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MooseX::Types::Perl(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation MooseX::Types::Perl(3pm)

NAME

MooseX::Types::Perl - Moose types that check against Perl syntax

VERSION

version 0.101343

SYNOPSIS

  use MooseX::Types::Perl qw(
    DistName
    ModuleName
    PackageName
    Identifier
    SafeIdentifier
    LaxVersionStr
    StrictVersionStr
    VersionObject
  );

DESCRIPTION

This library provides Moose types for checking things (mostly strings) against syntax that is, or is a reasonable subset of, Perl syntax.

TYPES

ModuleName

PackageName

These types are identical, and expect a string that could be a package or module name. That's basically a bunch of identifiers stuck together with double-colons. One key quirk is that parts of the package name after the first may begin with digits.

The use of an apostrophe as a package separator is not permitted.

DistName

The DistName type checks for a string like "MooseX-Types-Perl", the sort of thing used to name CPAN distributions. In general, it's like the more familiar ModuleName, but with hyphens instead of double-colons.

In reality, a few distribution names may not match this pattern -- most famously, "CGI.pm" is the name of the distribution that contains CGI. These exceptions are few and far between, and deciding what a "LaxDistName" type would look like has not seemed worth it, yet.

Identifier

An Identifier is something that could be used as a symbol name or other identifier (filehandle, directory handle, subroutine name, format name, or label). It's what you put after the sigil (dollar sign, at sign, percent sign) in a variable name. Generally, it's a bunch of alphanumeric characters not starting with a digit.

Although Perl identifiers may contain non-ASCII characters in some circumstances, this type does not allow it. A "UnicodeIdentifier" type may be added in the future.

SafeIdentifier

SafeIdentifiers are just like Identifiers, but omit the single-letter variables underscore, a, and b, as these have special significance.

LaxVersionStr

StrictVersionStr

Lax and strict version strings use the is_lax and is_strict methods from "version" to check if the given string would be a valid lax or strict version. version::Internals covers the details but basically: lax versions are everything you may do, and strict omit many of the usages best avoided.

VersionObject

Just for good measure, this type is included to check if a value is a version object. Coercions from LaxVersionStr (and thus StrictVersionStr) are provided.

AUTHOR

Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2014 by Ricardo SIGNES.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.

2022-06-16 perl v5.34.0