perldoc - Look up Perl documentation in pod format.
perldoc [-h] [-v] [-t] [-u] [-m] [-l] [-F] [-X] PageName|ModuleName|ProgramName
perldoc -f BuiltinFunction
perldoc -q FAQ Keyword
perldoc looks up a piece of documentation in .pod format that is embedded in the perl installation tree or in a perl script, and displays it via pod2man | nroff -man | $PAGER
. (In addition, if running under HP-UX, col -x
will be used.) This is primarily used for the documentation for the perl library modules.
Your system may also have man pages installed for those modules, in which case you can probably just use the man(1) command.
Prints out a brief help message.
Describes search for the item in detail.
Display docs using plain text converter, instead of nroff. This may be faster, but it won't look as nice.
Find docs only; skip reformatting by pod2*
Display the entire module: both code and unformatted pod documentation. This may be useful if the docs don't explain a function in the detail you need, and you'd like to inspect the code directly; perldoc will find the file for you and simply hand it off for display.
Display the file name of the module found.
Consider arguments as file names, no search in directories will be performed.
The -f option followed by the name of a perl built in function will extract the documentation of this function from perlfunc.
The -q option takes a regular expression as an argument. It will search the question headings in perlfaq[1-9] and print the entries matching the regular expression.
The -X option looks for a entry whose basename matches the name given on the command line in the file $Config{archlib}/pod.idx
. The pod.idx file should contain fully qualified filenames, one per line.
Because perldoc does not run properly tainted, and is known to have security issues, it will not normally execute as the superuser. If you use the -U flag, it will do so, but only after setting the effective and real IDs to nobody's or nouser's account, or -2 if unavailable. If it cannot relinguish its privileges, it will not run.
The item you want to look up. Nested modules (such as File::Basename
) are specified either as File::Basename
or File/Basename
. You may also give a descriptive name of a page, such as perlfunc
. You may also give a partial or wrong-case name, such as "basename" for "File::Basename", but this will be slower, if there is more then one page with the same partial name, you will only get the first one.
Any switches in the PERLDOC
environment variable will be used before the command line arguments. perldoc
also searches directories specified by the PERL5LIB
(or PERLLIB
if PERL5LIB
is not defined) and PATH
environment variables. (The latter is so that embedded pods for executables, such as perldoc
itself, are available.) perldoc
will use, in order of preference, the pager defined in PERLDOC_PAGER
, MANPAGER
, or PAGER
before trying to find a pager on its own. (MANPAGER
is not used if perldoc
was told to display plain text or unformatted pod.)
One useful value for PERLDOC_PAGER
is less -+C -E
.
This is perldoc v2.01.
Kenneth Albanowski <[email protected]>
Minor updates by Andy Dougherty <[email protected]>, and others.