This is just the Catalyst manual. If you want to develop Catalyst
apps, please install Catalyst::Devel. If you'd like a tutorial and a
full example Catalyst application, please intall
Task::Catalyst::Tutorial.
If you just want to run Catalyst applications, you probably don't need
this manual, but you do need Catalyst::Runtime.
igal2 (the successor of igal) is a quick and easy program for placing
your images online with just one command-line. It generates a pretty
good-looking set of W3-compliant static HTML slides even with its
default settings. The slide show preloads the next image with
JavaScript - ideal for slower links.
Translates a CSS3 selector into an equivalent XPath expression.
This allows us to use CSS selectors when working with the XML package
as it can only evaluate XPath expressions. Also provided are
convenience functions useful for using CSS selectors on XML nodes.
This package is a port of the Python package "cssselect".
This Perl module is used to populate HTML forms with default values. Unlike
other tools that fill a similar niche, this module can handle any existing
HTML page; this approach allows a clean separation of HTML development from
Perl program development.
HTML::GoogleMaps provides a simple wrapper around the Google Maps API. It
allows you to easily create maps with markers, polylines and information
windows. Thanks to Geo::Coder::Google you can now look up locations around
the world without having to install a local database.
The HTML::TagCloud module enables you to generate "tag clouds" in HTML.
Tag clouds serve as a textual way to visualize terms and topics that are
used most frequently. The tags are sorted alphabetically and a larger
font is used to indicate more frequent term usage.
HTTP::Negotiate provides a complete implementation of the HTTP content
negotiation algorithm. Content negotiation allows for the selection of
a preferred content representation based upon attributes of the
negotiable variants and the value of the various Accept* header fields
in the request.
DokuWiki is a standards compliant, simple to use Wiki, mainly aimed at
creating documentation of any kind. It is targeted at developer teams,
workgroups and small companies. It has a simple but powerful syntax which
makes sure the datafiles remain readable outside the Wiki and eases the
creation of structured texts.
All data is stored in plain text files - no database is required.
LWP::Authen::Wsse allows LWP to authenticate against servers that are using
the X-WSSE authentication scheme, as required by the Atom Authentication API.
The module is used indirectly through LWP, rather than including it directly
in your code. The LWP system will invoke the WSSE authentication when it
encounters the authentication scheme while attempting to retrieve a URL
from a server.
Perlanet is a program for creating programs that aggregate web feeds
(both RSS and Atom). Web pages like this are often called "Planets"
after the Python software which originally popularised them. Perlanet
is a planet builder written in Perl - hence "Perlanet".