Text::TestBase is a parser for the Test::Base format.
Text::Trac parses text with Trac WikiFormatting and convert it to
html format.
From the Time::Human documentation:
This module provides a "vague" rendering of the time into natural lan-
guage; it's originally intended for text-to-speech applications and
other speech-based interfaces.
Text::Unaccent is a module that remove accents from a string. unac_string
converts the input string from the specified charset to UTF-16 and call
unac_string_utf16 to return the unaccented equivalent. The conversion from
and to UTF-16 is done with iconv(1).
The Tree::Nary class implements N-ary trees (trees of data with any
number of branches), providing the organizational structure for a
tree (collection) of any number of nodes, but knowing nothing about
the specific type of node used. It can be used to display
hierarchical database entries in an internal application (the NIS
netgroup file is an example of such a database). It offers the
capability to select nodes on the tree, and attachment points for
nodes on the tree. Each attachment point can support multiple
child nodes.
Text::VimColor - syntax color text in HTML or XML using Vim
Text::WikiFormat converts text in a simple Wiki markup language to whatever
your little heart desires, provided you can describe it accurately in a
semi-regular tag language.
This module is a variation on the lovely Text::Diff module. Rather
than generating traditional line-oriented diffs, however, it generates
word-oriented diffs. This can be useful for tracking changes in
narrative documents or documents with very long lines. To diff
source code, one is still best off using Text::Diff. But if you
want to see how a short story changed from one version to the next,
this module will do the job very nicely.
Text::WrapI18N intends to be a better Text::Wrap module. This module is needed
to support multibyte character encodings such as UTF-8, EUC-JP, EUC-KR, GB2312,
and Big5. This module also supports characters with irregular widths, such as
combining characters (which occupy zero columns on terminal, like diacritical
marks in UTF-8) and fullwidth characters (which occupy two columns on terminal,
like most of east Asian characters). Also, minimal handling of languages which
doesn't use whitespaces between words (like Chinese and Japanese) is supported.
Like Text::Wrap, hyphenation and "kinsoku" processing are not supported, to keep
simplicity.