NAME
    String::Util -- Handy string processing utilities

SYNOPSIS
      use String::Util ':all';
  
      # "crunch" whitespace and remove leading/trailing whitespace
      crunch $val;
  
      # does this value have "content", i.e. it's defined
      # and has something besides whitespace?
      if (hascontent $val) {...}
  
      # format for display in web page
      htmlesc $val;
  
      # remove leading/trailing whitespace
      trim $val;
  
      # ensure defined value
      define $val;
  
      # remove leading/trailing quotes
      unquote $val;
  
      # remove all whitespace
      nospace $val;
  
      # format for use in URL
      urlencode $val;
  
      # decode URL encoded data
      urldecode $val;
  
      # remove trailing \r and \n, regardless of what
      # the OS considers an end-of-line
      fullchomp $val;
  
      # encrypt string using random seed
      randcrypt $val;
  
      # are these two values equal, where two undefs count as "equal"?
      if (equndef $a, $b) {...}
  
      # are these two values different, where two undefs count as "equal"?
      if (neundef $a, $b) {...}
  
      # get a random string of some specified length
      $val = randword (10);

DESCRIPTION
    String::Util provides a collection of small, handy utilities for
    processing strings.

INSTALLATION
    String::Util can be installed with the usual routine:

            perl Makefile.PL
            make
            make test
            make install

    You can also just copy Util.pm into the String/ directory of one of your
    library trees.

FUNCTIONS
crunch(string)
    Crunches all whitespace in the string down to single spaces. Also
    removes all leading and trailing whitespace. Undefined input results in
    undefined output.

    In void context modifies the value in place. Otherwise returns the
    modified value.

hascontent(scalar)
    Returns true if the given argument contains something besides
    whitespace.

    This function tests if the given value is defined and, if it is, if that
    defined value contains something besides whitespace.

    An undefined value returns false. An empty string returns false. A value
    containing nothing but whitespace (spaces, tabs, carriage returns,
    newlines, backspace) returns false. A string containing any other
    characers (including zero) returns true.

trim(string)
    Returns the string with all leading and trailing whitespace removed.
    Trim on undef returns undef.

    In void context modifies the value in place. Otherwise returns the
    modified value.

nospace(string)
    Removes all whitespace characters from the given string.

    In void context changes the values in place. Otherwise returns modified
    value.

htmlesc(string)
    Formats a string for literal output in HTML. An undefined value is
    returned as an empty string. In void context changes the values in
    place. Otherwise returns modified value.

    htmlesc is very similar to CGI.pm's escapeHTML. If your script already
    loads CGI.pm, you may well not need htmlesc. However, there are a few
    differences. htmlesc changes an undefined value to an empty string,
    whereas escapeHTML returns undefs as undefs and also results in a
    warning. Also, escapeHTML will not modify a value in place: you always
    have to store the return value, even in you're putting it back in to the
    variable the value came from. It's a matter of taste.

unquote(string)
    If the given string starts and ends with quotes, removes them.
    Recognizes single quotes and double quotes. The value must begin and end
    with same type of quotes or nothing is done to the value. Undef input
    results in undef output.

    In void context changes the values in place. Otherwise returns modified
    value.

define(scalar)
    Takes a single value as input. If the value is defined, it is returned
    unchanged. If it is not defined, an empty string is returned.

    This subroutine is useful for printing when an undef should simply be
    represented as an empty string. Granted, Perl already treats undefs as
    empty strings in string context, but this sub makes -w happy. And you
    ARE using -w, right?

    In void context modifies the value in place. Otherwise returns the
    modified value.

randword(length, %options)
    Returns a random string of characters. String will not contain any
    vowels (to avoid distracting dirty words). First argument is the length
    of the return string.

  option: numerals
    If the numerals option is true, only numerals are returned, no
    alphabetic characters.

  option: strip_vowels
    This option is true by default. If true, vowels are not included in the
    returned random string.

equndef($str1, $str2)
    Returns true if the two given strings are equal. Also returns true if
    both are undef. If only one is undef, or if they are both defined but
    different, returns false.

neundef($str1, $str2)
    The opposite of equndef, returns true if the two strings are *not* the
    same.

urlencode(string)
    Returns the string URL encoded. Undef returns an empty string.

    This subroutine works much like CGI.pm's escape function. The main
    difference is that this sub returns an empty string if an undefined
    value is input.

urldecode(string)
    Returns the string URL decoded. Undef returns an empty string.

    In void context modifies the value in place. Otherwise returns the
    modified value.

    This subroutine works much like CGI.pm's escape function. The main
    difference is that this sub returns an empty string if an undefined
    value is input.

    This subroutine also has a bug I haven't been able to fix. See notes in
    the code.

fullchomp(string)
    Works like chomp, but is a little more thorough about removing \n's and
    \r's even if they aren't part of the OS's standard end-of-line.

    Undefs are returned as undefs.

randcrypt(string)
    Crypts the given string, seeding the encryption with a random two
    character seed.

TERMS AND CONDITIONS
    Copyright (c) 2005 by Miko O'Sullivan. All rights reserved. This program
    is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
    same terms as Perl itself. This software comes with NO WARRANTY of any
    kind.

AUTHORS
    Miko O'Sullivan miko@idocs.com

VERSION
    Version 0.10 December 1, 2005
        Initial release

