=pod =head1 NAME sanity - The ONLY meta pragma you'll ever need! =head1 SYNOPSIS use sanity; use sanity 'strictures'; use sanity 'Modern::Perl'; use sanity qw( strictures -warnings/uninitialized/FATAL NO:autovivification NO:autovivification/store PRINT_PRAGMA_HASH ); use sanity '!0*b^Npow{8T7_yZt lines of header in front of every module they write. Personal opinions and pragmas don't really belong in the CPAN namespace. (It's CPAN, not Personal PAN. If you want a Personal PAN, go call Pizza Hut.) But copying code on potentially hundreds of modules doesn't make sense, either. That was my mentality when I had a personal opinion of my own. Why repeat the same problem like everybody else? This "sanity" module attempts to level the playing field by making it a B personal pragma, allowing you to both reduce the code needed and still implement all of the modules/pragmas you need. As an illustration to what it's capable of, this pragma will emulate all of the other personal pragmas, most of them 100% working exactly how they do it. =encoding utf-8 =head1 PARAMETERS Sanity's parameters fall into three types: flags, aliases, and hashes. (Oh my!) =head2 Flags and Aliases Flags are single pragma/module declarations, strict/warning flags, or other items that need flags. Aliases are merely one or more flags, grouped together to better emulate the pragma/module's functionality. Let's start off with an example: # These three statements do the same thing as... use Modern::Perl; use sanity 'Modern::Perl'; use sanity qw(strict warnings mro/dfs feature IO::File IO::Handle); # ...these statements use strict; use warnings; use mro 'dfs'; use feature ':all'; use IO::File; use IO::Handle; Basically, it does the same thing as the meta pragma L, except you actually don't need that module for it to work. While there is some magic to make sure, say, C gets loaded with various versions of Perl, it typically just works using a standard C call. The C and C flags are combined aliases that enable all of the warnings that they would do via a standard call. =head3 Negating flags/aliases You can turn off flags in the statement: use sanity qw(Modern::Perl -mro/dfs); This does the same thing as above, except it doesn't import the C pragma. You can negate any flag, including combined aliases, as long as it makes sense. In other words, you need a positive included before you can negate something. =head3 NO:* flags/aliases Some pragmas work by using the C> function, so that the English makes sense. To keep that syntax, these pragmas are included with a C prefix: use sanity 'NO:multidimensional'; use sanity 'NO:indirect/FATAL'; This will run the C function on these pragmas, even though sanity was called via the C function (via C). =head3 Perl versions Sanity also supports Perl versions as a special kind of alias to specify minimum Perl versions: # These are all the same: use v5.10.1; use sanity 'v5.10.1'; use sanity v5.10.1; # as a VSTRING use sanity 5.10.1; # works too # Upgrade the Perl version of your favorite pragma use sanity qw(NO:nonsense v5.12); Note that the version must be at least v5.8. This should be fine for most people. (If I get a ticket requesting support for a Perl version older than one released in 2002, I will hunt you down and break your keyboard in half.) =head3 The Default What does C do without any parameters? Why my personal preference, of course :) It's listed in the C section of the L below. I detail the reasons behind my choices L. =head2 Hashes So, there's all of these flags, but unless you're using one of the combined aliases, typing them all out is usually just as much (or more) code as the several lines of C statements. Well, they are all flags so that it fits into a giant bitmap, and that bitmap can be compressed into a large ASCII (or UTF-8) "number". This number can be calculated using the flag C: # This is merely the definition of uni::perl use sanity (qw( v5.10 strict feature/5.10 ), ( map { "warnings/$_/FATAL" } qw(closed threads internal debugging pack substr malloc unopened portable prototype inplace io pipe unpack regexp deprecated exiting glob digit printf utf8 layer reserved parenthesis taint closure semicolon) ), qw( -warnings/exec/FATAL -warnings/newline/FATAL utf8 open/utf8 open/std mro/c3 Carp ), 'PRINT_PRAGMA_HASH'); # Outputs: # use sanity '!04[D{9Fhfqc-7m738S4HK6B#D5=v{,T$(0)F5i'; # Safer ASCII version # use sanity '¡05༕ቑ釩腜쥸봱楇䐍퇥熠ᾯ緻褻真堩'; # Shorter UTF8 version You can use that hash as the output illustrates without having to type out the entire big set of commands or flags. =head2 Other Meta Pragmas Have your own set that is too long, and you don't like the ugliness of the hash? Send me your suggestion and I'll probably add it in. =head1 CAVEATS =head2 'NO:' ne '-' A C flag is NOT the same as negating a flag! You also cannot remove the C from a flag, as it's part of the name of the flag, not a special modifier. # These two are NOT the same! use sanity 'NO:indirect'; # runs indirect->unimport() use sanity '-indirect'; # Dies, as there is no such flag/alias # This runs through the strictures alias and runs autovivification->unimport() use sanity qw(strictures NO:autovivification); # This runs through the strictures alias WITHOUT running indirect->unimport() use sanity qw(strictures -NO:indirect); use sanity '-indirect'; # This isn't what you want... no sanity 'NO:indirect'; # ...you really meant to do this... use indirect; # ...but this is better =head2 Special clearing of strict/warnings Since most people want exactly the strictness and warnings they specify, sanity will clear these out first before running through the list. # This... use sanity qw(strict -strict/vars); # ...is the same as this... no strict; use strict qw(subs refs); Also, some special magic is in place to ensure that newer warnings/features aren't fatal to older Perls. See L. =head2 "Author" pragmas Certain pragmas really only exist to make sure the code is designed right. These pragmas are deemed "optional" by C. In other words, if the user doesn't have them, it will just silently ignore them and move on. If C thinks you're an author/coder of the module itself (.git/svn/$ENV checks), it will give you a warning that they are missing, but move on. The following modules don't "instadie". Modules that fall under this list don't change the nature of how Perl works, or would let you do something that would normally fatally error. overloading autovivification indirect multidimensional bareword::filehandles criticism # (autovivification probably shouldn't be here, since it actually # prevents autoviv, but it's generally used as an author tool.) This feature was borrowed from L and tweaked. =head1 LIST OF FLAGS =head2 Emulation of "meta pragmas" ex::caution: strict warnings NO:crap: # Same as above shit: # Same as above latest: strict warnings feature sane: strict warnings feature utf8 NO:nonsense: strict warnings true namespace::autoclean Modern::Perl: strict warnings mro 'dfs' feature IO::File IO::Handle strictures: (without the 5.8.4 checks; that crap is old) v5.8.4 (forced, to make sure things work) strict warnings FATAL => 'all' no indirect 'fatal' no multidimensional no bareword::filehandles common::sense: (without the "memory usage" BS) utf8 strict qw(subs vars) feature qw(say state switch) no warnings warnings FATAL => qw(closed threads internal debugging pack malloc portable prototype inplace io pipe unpack deprecated glob digit printf layer reserved taint closure semicolon) no warnings qw(exec newline unopened); uni::perl: (ditto) v5.10 strict feature qw(say state switch) no warnings warnings qw(FATAL closed threads internal debugging pack substr malloc unopened portable prototype inplace io pipe unpack regexp deprecated exiting glob digit printf utf8 layer reserved parenthesis taint closure semicolon) no warnings qw(exec newline) utf8 open (:utf8 :std) mro 'c3' Carp sanity: v5.10.1 utf8 open (:utf8 :std) mro 'c3' strict qw(subs vars) no strict 'refs' warnings FATAL => 'all' no warnings qw(uninitialized) feature no autovivification qw(fetch exists delete store strict) no indirect 'fatal' no multidimensional perl5i::0 / 1 / 2 / latest: [the real module] (the pragma is too insane to try to duplicate here) Acme::Very::Modern::Perl: (a joke, but it's still here all the same) strict warnings mro 'c3' feature IO::File IO::Handle utf8 open (:utf8 :std) no warnings warnings FATAL => qw(closed threads internal debugging pack malloc portable prototype inplace io pipe unpack deprecated glob digit printf layer reserved taint closure semicolon) no warnings qw(exec newline unopened); perl5i::latest Toolkit Carp =head2 Other flags/aliases strict/* => strict '[whatever]' # supports all flags strict => strict qw(refs subs vars) # other "hints" integer locale bytes re/taint re/eval filetest utf8 NO:overloading warnings/* => warnings NONFATAL => '[whatever]' # supports all flags, multi or not warnings/*/FATAL => warnings FATAL => '[whatever]' # supports all flags; FATAL trumps NONFATAL warnings => warnings NONFATAL => 'all' warnings/FATAL => warnings FATAL => 'all' feature/* => feature '[whatever]' # supports all flags feature/5.## => # similar to feature enabling via 'use v5.##'; major version only feature/5.9.5 => # also exists, just like feature/5.10 feature => feature ':all' # not exactly, but in spirit # Perl versions, described above v5.##.## # autodie autodie/* => autodie ':[whatever]' # supports all _category_ flags, like all, io, shm, etc. # (Will expand if requested, but I don't want to waste # all of that bit space right now.) autodie => autodie ':default' # other CORE pragmas bigint bignum bigrat charnames charnames/short charnames/full encoding::warnings encoding::warnings/FATAL mro/dfs # default for 'mro' mro/c3 open/* # namespace cleaners namespace::clean # included last; adds -except => 'meta' namespace::functions # included last namespace::autoclean namespace::sweep # others NO:autovivification/* NO:autovivification => no autovivification qw(fetch exists delete) criticism/* criticism => criticism 'gentle' perl5i::0 perl5i::1 perl5i::2 perl5i::3 perl5i::latest NO:indirect NO:indirect/global NO:indirect/fatal NO:multidimensional NO:bareword::filehandles subs::auto utf8::all IO::File IO::Handle IO::All Carp vendorlib true autolocale Toolkit Function::Parameters Function::Parameters/strict Switch::Plain Quote::Code Am I missing something? Let me know. =head1 TODO Actually need to write sanity::sanity POD. =head1 AVAILABILITY The project homepage is L. The latest version of this module is available from the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN). Visit L to find a CPAN site near you, or see L. =for :stopwords cpan testmatrix url annocpan anno bugtracker rt cpants kwalitee diff irc mailto metadata placeholders metacpan =head1 SUPPORT =head2 Internet Relay Chat You can get live help by using IRC ( Internet Relay Chat ). If you don't know what IRC is, please read this excellent guide: L. Please be courteous and patient when talking to us, as we might be busy or sleeping! You can join those networks/channels and get help: =over 4 =item * irc.perl.org You can connect to the server at 'irc.perl.org' and join this channel: #distzilla then talk to this person for help: SineSwiper. =back =head2 Bugs / Feature Requests Please report any bugs or feature requests via L|GitHub>. =head1 AUTHOR Brendan Byrd =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is Copyright (c) 2013 by Brendan Byrd. This is free software, licensed under: The Artistic License 2.0 (GPL Compatible)