head 1.2; access; symbols RELEASE_8_3_0:1.2 RELEASE_9_0_0:1.2 RELEASE_7_4_0:1.2 RELEASE_8_2_0:1.2 RELEASE_6_EOL:1.2 RELEASE_8_1_0:1.2 RELEASE_7_3_0:1.2 RELEASE_8_0_0:1.2 RELEASE_7_2_0:1.2 RELEASE_7_1_0:1.2 RELEASE_6_4_0:1.2 RELEASE_5_EOL:1.2 RELEASE_7_0_0:1.2 RELEASE_6_3_0:1.2 PRE_XORG_7:1.2 RELEASE_4_EOL:1.2 RELEASE_6_2_0:1.2 RELEASE_6_1_0:1.2 RELEASE_5_5_0:1.2 RELEASE_6_0_0:1.1 RELEASE_5_4_0:1.1 RELEASE_4_11_0:1.1 RELEASE_5_3_0:1.1 RELEASE_4_10_0:1.1 RELEASE_5_2_1:1.1 RELEASE_5_2_0:1.1; locks; strict; comment @# @; 1.2 date 2005.09.21.19.35.47; author fenner; state Exp; branches; next 1.1; 1.1 date 2003.10.31.09.47.09; author foxfair; state Exp; branches; next ; desc @@ 1.2 log @search.cpan.org redirect reduction canonicalization project, pass 2: Refer to all modules using their /dist/Foo/ path instead of via the mishmash of old author path, new author path, module documentation, etc. This pass brought to you by loving, painstaking hand editing. @ text @Serialize your RSS as JavaScript. Perhaps you use XML::RSS to generate RSS for consumption by RSS parsers. Perhaps you also get requests for how to use the RSS feed by people who have no idea how to parse XML, or write Perl programs for that matter. Enter XML::RSS::JavaScript, a simle subclass of XML::RSS which writes your RSS feed as a sequence of JavaScript print statements. This means you can then write the JavaScript to disk, and a users HTML can simple include it like so: What's more the javascript emits HTML that can be fully styled with CSS. See the CSS examples included with the distribution in the css directory. WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/XML-RSS-JavaScript/ @ 1.1 log @Add p5-XML-RSS-JavaScript, it is a perl extension to serialize your RSS as JavaScript @ text @d17 1 a17 1 WWW: http://search.cpan.org/perldoc?XML::RSS::JavaScript @