A short paragraph.
A long paragraph: Given an XHTML document (as an L<XML::LibXML::Document> object), find all the attributes in the markup which are relative URLs and turn them into absolute URLs relative to C<$base_url>. This can be used to prepare content from an article to be published in a different place with a different URL, such as in an RSS feed or on an index page, while ensuring that any links or embedded files continue to work.
extra whitespace around it
Bullet list:
Numbered list:
Bullet list containing block markup:
Here is a nested list:
This indented list item contains quite a lot of text, broken up into two paragraphs. The second paragraph is just some prose from the Daizu API documentation.
Return a string version of the DateTime object, formatted as a
W3CDTF date and time. If $datetime
is just a string, it is automatically validated and parsed by
validate_date() first. If the value is invalid
or undefined, then undef
is returned.
Another paragraph after the nested list.
Special chars should be preserved: ‘single quotes’ “double quotes” en–dash em—dash
text inside blockquote element
A long paragraph inside a blockquote: Most access to Daizu functionality requires a Daizu object. It provides a database handle for access to the 'live' content data, and a L<SVN::Ra> object for access to the Subversion repository.
another paragraph
nested blockquote
A pre element containing some code, syntax highlighted (but the extra span elements can be safely ignored when converting to text):
sub add_html_dom_filter { my ($self, $object, $method) = @_; push @{$self->{html_dom_filters}}, [ $object => $method ]; }
quoted text
simulated with Unicode chars:
sup: x123+4567890=(i), sub: H2−γO
can't be simulated:
sup: x%$#123, sub: H@O
Markup with unusual whitespace arrangement.
Images: alt=[]
noalt=[
]