NAME App::p - Steroids for your perl one-liners. VERSION version 0.0400 SYNOPSIS Usage: p [-lneE etc] 'code' The code can make use of: r to File::Slurper::read_text() w to File::Slurper::write_file() S to say() p to print() dd to Data::Dump::dd() jd to JSON::encode (utf8/pretty) jl to JSON::decode (utf8/allow nonref) a thing xd to XML::Hash::LX::hash2xml() xl to XML::Hash::LX::xml2hash() yd to YAML::Dump() yl to YAML::Load() xj to convert an xml file to json jx to convert a json file to xml get,head,getprint,getstore,mirror from LWP::Simple sum,first,min,max,zip,uniq,any,all,none ... all of List::AllUtils Examples: p 'dd [File::Spec->path]' # dynamically load arbitrary modules p -pe 's/foo/bar/' foo.txt # use your favorite options like -lane p 'say "hello world!"' # -E is assumed if no options are provided p 'dd yl r "config.yml"' # chain commands p 'S sum 1,2,3,4' # all of List::AllUtils is at your fingertips p 'dd ExtUtils::Installed->new->modules' # list all installed modules p ' dd xl r "/etc/xml/xml-core.xml"' # print dump of hash converted xml p 'p xd xl r "/etc/xml/xml-core.xml"' # print xml converted from hash p 'p get "http://icanhazip.com"' # print contents of url p 'p xj "file.xml" # (xj xml to json )print xml's equivalent json p 'p jx "file.json" # (jx json to xml )print json's equivalent xml p 'dd uniq map $_->{ostext}, @{ jl get "http://www.cpantesters.org/distro/A/App-p.json" }' # have fun! CONTRIBUTORS * datamuc <<https://github.com/datamuc>> * Jenish Gnanasicamani <<https://github.com/JenishGnanasicamani>> * Stanislaw Pusep <<https://github.com/creaktive>> * Stefan Corneliu Petrea <<https://github.com/wsdookadr>> * Tommy Stanton <<https://github.com/tommystanton>> ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This is based on Randy Stauner's <http://blogs.perl.org/users/randy_stauner/2011/06/exploratory-one-liner s-with-less-typing.html> and Marco Fontani's <https://gist.github.com/1042504>. AUTHOR Naveed Massjouni <naveed@vt.edu> COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2011 by Naveed Massjouni. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.