PNG  IHDR;IDATxܻn0K )(pA 7LeG{ §㻢|ذaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lom$^yذag5bÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذa{ 6lذaÆ `}HFkm,mӪôô! x|'ܢ˟;E:9&ᶒ}{v]n&6 h_tڠ͵-ҫZ;Z$.Pkž)!o>}leQfJTu іچ\X=8Rن4`Vwl>nG^is"ms$ui?wbs[m6K4O.4%/bC%t Mז -lG6mrz2s%9s@-k9=)kB5\+͂Zsٲ Rn~GRC wIcIn7jJhۛNCS|j08yiHKֶۛkɈ+;SzL/F*\Ԕ#"5m2[S=gnaPeғL lذaÆ 6l^ḵaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذa; _ذaÆ 6lذaÆ 6lذaÆ RIENDB` =pod =for comment DO NOT EDIT. This Pod was generated by Swim v0.1.48. See http://github.com/ingydotnet/swim-pm#readme =encoding utf8 =head1 NAME Pegex::Grammar::Atoms - Pegex Regex Atoms =head1 SYNOPSIS use Pegex::Grammar::Atoms; =head1 DESCRIPTION Atoms are special Pegex rules that represent the small pieces of text that you can use to build up regular expressions. Usually they are one or two characters. It may seem like a waste of time to specify C in a regex, instead of a simple C<:>. There are three reasons this is encouraged. First is that you are defining a grammar for a new language, and it is worth the time to be clear and verbose. Second, using an abstraction like this can help with portability to languages with different regex engines. Finally, it makes the grammar for Pegex so much simpler, because a C is always a part of the Pegex syntax, and a C is part of your grammar. =head1 AUTHOR Ingy döt Net =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE Copyright 2010-2020. Ingy döt Net. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See L =cut