Update DEPENDS
Uptream changes:
0.103004 2014-12-26 22:31:16-05:00 America/New_York
- fix a regression in 0.103003, in which Nonpod paragraphs were not
converted into Pod5::Nonpod paragraphs by the Pod5 transformer
0.103003 2014-12-23 21:11:26-05:00 America/New_York
- remove use of Moose::Autobox
0.103002 2014-10-27 21:12:54-04:00 America/New_York
- make classes immutable to improve runtime speed
0.103001 2014-05-20 20:45:43-04:00 America/New_York
- load Class::Load, which older Moose does not automatically load
Do it for all packages that
* mention perl, or
* have a directory name starting with p5-*, or
* depend on a package starting with p5-
like last time, for 5.18, where this didn't lead to complaints.
Let me know if you have any this time.
Upstream changes:
0.103000 2014-01-12 09:03:06-05:00 America/New_York
Pod::Elemental::Document only adds leading =pod or trailing =cut if
they are not already present
a) refer 'perl' in their Makefile, or
b) have a directory name of p5-*, or
c) have any dependency on any p5-* package
Like last time, where this caused no complaints.
CPAN into textproc/p5-Pod-Elemental.
Pod::Elemental is a system for treating a Pod (plain old documentation)
documents as trees of elements. This model may be familiar from many other
document systems, especially the HTML DOM. Pod::Elemental's document object
model is much less sophisticated than the HTML DOM, but still makes a lot
of document transformations easy.
In general, you'll want to read in a Pod document and then perform a number
of prepackaged transformations on it. The most common of these will be the
Pod5 transformation, which assumes that the basic meaning of Pod commands
described in the Perl 5 documentation hold: =begin, =end, and =for commands
mark regions of the document, leading whitespace marks a verbatim paragraph,
and so on. The Pod5 transformer also eliminates the need to track elements
representing vertical whitespace.