Russ Allbery
<rra@stanford.edu>.
This documentation is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.