NAME¶
Debian::Dependencies - a list of Debian::Dependency objects
SYNOPSIS¶
    my $dl = Debian::Dependencies->new('perl, libfoo-perl (>= 3.4)');
    print $dl->[1]->ver;      # 3.4
    print $dl->[1];           # libfoo-perl (>= 3.4)
    print $dl;                # perl, libfoo-perl (>= 3.4)
    $dl += 'libbar-perl';
    print $dl;                # perl, libfoo-perl (>= 3.4), libbar-perl
    print Debian::Dependencies->new('perl') + 'libfoo-bar-perl';
                              # simple 'sum'
    print Debian::Dependencies->new('perl')
          + Debian::Dependencies->new('libfoo, libbar');
                              # add (concatenate) two lists
    print Debian::Dependencies->new('perl')
          + Debian::Dependency->new('foo');
                              # add depeendency to a list
DESCRIPTION¶
Debian::Dependencies a list of Debian::Dependency objects, with automatic
  construction and stringification.
Objects of this class are blessed array references. You can safely treat them as
  arrayrefs, as long as the elements you put in them are instances of the
  Debian::Dependency class.
When used in string context, Debian::Dependencies converts itself into a
  comma-delimitted list of dependencies, suitable for dependency fields of
  
debian/control files.
CLASS METHODS¶
  - new(dependency-string)
 
  - Constructs a new Debian::Dependencies object. Accepts one
      scalar argument, which is parsed and turned into an arrayref of
      Debian::Dependency objects. Each dependency should be delimitted by a
      comma and optional space. The exact regular expression is
      "/\s*,\s*/".
 
OBJECT METHODS¶
  - add( dependency[, ... ] )
 
  - Adds dependency (or a list of) to the list of
      dependencies. If the new dependency is a subset of or overlaps some of the
      old dependencies, it is not duplicated.
    
 
        my $d = Debian::Dependencies('foo, bar (<=4)');
    $d->add('foo (>= 4), bar');
    print "$d";     # foo (>= 4), bar (>= 4)
    
     
     dependency can be either a Debian::Dependency object, a
      Debian::Deendencies object, or a string (in which case it is converted to
      an instance of the Debian::Dependencies class). 
  - remove( dependency, ... ) =item remove(
    dependencies, ... )
 
  - Removes a dependency from the list of dependencies.
      Instances of Debian::Dependency and Debian::Dependencies classes are
      supported as arguments.
    
 
    Any non-reference arguments are coerced to instances of Debian::Dependencies
      class.
     
    Only dependencies that are subset of the given dependencies are removed:
     
        my $deps = Debian::Dependencies->new('foo (>= 1.2), bar');
    $deps->remove('foo, bar (>= 2.0)');
    print $deps;    # bar
    
     
    Returns the list of the dependencies removed. 
  - has( dep )
 
  - Return true if the dependency list contains given
      dependency. In other words, this returns true if the list of dependencies
      guarantees that the given dependency will be satisfied. For example,
      "foo, bar" satisfies "foo", but not "foo (>=
      5)".
 
  - prune()
 
  - This method is deprecated. If you want to sort the
      dependency list, either call "sort" or use normal perl sorting
      stuff on the dereferenced array.
 
  - sort()
 
  - Sorts the dependency list by packagee name, version and
      relation.
 
SEE ALSO¶
Debian::Dependency
AUTHOR¶
  - Damyan Ivanov <dmn@debian.org>
 
  
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE¶
  - Copyright (C) 2008, 2009, 2010 Damyan Ivanov
    <dmn@debian.org>
 
  
  - Copyright (C) 2009 gregor herrmann
    <gregoa@debian.org>
 
  
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
  the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 as published by the Free
  Software Foundation.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
  WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR
  A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
  this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin
  Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.