NAME

Badger::Constants - defines constants for other Badger modules

SYNOPSIS

use Badger::Constants 'HASH';

if (ref $something eq HASH) {
    # rejoice!  No need to quote the word 'HASH'
}

DESCRIPTION

This module defines a number of constants used by other Badger modules. They can be imported into the caller's namespace by naming them as options to the use Badger::Constants statement:

use Badger::Constants 'HASH';
print HASH;   # HASH

Alternatively, one of the tagset identifiers may be specified to import different sets of constants.

use Badger::Constants ':types';
print HASH;   # HASH

EXPORTABLE CONSTANTS

CONSTANTS

Set to Badger::Constants.

SCALAR

The literal word SCALAR, typically used for testing references.

if (ref $data eq SCALAR) {
    ...
}

ARRAY

The literal word ARRAY, typically used for testing references.

if (ref $data eq ARRAY) {
    ...
}

HASH

The literal word HASH, typically used for testing references.

if (ref $data eq HASH) {
    ...
}

CODE

The literal word CODE, typically used for testing references.

if (ref $data eq CODE) {
    ...
}

GLOB

The literal word GLOB, typically used for testing references.

if (ref $data eq GLOB) {
    ...
}

REGEX

The literal word Regexp, typically used for testing references.

if (ref $data eq REGEX) {
    ...
}

FALSE

A false value (0)

TRUE

A true value (1)

OFF

A generic flag used to disable things (0).

ON

A generic flag used to enable things (1).

ALL

The literal string all.

NONE

The literal string none.

DEFAULT

The literal string default.

WARN

The literal string warn.

LAST

The value -1, used to index the last item in an array.

$array[LAST];

CRLF

An unambiguous carriage return and newline sequence: \015\012

PKG

An alias for the :: symbol used to delimiter Perl packages. Typically used to construct symbol references.

use Badger::Constants 'PKG';
use constant EXAMPLE => 'EXAMPLE';

my $var = ${ $pkg.PKG.EXAMPLE };   # same as: ${"${pkg}::EXAMPLE"}

DOT

An alias for a dot ..

REFS

The literal string refs. Typically used like so:

no strict REFS;

ONCE

The literal string once. Typically used like so:

no warnings ONCE;

BLANK

An empty string. How much more blank could this be? And the answer is none. None more blank.

SPACE

A single space character. Not to be confused with the three dimensional fabric of reality that it happens to share a name with.

SLASH

A forward slash as used to separate path segments in URIs and filesystem paths on sane operating systems.

DELIMITER

A regular expression used to split whitespace delimited tokens. Also accepts commas with optional trailing whitespace as a delimiter.

$names = [ split DELIMITER, $names ] 
    unless ref $names eq ARRAY;

WILDCARD

A regular expression used to match strings containing the * or ? wildcard characters.

if ($path =~ WILDCARD) {
    # do someting...
} 

UTF8

The literal string utf8.

JSON

The literal string json.

YAML

The literal string yaml.

LOADED

Contains the literal string BADGER_LOADED. The Badger::Class module uses it to define the $BADGER_LOADED variable in any modules that it loads.

EXPORTABLE TAG SETS

The following tag sets and associated constants are defined:

:types

SCALAR HASH ARRAY CODE REGEX

:values

FALSE TRUE OFF ON ALL NONE DEFAULT

:all

All the constants.

AUTHOR

Andy Wardley http://wardley.org/

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 1996-2009 Andy Wardley. All Rights Reserved.

This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

SEE ALSO

See Badger::Exporter for more information on exporting variables.