-#-------------------------#
- package PLP::Functions;
-#-------------------------#
+package PLP::Functions;
+
use base 'Exporter';
use Fcntl qw(:flock);
use strict;
-our @EXPORT = qw/HiddenFields Entity DecodeURI EncodeURI Entity include PLP_END
+our @EXPORT = qw/Entity DecodeURI EncodeURI include PLP_END
AddCookie ReadFile WriteFile AutoURL Counter Include exit/;
sub Include ($) {
local $@;
eval 'package PLP::Script; ' . PLP::source($PLP::file, 0, join ' ', (caller)[2,1]);
if ($@) {
- PLP::Functions::exit if $@ =~ /\cS\cT\cO\cP/;
+ PLP::Functions::exit() if $@ =~ /\cS\cT\cO\cP/;
PLP::error($@, 1);
}
}
push @PLP::END, shift;
}
-sub HiddenFields ($@) {
- my $hash = shift;
- my %saves;
- @saves{@_} = ();
- for (keys %$hash) {
- print qq{<input type=hidden name="$_" value="$hash->{$_}">}
- unless exists $saves{$_};
- }
-}
-
sub Entity (@) {
my $ref;
my @copy;
return defined wantarray ? (wantarray ? @$ref : "@$ref") : undef;
}
-# Browsers do s/ /+/ - I don't care about RFC's, but I do care about real-life
-# situations.
sub DecodeURI (@) {
+ # Browsers do s/ /+/ - I don't care about RFC's, but I do care about real-life
+ # situations.
my @r;
local $_;
for (@_) {
}
return defined wantarray ? (wantarray ? @r : "@r") : undef;
}
+
sub EncodeURI (@) {
my @r;
local $_;
Executes another PLP file, that will be parsed (i.e. code must be in C<< <: :> >>). As with Perl's C<do>, the file is evaluated in its own lexical file scope, so lexical variables (C<my> variables) are not shared. PLP's C<< <(filename)> >> includes at compile-time, is faster and is doesn't create a lexical scope (it shares lexical variables).
+Include can be used recursively, and there is no depth limit:
+
+ <!-- This is crash.plp -->
+ <:
+ include 'crash.plp';
+ # This example will loop forever,
+ # and dies with an out of memory error.
+ # Do not try this at home.
+ :>
+
=item include FILENAME
An alias for C<Include>.
<: print Entity($user_input); :>
+Be warned that this function also HTMLizes consecutive whitespace and newlines (using and <br> respectively).
+For simple escaping, use L<XML::Quote>. To escape high-bit characters as well, use L<HTML::Entities>.
+
=item EncodeURI LIST
-Replaces characters by their %-encoded values.
+Encodes URI strings according to RFC 3986. All disallowed characters are replaced by their %-encoded values.
In void context, B<changes> the values of the given variables. In other contexts, returns the changed versions.
<a href="/foo.plp?name=<:= EncodeURI($name) :>">Link</a>
+Note that the following reserved characters are I<not> percent-encoded, even though they may have a special meaning in URIs:
+
+ / ? : @ $
+
+This should be safe for escaping query values (as in the example above), but it may be a better idea to use L<URI::Escape> instead.
+
=item DecodeURI LIST
-Decodes %-encoded strings.
+Decodes %-encoded strings. Unlike L<URI::Escape>, it also translates + characters to spaces (as browsers use those).
In void context, B<changes> the values of the given variables. In other contexts, returns the changed versions.
=head1 AUTHOR
-Juerd Waalboer <juerd@juerd.nl>
+Juerd Waalboer <juerd@cpan.org>
+
+Current maintainer: Mischa POSLAWSKY <shiar@cpan.org>
=cut