Test::PerlTidy - check that all your files are tidy.
# In a file like 't/perltidy.t': use Test::PerlTidy; run_tests();
This rather unflattering comment was made in a piece by Ken Arnold:
"Perl is a vast swamp of lexical and syntactic swill and nobody knows how to format even their own code well, but it's the only major language I can think of (with the possible exception of the recent, yet very Java-like C#) that doesn't have at least one style that's good enough." http://www.artima.com/weblogs/viewpost.jsp?thread=74230
Hmmm... He is sort of right in a way. Then again the piece he wrote was related to Python which is somewhat strict about formatting itself.
Fear not though - now you too can have your very own formatting gestapo in the form of Test::PerlTidy! Simply add a test file as suggested above and any file ending in .pl, .pm, .t or .PL will cause a test fail unless it is exactly as perltidy would like it to be.
If the style is mandated in tests then it will be adhered to.
If perltidy decides what is a good style then there should be no quibbling.
If the style never changes then cvs diffs stop catching changes that are not really there.
Readability might even improve.
If you want to change the default style then muck around with '.perltidyrc';
To quickly make a file work then try 'perltidy -b the_messy_file.pl'.
Runs perltidy on files and reports errors if any of the files differ after having been tidied. Does not permanently modify the files being tested.
By default, perltidy will be run on files under the current directory and its subdirectories with extensions matching: .pm .pl .PL .t
.pm .pl .PL .t
This is the main entry point for running tests.
A number of options can be specified when running the tests, e.g.:
run_tests( path => $start_dir, perltidyrc => $path_to_config_file, exclude => [ qr{\.t$}, 'inc/'], );
Set debug to a true value to enable additional diagnostic output, in particular info about any processing done as a result of specifying the exclude option. Default is false.
debug
exclude
run_tests() will look for files to test under the current directory and its subdirectories. By default, it will exclude files in the "./blib/" directory. Set exclude to a listref of exclusion criteria if you need to specify additional rules by which files will be excluded.
run_tests()
./blib/
If an item in the exclude list is a string, e.g. "./blib/", it will be assumed to be a path prefix. Files will be excluded if that string matches their path at the beginning.
If an item in the exclude list is a regex object, e.g. "qr{\.t$}", files will be excluded if that regex matches their path.
qr{\.t$}
Note that the paths of files to be tested are canonified using File::Spec->canonpath before any matching is attempted, which can impact how the exclusion rules apply. If your exclusion rules do not seem to be working, turn on the debug option to see the paths of the files that are being kept/excluded.
->canonpath
Set path to the path to the top-level directory which contains the files to be tested. Defaults to the current directory (i.e. ".").
path
.
By default, perltidy will attempt to read its options from the .perltidyrc file on your system. Set perltidyrc to the path to a custom file if you would like to control the perltidy options used during testing.
perltidyrc
By default, run_tests() will output diagnostics about any errors reported by perltidy, as well as any actual differences found between the pre-tidied and post-tidied files. Set mute to a true value to turn off that diagnostic output.
mute
Set skip_all to a true value to skip all tests. Default is false.
skip_all
Generate the list of files to be tested. Generally not called directly.
Load the file to be tested from disk and return the contents. Generally not called directly.
Test if a file is tidy or not. Generally not called directly.
Perl::Tidy
Edmund von der Burg, <evdb at ecclestoad.co.uk>
<evdb at ecclestoad.co.uk>
Duncan J. Ferguson, <duncan_j_ferguson at yahoo.co.uk>
<duncan_j_ferguson at yahoo.co.uk>
Stephen, <stephen at enterity.com>
<stephen at enterity.com>
Larry Leszczynski, <larryl at cpan.org>
<larryl at cpan.org>
Please let me know if you have any comments or suggestions.
http://ecclestoad.co.uk/
Copyright 2007 Edmund von der Burg, all rights reserved.
This library is free software . You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as perl itself.
To install Test::PerlTidy, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Test::PerlTidy
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Test::PerlTidy
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.