X-Git-Url: http://git.vpit.fr/?p=perl%2Fmodules%2Fre-engine-Plugin.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=Plugin.pod;h=dec530e1554e63ce7db18a98f98b3a33117a7e0c;hp=d4bb1a246bed672d35878a3dc84e4dd310b9d49d;hb=06641849094f807d8762e328b5077e54b299f5e2;hpb=2dd7bc5f80da4fe2220e28de1102641c239d084c
diff --git a/Plugin.pod b/Plugin.pod
index d4bb1a2..dec530e 100644
--- a/Plugin.pod
+++ b/Plugin.pod
@@ -19,12 +19,12 @@ C or runtime for C patterns, or something inbetween
depending on variable interpolation etc.
When this module is loaded into a scope it inserts a hook into
-C<$^H{regcomp}> (as described in L) to have each regexp
-constructed in its lexical scope handled by this engine, but it
-differs from other engines in that it also inserts other hooks into
-C<%^H> in the same scope that point to user-defined subroutines to use
-during compilation, execution etc, these are described in
-L below.
+C<$^H{regcomp}> (as described in L and L) to
+have each regexp constructed in its lexical scope handled by this
+engine, but it differs from other engines in that it also inserts
+other hooks into C<%^H> in the same scope that point to user-defined
+subroutines to use during compilation, execution etc, these are
+described in L below.
The callbacks (e.g. L) then get called with a
L object as their first argument. This object
@@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ caller's scope use use the following snippet:
sub import
{
- # Populates the caller's %^H with our callbacks
+ # Sets the caller's $^H{regcomp} his %^H with our callbacks
re::engine::Plugin->import(
comp => \&comp,
exec => \&exec,
@@ -149,7 +149,7 @@ hashrefs, objects, etc.
=head2 mod
my %mod = $rx->mod;
- say "has /ix" if $mod{i} and $mod{x};
+ say "has /ix" if %mod ~~ 'i' and %mod ~~ 'x';
A key-value pair list of the modifiers the pattern was compiled with.
The keys will zero or more of C and the values will be true
@@ -397,7 +397,7 @@ Evar ArnfjErE Bjarmason
=head1 LICENSE
-Copyright 2007 Evar ArnfjErE Bjarmason.
+Copyright 2007-2008 Evar ArnfjErE Bjarmason.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.