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Template::DBI(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					Template::DBI(3pm)

NAME
Template::DBI - DBI plugin for the Template Toolkit SYNOPSIS
$ perldoc Template::Plugin::DBI DESCRIPTION
The Template-DBI distribution contains the DBI plugin for the Template Toolkit. At some point in the future it is likely to contain other DBI-related plugins and extension modules for the Template Toolkit. The DBI plugin was distributed as part of the Template Toolkit until version 2.15 released in May 2006. At this time it was extracted into this separate Template-DBI distribution. See the documentation for Template::Plugin::DBI for further details on using the DBI plugin. AUTHORS
The DBI plugin was originally written by Simon A Matthews, and distributed as a separate module. It was integrated into the Template Toolkit distribution for version 2.00 and included contributions from Andy Wardley, Craig Barratt, Dave Hodgkinson and Rafael Kitover. Andy Wardley extracted it back into a separate distribution in May 2006. After that, in 2010 Jens Rehsack maintains this distribution. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1999-2006 Simon Matthews, Andy Wardley. All Rights Reserved Copyright (C) 2010 Jens Rehsack. All Rights Reserved This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
Template, Template::Plugins, Template::Plugin::DBI, DBI, Tie::DBI perl v5.10.1 2011-02-05 Template::DBI(3pm)

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Template::Stash::XS(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				    Template::Stash::XS(3)

NAME
Template::Stash::XS - High-speed variable stash written in C SYNOPSIS
use Template; use Template::Stash::XS; my $stash = Template::Stash::XS->new(\%vars); my $tt2 = Template->new({ STASH => $stash }); DESCRIPTION
The Template:Stash::XS module is an implementation of the Template::Stash written in C. The "XS" in the name refers to Perl's XS extension system for interfacing Perl to C code. It works just like the regular Perl implementation of Template::Stash but runs about twice as fast. The easiest way to use the XS stash is to configure the Template Toolkit to use it by default. You can do this at installation time (when you run "perl Makefile.PL") by answering 'y' to the questions: Do you want to build the XS Stash module? y Do you want to use the XS Stash by default? y See the INSTALL file distributed with the Template Toolkit for further details on installation. If you don't elect to use the XS stash by default then you should use the "STASH" configuration item when you create a new Template object. This should reference an XS stash object that you have created manually. use Template; use Template::Stash::XS; my $stash = Template::Stash::XS->new(\%vars); my $tt2 = Template->new({ STASH => $stash }); Alternately, you can set the $Template::Config::STASH package variable like so: use Template; use Template::Config; $Template::Config::STASH = 'Template::Stash::XS'; my $tt2 = Template->new(); The XS stash will then be automatically used. If you want to use the XS stash by default and don't want to re-install the Template Toolkit, then you can manually modify the "Template/Config.pm" module near line 42 to read: $STASH = 'Template::Stash::XS'; BUGS
Please report bugs to the Template Toolkit mailing list templates@template-toolkit.org AUTHORS
Andy Wardley <abw@wardley.org> <http://wardley.org/> Doug Steinwand <dsteinwand@citysearch.com> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1996-2009 Andy Wardley. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
Template::Stash perl v5.12.1 2009-04-07 Template::Stash::XS(3)
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