#!/usr/bin/perl -w
# Example use a perltidy postfilter to outdent certain leading keywords
# Usage:
# perltidy_okw.pl -sil=1 file.pl
# This version outdents hardwired keywords 'step', 'command', and 'expected'
# The following is an example of the desired effect. The flag -sil=1 is
# needed to get a starting indentation level so that the outdenting
# is visible.
=pod
step 4;
command 'Share project: project1';
expected 'A project megjelenik a serveren';
shareProject ('project1', 'login', '123', Login => 1, PortalServer =>
$openJoinAddress);
valueCheck ('project1_share', listBIMCloudData ('projects'));
step 5;
command 'quitAC';
quitAC ();
=cut
# Run it exactly like perltidy, and the postfilter removes the
# leading whitespace of lines which begin with your keywords. The
# postfilter works on the file as a single string, so the 'm' quote
# modifier is needed to make the ^ and $ string positioners work
# See http://perltidy.sourceforge.net/Tidy.html for further details
# on how to call Perl::Tidy
use Perl::Tidy;
my $arg_string = undef;
my $err=Perl::Tidy::perltidy(
argv => $arg_string,
postfilter =>
sub { $_ = $_[0]; s/^\s*(step|command|expected)(.*)$/$1$2/gm; return $_ }
);
if ($err) {
die "Error calling perltidy\n";
}
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