Representations of literal values
Many places you'd expect a Perl scalar to appear, e.g.:
$my_hcard->get_fn;
What you actually get returned is an object from one of the Datatype modules. Why? Because using a scalar loses information. For example, most strings have associated language information (from \s-1HTML\s0 lang and xml:lang attributes). Using an object allows this information to be kept.
The Datatype modules overload stringification, which means that for the most part, you can use them as strings (subjecting them to regular expressions, concatenating them, printing them, etc) and everything will work just fine. But they're not strings.
Please report any bugs to <http://rt.cpan.org/>.
HTML::Microformats.
HTML::Microformats::Datatype::DateTime, HTML::Microformats::Datatype::Duration, HTML::Microformats::Datatype::Interval, HTML::Microformats::Datatype::String.
Toby Inkster <[email protected]>.
Copyright 2008-2012 Toby Inkster
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
\s-1THIS\s0 \s-1PACKAGE\s0 \s-1IS\s0 \s-1PROVIDED\s0 \*(L"\s-1AS\s0 \s-1IS\s0\*(R" \s-1AND\s0 \s-1WITHOUT\s0 \s-1ANY\s0 \s-1EXPRESS\s0 \s-1OR\s0 \s-1IMPLIED\s0 \s-1WARRANTIES\s0, \s-1INCLUDING\s0, \s-1WITHOUT\s0 \s-1LIMITATION\s0, \s-1THE\s0 \s-1IMPLIED\s0 \s-1WARRANTIES\s0 \s-1OF\s0 \s-1MERCHANTIBILITY\s0 \s-1AND\s0 \s-1FITNESS\s0 \s-1FOR\s0 A \s-1PARTICULAR\s0 \s-1PURPOSE\s0.