NAME
Acme::CPANModules::Import::CPANRatings::User::perlancar - Modules
mentioned by CPANRatings user perlancar
VERSION
This document describes version 0.001 of
Acme::CPANModules::Import::CPANRatings::User::perlancar (from Perl
distribution Acme-CPANModules-Import-CPANRatings-User-perlancar),
released on 2018-06-07.
DESCRIPTION
This list is generated by scraping CPANRatings (cpanratings.perl.org)
user page.
Modules mentioned by CPANRatings user perlancar.
This list is generated by scraping CPANRatings (cpanratings.perl.org)
user page.
INCLUDED MODULES
* LWP::JSON::Tiny
I'm not sure this really "befits a ::Tiny distribution"
just because it's a thin wrapper of something. Please read: blogs.perl.org/users/dan_muey/2014/08... or the
Tiny mandate e.g. in metacpan.org/pod/Time::Tiny#The-Tiny-...
* Acme::CPANRatings
After the last template change of the website which is one year ago,
"Was this review helpful" links no longer works. github.com/perlorg/perlweb/issues/232
Rating: 2/10
* Finance::Currency::Convert::WebserviceX
No longer works. Sigh, looks like there is currently NO working
generic currency converter module on CPAN anymore. Every converter
module is either: 1) dead; 2) specific for some currencies only.
Rating: 2/10
* Finance::Currency::Convert
Uses hard-coded rates in the source code. Does not seem to work
anymore: convert() returns zero even after updateRates().
Rating: 2/10
* Finance::Currency::Convert::XE
Of limited use because of the site's restrictive license. UPDATE:
And it no longer works.
Rating: 2/10
* Finance::Currency::Convert::Yahoo
No longer works (not a surprise since this module has not been
updated since almost 13 years ago).
Rating: 2/10
* App::used
Uses simple regex instead of properly parses Perl source code (PPI,
Compiler::Lexer) so potentially lots of false positives. Better use
existing solutions like Perl::PrereqScanner or
Perl::PrereqScanner::Lite, which already come with their own CLI's.
* Net::FTPServer
Currently the only "real" module to create FTP servers in
Perl. My suggestion would be to separate the Perl API documentation
vs using the ftpd*.pl script, as the Net::FTPServer documentation
currently mixes the two.
* Games::Sudoku::CLI
Early release, so not polished yet, but... cool! Thanks, Gabor. We
need more CLI games!
* PPR
The coolest thing since PPI. Now every time someone still says that
one can't parse HTML or balanced parentheses using regex, you can
just point him to this module to shut him up (although, if he had
said that one *shouldn't*...).
Also now you can say that
Perl is a simple language that is easy to learn. Why? Well, it's so
simple you can parse the whole syntax with a single regex.
* DBIx::Compare
Use MySQL-specific SQL dialect "SHOW TABLES" so comparing
e.g. two SQLite database is an instant fail, even though there is
DBIx::Compare::SQLite. Instead of the common convention like
DBIx::Compare->new(...), uses db_comparison->new(...),
sqlite_comparison->new(...), etc.
Rating: 4/10
* Perl::Critic
Hey, Perl::Critic has not been reviewed for quite a while...
Finally take the plunge (again) to include Perl::Critic in
my development work, this time adding critic test in the Dist::Zilla
release process. Already caught a couple of stupid bugs otherwise
uncaught by perl's -w. Aside from that, will help you become more
consistent and a better (Perl) programmer. Invaluable!
* Config::Perl
Rating Data::Undump::PPI, which currently lives inside Config-Perl:
Of course this is a nice proof of concept, but for
"real world" usage, look at Data::Undump which is about
2000x faster :)
* Array::Contains
Requires perl 5.20 for no particular reason. Claims to be
replacement of smart match but only covers string comparison. Just
use List::Util's first() which is more flexible and part of the core
Perl distribution, or match::smart which covers more cases.
Rating: 2/10
* Array::Unique
Mostly unnecessary because this is just a glorified form of a widely
known Perl idiom. Requires perl 5.20 for no particular reason.
Re-sorts the list which is 99% not what user wants. Just use
List::Util's uniq() which is faster and part of core distribution.
Rating: 2/10
* Dist::Zilla::Plugin::ReadmeFromPod
Has some problems, e.g. it uses InstallTool phase so it conflicts
with DZP:StaticInstall when wanting to produce a static install
distro. Use alternatives like the simpler DZP:Pod2Readme or the more
complex DZP:ReadmeAnyFromPod.
Rating: 2/10
* Dist::Zilla::Plugin::Hook
Great for debugging. Just whip up some code in dist.ini to e.g. dump
& print some stuffs, etc.
* File::Tail::Dir
Interesting features, but mooseware.
Rating: 6/10
* Algorithm::Dependency
Happily returns result when graph is cyclic (and thus proper
topological sorting cannot be done). See also Data::Graph::Util for
a simpler alternative.
Rating: 6/10
* Data::Match
(Reviewing Sort::Topological, which is included in Data-Match
distribution at the time of this review).
Hangs when given a
dependency like: a => ["a"]. Happily returns result
when graph is cyclic (and thus proper topological sorting cannot be
done). See also Data::Graph::Util for alternative.
Rating: 4/10
* File::Find::Wanted
File::Find lacks the "making easy things easy" part, so
modules like this are great. A further step would be an option to
omit $wanted for even simpler cases, but that would probably break
the interface. Another alternative is File::Finder, but it forces OO
style.
Rating: 8/10
* Hash::MD5
Since this is essentially md5(dump($data)), why restrict yourself to
hash? This works also for any kind of Perl data structure.
* DateTime::Format::Docker
Isn't this basically ISO8601 (see DateTime::Format::ISO8601)?
* WWW::CPANRatings
To get the ratings for a single distribution, this client library
needs to download /csv/all_ratings.csv (~80KB at the time of this
writing) first. This is not the fault of the client because the
website indeed does not provide the necessary ratings data on the
/dist/:DISTNAME page. The client library should perhaps cache the
CSV response though. The implementation could also be simplified by
using slimmer libraries for this simple scraping task. But other
than that, does what it says on the tin.
Rating: 8/10
* Parse::CPAN::Ratings
Not as useful as the name implies. It requires you to download the
CSV of all ratings first, which BTW does not seem to be advertised
on the CPAN Ratings website. The CSV file only contains numeric
ratings and does not include any reviews. So basically what this
module does is just filter the CSV rows for a distribution's rating.
One might want to look at WWW::CPANRatings instead.
Rating: 6/10
* Acme::Curse
This pure-perl module creates a shallow copy of the object instead
of directly removing blessing from the same object (which requires
XS). Acme::Damn is the more direct counterpart of bless().
* Digest::SHA1
Use Digest::SHA instead. In general, there is no reason in using
Digest::SHA1 over Digest::SHA. The latter is a core Perl module,
more updated, and implements the other algorithms while the former
only implements SHA-1 which is now deprecated.
* File::Checksum
The "checksum" (basically just adding 16-bit words) is too
simplistic to be a real checksum or to be practically useful. Even
MD5 or CRC32 is infinitely better.
* WordPress::XMLRPC
Still works, partially, but in general out of date. For example, to
get post the deprecated metaWeblog.getPost API method is still used
instead of the newer wp.getPost call (which understandably is only
introduced in WordPress 3.4, while this module is last updated with
WordPress 2.8.4). And apparently wordpress.com doesn't return
post_content anymore when you use metaWeblog.getPost.
Luckily, performing XMLRPC request directly is easy enough.
Just use XMLRPC::Lite and peruse the Wordpress documentation here:
codex.wordpress.org/XML-RPC_WordPress...
* Text::Levenshtein::Flexible
My new favorite Levenshtein distance module. It's as fast (if not
faster) than Text::Levenshtein::XS and can provide a speed boost if
you don't care about distances above a certain limit. Which I think
in many cases is true.
* CPAN::Changes
Great and all, but one drawback is that it currently destroys
original file's formatting in serialize().
* Module::Changes::ADAMK
Any module from ADAMK should be interesting, including this one. But
please take a look at CPAN::Changes for the de facto standard
nowadays.
* Module::Metadata::Changes
Like Module::Changes, this module also tries to use a more defined
format for Changes. Sadly, it has not caught on. Please also take a
look at CPAN::Changes which seems to be the de facto standard
nowadays.
* Module::Changes
In general I'm not opposed to the idea of this module. The included
'changes' script is also pretty cool (which I'm trying to recreate,
for CPAN::Changes).
Just pointing out that I believe this
module has not really "caught on" among the CPAN
community. What has, is, CPAN::Changes which is followed by many
authors and even employed on MetaCPAN.
* Archive::Tar::Wrapper
Sadly there is not a single perfect Archive::Tar::* module out
there. Either a module offers incomplete API, (was) buggy, or it is
crippled/limited in some way. Plus, the modules are mostly
incompatible with one another. And that's why TIMTOWTDI.
For
the task of just listing files in an archive, for example, it seems
only Archive::Tar and Archive::Tar::Wrapper are usable.
Archive::Tar::Wrapper is fast (because it utilizes external C-based
tar utility) and does not load all contents of an archive into
memory, but requires writing to temporary files and of course
requires a tar utility so portability to non-Unix systems might be
an issue.
* Archive::Tar
Sadly there is not a single perfect Archive::Tar::* module out
there. Either a module offers incomplete API, (was) buggy, or it is
crippled/limited in some way. Plus, the modules are mostly
incompatible with one another. And that's why TIMTOWTDI.
For
the task of just listing files in an archive, for example, it seems
only Archive::Tar and Archive::Tar::Wrapper are usable. Archive::Tar
is a core module, but relatively slow, and extracts all contents of
an archive in memory so it's not workable for huge archives.
* Hash::Util::Pick
One can easily use this idiom instead:
$picked = { map
{(exists $hash{$*} ? ($*=>$hash{$*}):())} @keys };
or:
$picked = { map {$*=>$hash{$*}} grep {exists $hash{$*}}
@keys };
or (if you want non-existing picked keys to be
created instead):
$picked = { map {$_ => $hash{$_}} @keys
};
but Hash::Util::Pick is implemented in XS and can be a
few times faster than the above when the number of keys has reached
thousands. So I guess this module has its uses.
* NetObj::IPv4Address
Cons: more heavyweight (requires Moo), limited operations/methods,
can only handle IPv4 and not IPv6. Pros: some operations are faster
than competing modules, e.g. validation. See also: NetAddr::IP,
Net::CIDR.
* NetObj::MacAddress
Aside from being Moo-based (which, makes it a bit more heavyweight
and with more dependencies), doesn't yet offer anything extra or
more methods compared to previously existing modules like
NetAddr::MAC.
Rating: 4/10
* Acme::AsciiArtinator
Cool. Now you can create your own Camel Code with ease!
* Object::Simple
I'd say in terms of footprint and runtime performance, this module
is average (it's not the most lightweight nor the fastest pure-perl
object system, not to mention against XS ones). See my
Bencher::Scenarios::Accessors for a comparison, e.g. metacpan.org/pod/Bencher::Scenario::A... and metacpan.org/pod/Bencher::Scenario::A... .
One drawback of using Mojo::Base and Object::Simple is its
similar but slightly different and incompatible syntax with the Moo*
family, so your code is not "upgradable" to Moo or Moose
once you need more features. And often you'll end up wanting them,
e.g. one day you'll probably read about the wonders of method
modifiers (before, after, around), or roles, or wanting to have a
lazy constructor, or triggers, and so on.
I'd recommend
instead Mo. It's more lightweight than Object::Simple and you can do
default value, builder, ro/rw, required, even coercion. But the
features are modular and you only pay for what you use. And once you
need more features later, you normally should be able to just
replace 'use Mo' in your code with 'use Moo' or 'use Moose'.
Of course, this point is moot if you don't care about
compatibility/upgradability to Moo*.
Rating: 6/10
* Test::Needs
Nice. API is more convenient to use than Test::Requires, especially
if you use subtests.
* HTTP::Command::Wrapper
There are a few use-cases where this would be useful (mostly, to
access https websites in the absence of required perl library like
LWP::Protocol::https), but it would be more useful to provide an API
that is already familiar to Perl programmers. That's why MIYAGAWA
created HTTP::Tinyish.
* File::Util
Point for documentation (lots of examples and cookbook). But the
recipes in the cookbook currently don't really entice me to use the
module. Let's see:
1) batch file rename: it's much simpler
to use 'rename' or 'perlmv' utility. Or, it's much shorter to just
use plain perl like 'for (grep {-f} <*>) { rename $*,
s/.log$/.txt/r }'.
2) recursively remove a directory tree:
it's much shorter to just use 'File::Path::remove*tree()'.
3) increment a counter file: no locking (it's classic 1990's
counter.cgi race condition all over again). Take a look at, for
example, The Perl Cookbook chapter 7.11. Or I think one of Randal
Schwartz's articles.
As an alternative, one can also take a
look at Path::Tiny.
* Common::Routine
A couple of comments:
* Some functions like min(), max(),
etc need not be reinvented because they are already in core module
List::Util. But I guess the author wants to be able to say
min([1,2,3]) in addition to min(1,2,3).
* round() uses
Number::Format, note that rounding number using this module is
hundreds of times slower than using sprintf().
* Submodules
A couple of prior arts:
* all, metacpan.org/pod/all (since 2003), nicer
interface and offers "use"/compile-time interface, so it's
more equivalent to the statements it wants to replace. The
Submodules equivalent would be: BEGIN { for my $i
(Submodules->find("Blah")) { $i->require } }.
* Module::Require, metacpan.org/pod/Module::Require (since 2001),
also nicer interface, more flexible, and more lightweight
implementation.
I don't like Submodules' interface, it's too
verbose and clunky. IMO, the interface should be a one-liner and
without manual looping.
* Regexp::Assemble
I guess it depends on your data, but for random shortish strings
(hundreds to thousands of them), I find that using raw joining is
much faster to assemble the regex. And the resulting regex is also
(much) faster to match. Please see Bencher::Scenario::RegexpAssemble
if you're interested in the benchmark script.
* Tie::Scalar::Callback
There is a prior art Tie::Simple (created in 2004) which works for
scalar as well as the other types of ties that perl supports (array,
hash, handle).
* JSON::Create
Review for 0.02: Performance-wise, still has some catching up to do
against JSON::XS & Cpanel::JSON::XS with regards to encoding
arrays & hashes.
UPDATE review for 0.19: Giving it 4
stars now. Speed has been improving and on-par/slightly better than
the other JSON XS modules in some areas, while a bit worse in some
other areas. Faster modules are always welcome.
Rating: 8/10
* Set::Scalar
Confirming previous reviewer, the module is a lot slower (~ 20-40x)
than other alternatives like Array::Utils or List::MoreUtils when
you want to perform basic set operations like
union/intersect/diff/symmetric diff.
* Exporter::Easy
I can see the value of Exporter::Easy (although these days the
saving in typing is not as big, with plain Exporter one can just
say: use Exporter 'import'; our @EXPORT = qw(a b c)).
However I fail to see the value of Exporter::Easiest. I'd
rather use plain Perl than some DDL which cannot be checked
statically or cannot be syntax-highlighted, just to save some []'s
and ()'s (which I can get my editor to help me type them).
In short, I'd rather use plain Exporter than save a few
keystrokes but add a non-core dependency.
Rating: 6/10
* App::cpm
Due to parallel processes and defaulting on no_test, can be several
times faster than cpanminus (tried installing a module on a vanilla
perlbrew instance with local CPAN mirror, which pulled +- 200
distributions, "cpanm -n" took 2m9s, while cpm took 38s.)
I hope this gets developed further. Great job.
* Zodiac::Chinese
From the doc: "This module generates one's Chinese zodiac.
However, for those born in late January to early February, it may be
wrong." Well, a module that might return wrong results is not
very useful.
Rating: 2/10
* JSON::MultiValueOrdered
I guess if you want to switch JSON implementation more easily with
JSON, JSON::PP, and JSON::XS, it's better to use
JSON::Tiny::Subclassable instead of JSON::Tiny, because the
interface is more similar to JSON{::XS,::PP}, although it's not
exactly the same. JT:Subclassable also supports pretty() which is
often used when debugging. In short, I found
JSON::Tiny::Subclassable is a better "Tiny JSON" module
than JSON::Tiny.
* JSON::Tiny
Ah, the many JSON implementation modules out there...
I
guess if you want to switch JSON implementation more easily with
JSON, JSON::PP, and JSON::XS, it's better to use
JSON::Tiny::Subclassable instead of JSON::Tiny, because the
interface is more similar to JSON{::XS,::PP}, although it's not
exactly the same.
* Devel::Confess
Provides some more features compared to Carp::Always, like producing
stack trace even when exception is ref/object, color & dump
function arguments (so you don't need a separate Carp::Always::Dump
and Carp::Always::Color). Recommended.
* Carp::Always
This module works well for string exceptions (e.g. die "some
message"), but for ref/object exceptions (e.g. die
[404,"Not found"] or die $some_object) it will simply
print/return the ref/object and thus no stack trace information is
produced.
See also Devel::Confess, which can handle
ref/object.
References:
blogs.perl.org/users/graham_knop/2013...
* experimental
Our prayer has been answered. experimental was added to perl core in
5.19.11
* Exporter::Lite
Mostly unnecessary. The main premise of this module is that you
don't need to inherit to use it. But you also can use Exporter (a
core module, BTW) without inherinting it:
use Exporter
qw(import);
* Date::Holidays
The idea is good, but a couple of things prevents me from using this
interface.
First, the use of TryCatch (which brings the
Moose ecosystem) makes the startup overhead too high for my taste
(about 0.5s on my PC). Which is rather unfortunate because
Date::Holidays itself does not use Moose.
Second, the
interface assumes that a country has a single set of holidays, which
is too restrictive in some cases. A more flexible/general interface
would allow adding more calendars based not only on country but also
religion, special community, organization, etc. And allow adding
custom calendars.
* Furl
@Kira S (I wish cpanratings adds a feature to comment on a review):
Comparing WWW::Mechanize with Furl is not really
apples-to-apples, since Furl does not support parsing/following
links or form processing. As the Furl POD itself suggests, Furl is
positioned as a faster alternative to LWP, not WWW::Mechanize.
* Lingua::EN::Inflect
Just add this review to link to Ben Bullock's
Lingua::EN::PluralToSingular if you need to go the other way
(converting English noun from plural to singular).
BTW, I
don't like the interface either, and wonder why the Env module needs
to be involved.
* Lingua::EN::PluralToSingular
Not perfect or exhaustive, but good enough and lightweight. With a
dead-simple interface. Just the sort of libraries that are reusable
almost everywhere. Thanks for this.
Also, this might not be
immediately obvious since there's no mention on the See Also
section: to go the other way (converting English noun from singular
to plural) you can use Lingua::EN::Inflect.
* Log::Declare
I haven't used or evaluated this module in detail, but if there is
one advantage to using procedural/command syntax:
info blah;
as opposed to object syntax:
$log->info(blah);
then this module clearly demonstrates it. Using
Devel::Declare (or the Perl 5.14+ keyword API), the former can be
easily rewritten as something like:
info && blah;
or:
if (CONST_LOG_INFO) { info blah }
and
during compilation, Perl can optimize the line away and we get zero
run-time penalty when logging (level) is disabled.
(Actually, it's also possible for the object syntax to get
rewritten, e.g. using source filter, but it's more cumbersome).
* Benchmark::Timer
Nice alternative module for benchmarking with a different interface
than Benchmark (marking portion of code to be benchmarked with start
and stop).
For most Perl programmers familiar to the core
module Benchmark, I recommend looking at Benchmark::Dumb first
though. It has an interface like Benchmark (cmpthese() et all) but
with some statistical confidence.
* Getargs::Long
Nice idea, but some performance concerns. If you want to use
cgetargs (the compiled, faster version), you are restricted to the
getargs() interface, which only features checking for required
arguments and supplying default value. In which case you might as
well use Params::Validate directly as it's several times (e.g. 3-4x)
faster.
If you want to use the more featured xgetargs, there
is currently no compiled version.
All in all, I think users
should take a look at Params::Validate first.
* Debug::Easy
Not as easy as the name might claim. First of all, why do users need
to pass LINE explicitly for every call??? Other logging modules will
get this information automatically via caller().
Levels are
a bit confusing: why is debug split to 2 (or 3)?
Not as
flexible as it should be because the design conflates some things
together. For example, most levels output to STDERR but some level
(VERBOSE) outputs to STDOUT instead. The output concern and levels
should've been separated. Another example would be the DEBUGWAIT
level, where level is DEBUG *and* execution is halted (wait on a
keypress) on log. What if users want a lower level setting *but*
want execution to be halted on log? The halt/keypress setting
should've been separated from the level.
Rating: 4/10
* File::Slurper
Who'da thought that something as seemingly simple as "slurping
a file into a string" would need several modules and false
starts? Well, if you add encodings, Perl I/O layers, scalar/list
context, DWIM-ness, ... it can get complex and buggy. I'm glad there
are people taking care of this and making sure that a simple task
stays simple and correct.
* File::Slurp
Use the newer File::Slurper instead, which has a clearer API (e.g.
text vs binary, array/lines vs string) and encoding default. It's
arguably "saner" than File::Slurp and File::Slurp::Tiny.
* File::Slurp::Tiny
Use the newer File::Slurper instead, which has a clearer API (e.g.
text vs binary, array/lines vs string) and encoding default. It's
arguably "saner" than File::Slurp and File::Slurp::Tiny.
* Perl::PrereqScanner::Lite
A significantly faster alternative to Perl::PrereqScanner. It's
*almost* a drop-in replacement, there might still be some bugs in
missing detecting some modules, and you still have to do several
add_extra_scanner() calls like
$scanner->add_extra_scanner('Moose') to match the behavior of
Perl::PrereqScanner.
* Logfile::Rotate
First file rotating module I found and tried. Works, but needs to be
modernized a bit. Indirect object notation in doc should be
replaced. Bool option takes "yes" or "no",
should perhaps be 1 or 0. Capitalization adjustment, perhaps.
Rating: 6/10
* File::ReadBackwards
At the time of this review, I find two modules for reading a file
backwards: File::Bidirectional (FBidi) and File::ReadBackwards
(FRB).
Both modules have roughly the same footprint and
minimal dependencies. Both provide OO as well as tie interface. Both
respect the $/ setting.
FRB pro's:
- FRB is 15-20%
faster than FBidi when reading backwards;
FRB con's:
-
does not offer the feature of reading forward as well, but of course
this is not the goal of the module.
FBidi's POD contains
information on benchmarks (it's roughly an order of magnitude slower
than raw Perl's open+read/diamond operator, still the case in 2014).
While FRB's POD contains information on how the thing works behind
the scenes.
In summary, both modules are roughly the same.
I'd prefer FRB unless in the rarer cases where I need bidirectional
reading.
Rating: 8/10
* File::Bidirectional
At the time of this review, I find two modules for reading a file
backwards: File::Bidirectional (FBidi) and File::ReadBackwards
(FRB).
Both modules have roughly the same footprint and
minimal dependencies. Both provide OO as well as tie interface. Both
respect the $/ setting.
FBidi pro's:
- has the unique
feature of reading backward/forward and switch direction in the
middle;
FBidi con's:
- FBidi is 15-20% slower than
FBidi when reading backwards;
- reading forward is just as slow
as backward, so if you only need to read forward, obviously there's
no need to use this module;
FBidi's POD contains information
on benchmarks (it's roughly an order of magnitude slower than raw
Perl's open+read/diamond operator, still the case in 2014). While
FRB's POD contains information on how the thing works behind the
scenes.
In summary, both modules are roughly the same. I'd
prefer FRB unless in the rarer cases where I need bidirectional
reading.
Rating: 8/10
* Signal::StackTrace::CarpLike
Nice, but Signal::StackTrace should've output something carp-like in
the first place.
* Devel::Messenger
I think this is basically logging under a fancy name and with a more
cumbersome interface. Look at Log::Any instead.
* Term::Twiddle
Cute! I didn't know SIGALRM still works even though you're doing
blocking I/O or calling other programs. But unfortunately it doesn't
work if you sleep(), making this approach not as attractive.
* CHI
The move to Moo is very welcome, but I wish there were an
alternative of CHI which is even more lightweight (starts in under
0.01s). CHI::Tiny, anyone?
* App::YTDL
Bit of a shame that we currently don't have a working YouTube
download script/module (WWW::YouTube::Download is last updated 2013
and has been broken for a long while). This module actually requires
another *Python* script to do its job. I might as well skip this and
go straight to the Python script.
UPDATE 2016-03-04: I guess
it's been so for a few years, but this still needs to be said: For
downloading YouTube videos, use youtube-dl (a far more popular
Python project) and just forget the rest. Keeping up with YouTube
changes is many times a full time job. Nothing else comes remotely
close.
* XXX
The part that makes this module convenient is that the functions
return their original arguments. So when debugging (peppering dump
statements), you don't have to change this:
return
["some", $expr];
to this (taking an example from
another dumping module, Data::Dump):
my $tmp =
["some", $expr]; dd $tmp; return $tmp;
but just
this:
return YYY ["some", $expr];
This
should be imitated by the other dumper functions.
HOMEPAGE
Please visit the project's homepage at
.
SOURCE
Source repository is at
.
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website
When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch
to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.
SEE ALSO
Acme::CPANModules - about the Acme::CPANModules namespace
cpanmodules - CLI tool to let you browse/view the lists
AUTHOR
perlancar
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2018 by perlancar@cpan.org.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.