+=head2 Constants
+
+=head3 C<TOP>
+
+ my $top_context = TOP;
+
+Returns the context that currently represents the highest scope.
+
+=head3 C<HERE>
+
+ my $current_context = HERE;
+
+The context of the current scope.
+
+=head2 Getting a context from a context
+
+For any of those functions, C<$from> is expected to be a context.
+When omitted, it defaults to the current context.
+
+=head3 C<UP>
+
+ my $upper_context = UP;
+ my $upper_context = UP $from;
+
+The context of the scope just above C<$from>.
+If C<$from> points to the top-level scope in the current stack, then a warning is emitted and C<$from> is returned (see L</DIAGNOSTICS> for details).
+
+=head3 C<SUB>
+
+ my $sub_context = SUB;
+ my $sub_context = SUB $from;
+
+The context of the closest subroutine above C<$from>.
+If C<$from> already designates a subroutine context, then it is returned as-is ; hence C<SUB SUB == SUB>.
+If no subroutine context is present in the call stack, then a warning is emitted and the current context is returned (see L</DIAGNOSTICS> for details).
+
+=head3 C<EVAL>
+
+ my $eval_context = EVAL;
+ my $eval_context = EVAL $from;
+
+The context of the closest eval above C<$from>.
+If C<$from> already designates an eval context, then it is returned as-is ; hence C<EVAL EVAL == EVAL>.
+If no eval context is present in the call stack, then a warning is emitted and the current context is returned (see L</DIAGNOSTICS> for details).
+
+=head2 Getting a context from a level
+
+Here, C<$level> should denote a number of scopes above the current one.
+When omitted, it defaults to C<0> and those functions return the same context as L</HERE>.
+
+=head3 C<SCOPE>
+
+ my $context = SCOPE;
+ my $context = SCOPE $level;
+
+The C<$level>-th upper context, regardless of its type.
+If C<$level> points above the top-level scope in the current stack, then a warning is emitted and the top-level context is returned (see L</DIAGNOSTICS> for details).
+
+=head3 C<CALLER>
+
+ my $context = CALLER;
+ my $context = CALLER $level;
+
+The context of the C<$level>-th upper subroutine/eval/format.
+It kind of corresponds to the context represented by C<caller $level>, but while e.g. C<caller 0> refers to the caller context, C<CALLER 0> will refer to the top scope in the current context.
+If C<$level> points above the top-level scope in the current stack, then a warning is emitted and the top-level context is returned (see L</DIAGNOSTICS> for details).
+
+=head2 Examples
+
+Where L</reap> fires depending on the C<$cxt> :
+
+ sub {
+ eval {
+ sub {
+ {
+ reap \&cleanup => $cxt;
+ ...
+ } # $cxt = SCOPE(0) = HERE
+ ...
+ }->(); # $cxt = SCOPE(1) = UP = SUB = CALLER(0)
+ ...
+ }; # $cxt = SCOPE(2) = UP UP = UP SUB = EVAL = CALLER(1)
+ ...
+ }->(); # $cxt = SCOPE(3) = SUB UP SUB = SUB EVAL = CALLER(2)
+ ...
+
+Where L</localize>, L</localize_elem> and L</localize_delete> act depending on the C<$cxt> :
+
+ sub {
+ eval {
+ sub {
+ {
+ localize '$x' => 1 => $cxt;
+ # $cxt = SCOPE(0) = HERE
+ ...
+ }
+ # $cxt = SCOPE(1) = UP = SUB = CALLER(0)
+ ...
+ }->();
+ # $cxt = SCOPE(2) = UP UP = UP SUB = EVAL = CALLER(1)
+ ...
+ };
+ # $cxt = SCOPE(3) = SUB UP SUB = SUB EVAL = CALLER(2)
+ ...
+ }->();
+ # $cxt = SCOPE(4), UP SUB UP SUB = UP SUB EVAL = UP CALLER(2) = TOP
+ ...
+
+Where L</unwind>, L</yield>, L</want_at>, L</context_info> and L</uplevel> point to depending on the C<$cxt>:
+
+ sub {
+ eval {
+ sub {
+ {
+ unwind @things => $cxt; # or yield @things => $cxt
+ # or uplevel { ... } $cxt
+ ...
+ }
+ ...
+ }->(); # $cxt = SCOPE(0) = SCOPE(1) = HERE = UP = SUB = CALLER(0)
+ ...
+ }; # $cxt = SCOPE(2) = UP UP = UP SUB = EVAL = CALLER(1) (*)
+ ...
+ }->(); # $cxt = SCOPE(3) = SUB UP SUB = SUB EVAL = CALLER(2)
+ ...
+
+ # (*) Note that uplevel() will croak if you pass that scope frame,
+ # because it cannot target eval scopes.
+
+=head1 DIAGNOSTICS
+
+=head2 C<Cannot target a scope outside of the current stack>
+
+This warning is emitted when L</UP>, L</SCOPE> or L</CALLER> end up pointing to a context that is above the top-level context of the current stack.
+It indicates that you tried to go higher than the main scope, or to point across a C<DESTROY> method, a signal handler, an overloaded or tied method call, a C<require> statement or a C<sort> callback.
+In this case, the resulting context is the highest reachable one.
+
+=head2 C<No targetable %s scope in the current stack>
+
+This warning is emitted when you ask for an L</EVAL> or L</SUB> context and no such scope can be found in the call stack.
+The resulting context is the current one.