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perl-Sys-Syslog-0.36-480.fc36.x86_64
Sys::Syslog is an interface to the UNIX syslog(3) function. Call syslog() with
a string priority and a list of printf() arguments just like at syslog(3).
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perl-Term-ANSIColor-5.01-480.fc36.noarch
This module has two interfaces, one through color() and colored() and the
other through constants. It also offers the utility functions uncolor(),
colorstrip(), colorvalid(), and coloralias(), which have to be explicitly
imported to be used.
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perl-Term-Cap-1.17-479.fc36.noarch
These are low-level functions to extract and use capabilities from a terminal
capability (termcap) database.
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perl-Term-Complete-1.403-486.fc36.noarch
"Complete" routine provides word completion on a list of words in the array.
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perl-Term-ReadLine-1.17-486.fc36.noarch
This package is just a front end to some other packages. It's a stub to
set up a common interface to the various read-line implementations found
on CPAN (under the "Term::ReadLine::*" name space).
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perl-TermReadKey-2.38-12.fc36.x86_64
Term::ReadKey is a compiled perl module dedicated to providing simple
control over terminal driver modes (cbreak, raw, cooked, etc.)
support for non-blocking reads, if the architecture allows, and some
generalized handy functions for working with terminals. One of the
main goals is to have the functions as portable as possible, so you
can just plug in "use Term::ReadKey" on any architecture and have a
good likelyhood of it working.
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perl-Test-1.31-486.fc36.noarch
The Test Perl module simplifies the task of writing test files for Perl modules,
such that their output is in the format that Test::Harness expects to see.
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perl-Test-Base-0.89-13.fc36.noarch
Testing is usually the ugly part of Perl module authoring. Perl gives you a
standard way to run tests with Test::Harness, and basic testing primitives
with Test::More. After that you are pretty much on your own to develop a
testing framework and philosophy. Test::More encourages you to make your
own framework by subclassing Test::Builder, but that is not trivial.
Test::Base gives you a way to write your own test framework base class that
*is* trivial.
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perl-Test-Carp-0.2-25.fc36.noarch
Call given code (with given arguments) and tests whether the given
Carp function (or their imported versions) are called (with a given
value) or not.
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perl-Test-Compile-3.1.0-1.fc36.noarch
Test::Compile lets you check the validity of a Perl module file or Perl script
file, and report its results in standard Test::Simple fashion.
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BastionLinux 36