Personal tools
Skip to content. | Skip to navigation
When testing applications, often you find yourself needing to provide functionality in your test environment that would usually be provided by external modules. Rather than munging the %INC by hand to mark these external modules as loaded, so they are not attempted to be loaded by perl, this module offers you a very simple way to mark modules as loaded and/or unloaded.
Gather package and POD information from perl module files
Provides a simple but, hopefully, extensible way of having 'plugins' for your module.
The functions exported by this module deal with runtime handling of Perl modules, which are normally handled at compile time.
This module scans potential modules used by perl programs and returns a hash reference. Its keys are the module names as appears in %INC (e.g. Test/More.pm). The values are hash references.
Moose is an extension of the Perl 5 object system. The main goal of Moose is to make Perl 5 Object Oriented programming easier, more consistent and less tedious. With Moose you can to think more about what you want to do and less about the mechanics of OOP. Additionally, Moose is built on top of Class::MOP, which is a metaclass system for Perl 5. This means that Moose not only makes building normal Perl 5 objects better, but it provides the power of metaclass programming as well. Moose is different from other Perl 5 object systems because it is not a new system, but instead an extension of the existing one.
Moose, a powerful metaobject-fuelled extension of the Perl 5 object system, is wonderful. (For more information on Moose, please see 'perldoc Moose' after installing the perl-Moose package.) Unfortunately, it's a little slow. Though significant progress has been made over the years, the compile time penalty is a non-starter for some applications. Mouse aims to alleviate this by providing a subset of Moose's functionality, faster.
Moose, a powerful metaobject-fueled extension of the Perl 5 object system, is wonderful. (For more information on Moose, please see 'perldoc Moose' after installing the perl-Moose package.) Unfortunately, it's a little slow. Though significant progress has been made over the years, the compile time penalty is a non-starter for some applications. Mouse aims to alleviate this by providing a subset of Moose's functionality, faster.