Textile Plugin for the Template Toolkit

Version 1.00

12th June 2003

Copyright (C) 2003 Profero. All Rights Reserved

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
           modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

Hmm, most people will never read this as they'll download with CPANPLUS or CPAN. Here's hoping they click on it from a link from http://search.cpan.org/

STOP: Do you want the main documentation by typing

"perldoc Template::Plugin::Textile" ?

DESCRIPTION

This is a plugin for Textile for the Template Toolkit.

It allows you to do things like this:

[% USE Textile -%]
[% FILTER textile %]this is like so cool[% END %]

And get back things like this:

<p>this is <em>like</em> <strong>so* *cool</strong></p>

INSTALL

Just like any other Perl module:

tar zxf Template-Plugin-Textile-X.XX.tar.gz cd Template-Plugin-Textile-X.XX
perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install (as root, or with sudo, etc)

Or, if you're using the new Module::Build install method:

tar zxf Template-Plugin-Textile-X.XX.tar.gz cd Template-Plugin-Textile-X.XX
perl Build.PL
./Build
./Build test
./Build install (as root, or with sudo, etc)

This requires

SUPPORT

This code is provided as is, and is offered with no guarantee.

This having been said, you may request our voluntary support in one of two ways:

  1. Use the CPAN RT: http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Template-Plugin-Textile
  2. Mail the Profero open source development team directly: profero@cpan.org

Problems with the underlying Text::Textile module probably should be addressed to Tom Insam E<lt>tom@jerakeen.orgE<gt>.

AUTHOR

The thin wrapper code (all ten lines of it) was written by Mark Fowler E<lt>mark@twoshortplanks.comE<gt>.

The B<Text::Textile> module that does all the work was written by Tom Insam E<lt>tom@jerakeen.orgE<gt>, and in his own words 'All the clever things in Text::Textile were written by Brad Choate E<lt>http://www.bradchoate.comE<gt>;'

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 2003 Profero. All Rights Reserved.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.