NAME
Acme::No - makes no() work the way I want it to
SYNOPSIS
use 5.6; # I use our(), so 5.6 is required
no 6.0; # but this was coded for perl 5, not perl 6
# and the perl 6 compat layer isn't really 5.6
# so my code breaks under 6.0
use mod_perl 1.27; # we need at least version 1.27
no mod_perl 2.0; # but mod_perl 2.0 is entirely different than 1.0
# so keep my cpan email to a minimum
DESCRIPTION
ok, first the appropriate pod:
$ perldoc -f
no =item no Module VERSION LIST
=item no Module VERSION
=item no Module LIST
=item no Module
See the L</use> function, which C<no> is the opposite of.
now, one might think that, since
use mod_perl 1.27;
makes sure that mod_perl is at least version 1.27,
no mod_perl 1.27;
should mean that 1.27 is too high - the manpage says use() and no() are opposites, and that looks like opposite behavior to me. however...
$ perl -e 'use mod_perl 2.0'
mod_perl version 2 required--this is only version 1.2701 at -e line 1.
BEGIN failed--compilation aborted at -e line 1.
$ perl -e 'no mod_perl 2.0'
mod_perl version 2 required--this is only version 1.2701 at -e line 1.
BEGIN failed--compilation aborted at -e line 1.
so, no() and use() do the exact same thing here - hmmm... looks like a bug in perl core...
enter Acme::No
Acme::No makes no() work the way I want it to.
$ perl -MAcme::No -e'no v5.9.0; print "ok\n"'
Perl v5.009 too high--version less than v5.009 required at -e line 0
$ perl -MAcme::No -e'no v5.9.1; print "ok\n"'
ok
$ perl -MAcme::No -e'no mod_perl 1.27; print "ok\n"'
mod_perl version 1.2701 too high--version less than 1.27 required at -e line 0
$ perl -MAcme::No -e'no mod_perl 2.0; print "ok\n"'
ok
FEATURES/BUGS
probably lots
SEE ALSO
Filter::Util::Call, perldoc -f
use, perldoc -f
no, http://www.mail-archive.com/perl5-porters@perl.org/msg53742.html, http://www.mail-archive.com/perl5-porters@perl.org/msg53752.html,
AUTHOR
Geoffrey Young <geoff@modperlcookbook.org>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2002, Geoffrey Young All rights reserved.
This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself.