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perl-Data-Dumper-2.135.06-239.lbn13.armv6hl
Given a list of scalars or reference variables, writes out their contents
in perl syntax. The references can also be objects. The content of each
variable is output in a single Perl statement. Handles self-referential
structures correctly.
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perl-Data-Dumper-2.135.06-239.lbn13.x86_64
Given a list of scalars or reference variables, writes out their contents
in perl syntax. The references can also be objects. The content of each
variable is output in a single Perl statement. Handles self-referential
structures correctly.
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perl-Data-OptList-0.106-1.lbn13.noarch
Hashes are great for storing named data, but if you want more than one
entry for a name, you have to use a list of pairs. Even then, this is
really boring to write:
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perl-Date-Calc-6.3-13.lbn13.noarch
The library provides all sorts of date calculations based on the
Gregorian calendar (the one used in all western countries today),
thereby complying with all relevant norms and standards: ISO/R
2015-1971, DIN 1355 and, to some extent, ISO 8601 (where applicable).
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perl-Date-Manip-6.07-1.lbn13.noarch
Date::Manip is a series of modules designed to make any common date/time
manipulation easy to do. Operations such as comparing two times,
calculating a time a given amount of time from another, or parsing
international times are all easily done. From the very beginning, the main
focus of Date::Manip has been to be able to do ANY desired date/time
operation easily, not necessarily quickly. Also, it is definitely oriented
towards the type of operations we (as people) tend to think of rather than
those operations used routinely by computers. There are other modules that
can do a subset of the operations available in Date::Manip much quicker
than those presented here, so be sure to read the section SHOULD I USE
DATE::MANIP in the Date::Manip::Misc document before deciding which of the
Date and Time modules from CPAN is for you.
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perl-DateTime-0.5300-4.lbn13.armv6hl
DateTime is a class for the representation of date/time combinations, and
is part of the Perl DateTime project. For details on this project please
see http://datetime.perl.org/. The DateTime site has a FAQ which may help
answer many "how do I do X?" questions. The FAQ is at
http://datetime.perl.org/wiki/datetime/page/FAQ
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perl-DateTime-0.5300-4.lbn13.x86_64
DateTime is a class for the representation of date/time combinations, and
is part of the Perl DateTime project. For details on this project please
see http://datetime.perl.org/. The DateTime site has a FAQ which may help
answer many "how do I do X?" questions. The FAQ is at
http://datetime.perl.org/wiki/datetime/page/FAQ
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perl-DateTime-Format-Builder-0.7901-5.lbn13.noarch
DateTime::Format::Builder creates DateTime parsers. Many string formats of
dates and times are simple and just require a basic regular expression to
extract the relevant information. Builder provides a simple way to do this
without writing reams of structural code.
Builder provides a number of methods, most of which you'll never need, or at
least rarely need. They're provided more for exposing of the module's innards
to any subclasses, or for when you need to do something slightly beyond what
is expected.
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perl-DateTime-Format-DateParse-0.04-5.lbn13.noarch
This module is a DateTime compatibility wrapper around Date::Parse; it allows
one to easily parse formats Date::Parse recognises for DateTime.
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perl-DateTime-Format-ISO8601-0.07-1.lbn13.noarch
Parses almost all ISO8601 date and time formats. ISO8601 time-intervals
will be supported in a later release.
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