File: //bin/X11/X11/xslate
#!/usr/bin/perl 
use strict;
use Text::Xslate::Runner;
my $app = Text::Xslate::Runner->new_from(@ARGV);
$app->run( $app->targets );
__END__
=for stopwords xslate
=head1 NAME
xslate - Process Xslate Templates
=head1 USAGE
    # process paths
    $ xslate [options...] target
    -a --cache               Cache level
    -t --type                Output content type (html | xml | text)
    -E --engine              Template engine
    -D --define              Define template variables (e.g. foo=bar)
    -I --path                Include paths
    --version                Print version information
    --oe --output_encoding   Output encoding (default: UTF-8)
    -M --module              Modules templates will use (e.g. name=sub1,sub2)
    -e --eval                One line of template code
    -s --syntax              Template syntax (e.g. TTerse)
    -d --debug               Debugging flags
    -x --suffix              Output suffix mapping (e.g. tx=html)
    --ie --input_encoding    Input encoding (default: UTF-8)
    -i --ignore              Regular expression the process will ignore
    -c --cache_dir           Directory the cache files will be saved in
    -o --dest                Destination directory
    -w --verbose             Warning level (default: 2)
    # one liners, with $ARGV and $ENV
    xslate -e 'Hello, <: $ARGV[0] :> world!' Xslate
    # => Hello, Xslate world!
    xslate -MDigest::MD5=md5_hex -e '<: md5_hex($ARGV[0]) :>' 'foo bar'
    # => 327b6f07435811239bc47e1544353273
=head1 DESCRIPTION
The C<xslate> script is used to process entire directory trees containing
template files, or to process one liners.
=head1 ARGUMENTS
=head2 target
Specifies the target to be processed by Xslate.
If the target is a file, the file is processed, and C<xslate> will exit immediately. If the target is a directory, then the directory is traversed and each file found is processed via C<xslate>.
=head1 AUTHOR
Maki, Daisuke (lestrrat)
Fuji, Goro (gfx)
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<Text::Xslate>
=cut