Well, yeah. It brings you to the directory for the source, which contains the POD as text in a README file. Once they appear on CPAN, you can just use CPAN to read the docs in a nicer format.

Oh. Fixing... update: fixed.

Let this be a lesson to you:

for my (grep -d, glob "*") { (my $mod = $_) =~ s/-/::/g; my ($latest) = sort { $b <=> $a } map /.*-(\d+\.?\d*)/, glob "$_/*"; my $what = ""; open README, "< $_/$_-$latest/README"; while (<README>) { # AGH! THIS KILLED MY OLD $_ ($what) = /$mod - (.*)/ and last; } close README; print "<h2><tt>$mod $latest</tt></h2>\n"; print "<b>\u$what</b>\n"; print "<ul><li><a href='$_/$_-$latest/'>Documentation</a> and source +\n"; print "<li><a href='$_/$_-$latest.tar.gz'>Download</a></ul>\n"; }
If you follow that code carefully, you'll see why the links were messed up. When I read from README, I was setting $_ each time, which clobbered the $_ that held the filename.
_____________________________________________________
Jeff[japhy]Pinyan: Perl, regex, and perl hacker, who'd like a job (NYC-area)
s++=END;++y(;-P)}y js++=;shajsj<++y(p-q)}?print:??;

In reply to Re: Re: Tie::IxHash::Easy and Tie::Autotie on CPAN by japhy
in thread Tie::IxHash::Easy and Tie::Autotie on CPAN by japhy

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