Perlmazing - A collection of helper functions powered by Perlmazing::Engine.

SYNOPSIS

This module is the first practical example of a module powered by Perlmazing::Engine. It's a collection of helper functions that are loaded only when actually used, making it extremely fast to load and efficient to run. This manual will show you how to use this module and what its helper functions do, but you should look at Perlmazing::Engine to understand how it's being used and maybe look at the source code of this module to see how simple it was to implement Perlmazing::Engine for this example.

As an additional benefit, this module automatically uses and imports Perlmazing::Feature, which basically will enable strict and warnings FATAL = 'all'>, along with the most recent features your version of Perl can enable.

How this module works at the end:

use Perlmazing;

# First of all, Perlmazing::Feature is automatically imported,
# so warnings and strict are automatically enabled and also
# any features that your version of Perl can have (similar to
# "use $]", if only that was a valid call).

# Now all helper functions are available. Yes, it exports
# all symbols by default. Please read the rest of this POD
# to understand why and when it's considered a good thing.

# Now use any of the helper functions from this module freely!

EXPORT

In the case of this module, all documented functions are exported by default, but that doesn't mean you have to work like that in your own module when using Perlmazing::Engine. It also doesn't mean that those functions are actually loaded into memory, they are just available to the caller and will be loaded and processed as soon as the caller actually calls one of them. Please read the documentation of Perlmazing::Engine to learn more about it.

FUNCTIONS

There are two types of functions in terms of behavior and this is something comming from Perlmazing::Engine. Basically, you get the regular type and the Listable type. The regular type is simply any kind of subroutine, and it can simply do whatever you code it to do.

In the other hand, Listable functions are all meant to have the same behavior as described in Perlmazing::Engine Listable functions and this should be warranted by Perlmazing::Engine's own code. These functions can, of course, do whatever you code them to do too, but they are all meant to follow this behavior:

# Assume 'my_sub' is a function of the type Listable:

# Calling my_sub on an array will directly affect elements of @array:

my_sub @array;

# Calling my_sub on a list will *attempt* to directly affect the
# elements of that list, failing on 'read only'/'constant' elements
# like the elements in the following list:

my_sub (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 'string element');

# Calling my_sub on an array or a list BUT with an assignment,
# will *not* affect the original array or list, but assign an
# affected copy:

my @array_A = my_sub @array;
my @array_B = my_sub (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 'string_element');

# Listable functions can be chained to achieve both behaviors
# (assignment or direct effect) on a single call. Assume
# 'my_sub2', 'my_sub3' and 'my_sub4' are also Listable functions:

my_sub my_sub1 my_sub2 my_sub3 my_sub4 @array;
my @array_C = my_sub my_sub1 my_sub2 my_sub3 my_sub4 (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 'string element');

# When a Listable function is assigned in scalar context, then only the
# first element is assigned, not a list/array count.

my $scalar = my_sub @array; # $scalar contains the first element of the resulting list

In the following list of functions, each function will be documented by describing what it does and specifying Listable functions, in which case you now know how you can use them to take advantage of that.

abs2rel

Same as File::Spec-abs2rel()|File::Spec>. Just much more readable and easier/shorter to type.

aes_decrypt

aes_decrypt($encrypted_data, $key)

Equivalent to MySQL's AES_DECRYPT function, 100% compatible with MySQL. Returns unencrypted data if successful.

aes_encrypt

aes_encrypt($plain_data, $key)

Equivalent to MySQL's AES_ENCRYPT function, 100% compatible with MySQL. Returns encrypted (binary) data.

basename

Listable function

Same as File::Basename::basename(), but it is a listable function.

    use Perlmazing;
    my @file_names = ($path_to_file_1, $path_to_file_2, $path_to_file_3);
    
    my @paths = ($path_to_file_1, $path_to_file_2, $path_to_file_3);
	# Alter all in @paths to become just file names:
	basename @file_names;

    

carp

Same as Carp::carp().

catdir

Same as File::Spec-catdir()|File::Spec>. Just much more readable and easier/shorter to type.

catfile

Same as File::Spec-catfile()|File::Spec>. Just much more readable and easier/shorter to type.

catpath

Same as File::Spec-catpath()|File::Spec>. Just much more readable and easier/shorter to type.

cluck

Same as Carp::cluck().

commify

my @result = commify(@values) commify(@values)

Listable function

This function will format any received number into a grouped by comma number. It uses the US format (e.g. 123,456.78). If you need a different locale, look at CLDR::Number, which is the module this function is using with a fixed locale - except commify handles more cases than just numbers, contrary to CLDR::Number.

In the received values, any existing grouping (even broken grouping) will be removed and changed into the right grouping. Also, decimal numbers will be left alone as they are received (e.g. 1234.00 will become 1,234.00 and 1234.001230 will become 1,234.001230). This behavior is intentional to help with any numbers you may preformat with sprintf, like money values or any other values that you are puposedly setting to a specific number of decimals before applying grouping commas.

This is a listable function, so any of the following examples will work:

use Perlmazing;

my @numbers = qw(
	123
	12345
	1234.56
	-90120
	Not_a_number
);
# More extreme cases:
push @numbers, (
	'123,,456.01',
	'12,34,56',
	'12,,3,4,5.010',
	'123.456.789',
);

pl @numbers;
# Output:
# 123
# 12345
# 1234.56
# -90120
# Not_a_number
# 123,,456.01
# 12,34,56
# 12,,3,4,5.010
# 123.456.789

pl commify @numbers;
# Output:
# 123
# 12,345
# 1,234.56
# -90,120
# Not_a_number
# 123,456.01
# 123,456
# 12,345.010
# 123.456.789

my @copy = commify @numbers;
pl @copy;
# Output: Same as "pl commify @numbers". @numbers remains unchanged.

# Directly affect the elements of @numbers
commify @numbers;
pl @numbers;
# Output: Same as "pl commify @numbers", but this time all values in @numbers where changed.

confess

Same as Carp::confess().

copy

Same as File::Copy::Recursive::rcopy(). Copies a file using the native OS file-copy implementation. Not to be confused with Perl's link, which doesn't create an actual copy. It will recursively copy directories when passed as argument.

croak

Same as Carp::croak().

cwd

Same as Cwd::cwd(). Returns the current working directory.

define

Listable function

Converts any undefined element into an empty string. Useful when purposely avoiding warnings on certain operations.

use Perlmazing;
my @array = (1, 2, 3, undef, undef, 6);

define @array;
# Now @array = (1, 2, 3, '', '', 6);

sub my_sub {
    for my $i (define @_) {
        # None of the following will cause an 'undefined' warning:
        print "Received argument $i\n";
        $i =~ s/\d//;
        $i = 1 if $i eq 'abc';
    }
}

devnull

Same as File::Spec-devnull()|File::Spec>. Just much more readable and easier/shorter to type.

dir

dir

dir($path)

dir($path, $recursive)

dir($path, $recursive, $callback)

This function will return an array with the contents of the directory given in $path. If $path is omited, then the current working directory is used. $recursive is a boolean value, is optional and defaults to 0. When true, then the contents of subdirectories are returned too. $callback is also optional and must be a coderef. If provided, then it will be called on each element found in real time. It receives the current element as argument.

dirname

Listable function

Same as File::Basename::dirname(), but it is a listable function.

    use Perlmazing;
    my @dirs = ($path_to_file_1, $path_to_file_2, $path_to_file_3);
    
    my @files = ($path_to_file_1, $path_to_file_2, $path_to_file_3);
	# Alter all in @files to become just directory names:
	dirname @files;

    

dumped

Same as Data::Dump::dump(). It will return a code dump of whatever you provide as argument.

For example:

print dumped @array;
print dumped \@array; # Maybe better
print dumped \%hash;
print dumped $some_object;

empty_dir

empty_dir($path)

This is almost the same as File::Path::remove_tree(), except it will make the folder provided in $path empty without removing $path too.

escape_html

Listable function

This function will html-escape any characters that are special to HTML. For example, it will replace & with &amp; or < with &lt;. It is a Listable function.

Examples:

    use Perlmazing;
	
	print escape_html $some_text;
    
    escape_html @array_A;
    
    my @array_B = escape_html @array_C;
    

escape_quote

escape_quote($value)

escape_quote(@values)

my @result = escape_quote(@values)

Listable function

This is a very simple function that escapes with a backslash any match of the symbol '. Works as any other listable function from this module.

escape_quotes

Exactly the same as <escape_quote|Perlmazing/escape_quote>, except it escapes the symbol " instead of the symbol '.

escape_uri

Listable function

This function will uri-escape any characters that are special to an URI. For example, it will replace & with %26 or = with %3D. It is a Listable function.

Examples:

    use Perlmazing;
	
	my $url = 'https://www.google.com.mx/search?q=';
    my $query = escape_uri 'how are &, < and > escaped in html';
    my $final_url = $url.$query;
    
    my @escaped_queries = escape_uri @queries;
    
    escape_uri @queries;

See also unescape_uri.

eval_string

eval_string($string_with_perl_code)

This function acts exactly like native eval - except it shows you the file and line number on errors captured in $@, in addition to the regular uninformative and unhelpful ...error at (eval n) message that the native eval sets.

find_parent_classes

find_parent_classes($object)

This function will return an array containing all classes for which $object isa, in order of precedence. It basically walks through all namespaces found in its own @ISA, and then recursively on each @ISA for all found namespaces.

For example, the following code:

use Perlmazing;
use WWW::Mechanize;

my $mec = WWW::Mechanize->new;
my @classes = find_parent_classes $mec;

say for @classes;

will print something like:

WWW::Mechanize
LWP::UserAgent
LWP::MemberMixin
UNIVERSAL

get_time_from

get_time_from(year = $year, month => $month, day => $day)>

Same as Time::Precise::get_time_from(). Returns time in seconds including nanoseconds.

gmtime

Same as Time::Precise::gmtime(). Returns time in seconds including nanoseconds.

gmtime_hashref

Same as Time::Precise::gmtime_hashref(). Returns a hashref with current datetime elements.

in_array

in_array(@array, $something_to_find)

This function will tell you if @array contains an element identical to $something_to_find. If found, it will return the index number for that element. For effective boolean effect, it will return the string 00 when the index is actually 0. So, the following is a safe case:

    use Perlmazing;
	
	my @array = ('first', 'second', 'third');
    
    if (my $index = in_array @array, 'first') {
        print "Found $array[$index]";
    }

is_array

is_array($object)

Returns true if $object is a pure arrayref. See also isa_array.

is_blessed

is_blessed($object)

Same as Scalar::Util::blessed(). Returns the name of the package $object is a blessed into, if blessed.

is_code

is_code($object)

Returns true if $object is a pure coderef. See also isa_code.

is_email_address

is_email_address($string)

Formed by a very complex, fast, RFC compliant regex that effectively validates any email address. Returns true is valid.

is_empty

is_empty($value)

Returns true if $value is equal en an empty string ('') or $value is undefined.

is_filehandle

is_filehandle($value)

Returns true if $value is a valid filehandle.

is_format

is_format($object)

Returns true if $object is a pure formatref. See also isa_format.

is_glob

is_glob($object)

Returns true if $object is a pure globref. See also isa_glob.

is_hash

is_hash($object)

Returns true if $object is a pure hashref. See also isa_hash.

is_io

is_io($object)

Returns true if $object is a pure ioref. See also isa_io.

is_leap_year

is_leap_year($year)

Same as Time::Precise::is_leap_year(). Returns true if $year is a leap year.

is_lvalue

is_lvalue($object)

Returns true if $object is a pure lvalueref. See also isa_lvalue.

is_number

is_number($value)

Returns true if $value can be interpreted as a number. It is intended to work with any kind of expresion that Perl would take as a number if it was actual code, meaning that if it is a valid numeric expresion (whatever format) to Perl, then this function should return true too.

is_ref

is_ref($object)

Returns true if $object is a pure refref. See also isa_ref.

is_regexp

is_regexp($object)

Returns true if $object is a pure regexpref. See also isa_regexp.

is_scalar

is_scalar($object)

Returns true if $object is a pure scalarref. See also isa_scalar.

is_utf8

is_utf8($string)

Returns true if $string has valid UTF8 encodings. Basically, if Encode::decode('utf8', $str, Encode::FB_CROAK) doesn't throw an error and only if the resulting value is different from $string, it will return true.

is_valid_date

is_valid_date($year, $month, $day)

Same as Time::Precise::is_valid_date(). Returns true if the values passed for $year, $month and $day form together a valid date.

is_vstring

is_vstring($object)

Returns true if $object is a pure vstringref. See also isa_vstring.

isa_array

isa_array($object)

Works just like is_array, except it will return true even if the reference is not pure (e.g. it's blessed into something).

isa_code

isa_code($object)

Works just like is_code, except it will return true even if the reference is not pure (e.g. it's blessed into something).

isa_filehandle

isa_filehandle($object)

Works just like is_filehandle, except it will return true even if the reference is not pure (e.g. it's blessed into something).

isa_format

isa_format($object)

Works just like is_format, except it will return true even if the reference is not pure (e.g. it's blessed into something).

isa_glob

isa_glob($object)

Works just like is_glob, except it will return true even if the reference is not pure (e.g. it's blessed into something).

isa_hash

isa_hash($object)

Works just like is_hash, except it will return true even if the reference is not pure (e.g. it's blessed into something).

isa_io

isa_io($object)

Works just like is_io, except it will return true even if the reference is not pure (e.g. it's blessed into something).

isa_lvalue

isa_lvalue($object)

Works just like is_lvalue, except it will return true even if the reference is not pure (e.g. it's blessed into something).

isa_ref

isa_ref($object)

Works just like is_ref, except it will return true even if the reference is not pure (e.g. it's blessed into something).

isa_regexp

isa_regexp($object)

Works just like is_regexp, except it will return true even if the reference is not pure (e.g. it's blessed into something).

isa_scalar

isa_scalar($object)

Works just like is_scalar, except it will return true even if the reference is not pure (e.g. it's blessed into something).

isa_vstring

isa_vstring($object)

Works just like is_vstring, except it will return true even if the reference is not pure (e.g. it's blessed into something).

list_context

list_context()

This function is meant to be called inside of a subroutine. It will return true if the subroutine was called in list context. See also void_context and scalar_context.

localtime

Same as Time::Precise::localtime(). Works as the core localtime, except it returns nanoseconds and full year too.

longmess

Same as Carp::longmess().

md5

md5($value)

md5(@values)

my @result = md5(@values)

Listable function

This function returns the md5 representation (in hexadecimal) of the passed value(s). It will work as any other Listable function from this module.

md5_file

md5_file($path_to_file)

md5_file($file_handle)

This function will take a $path_to_file or directly a $file_handle, read the contents of the file in binary mode and return the md5 representation (in hexadecimal) of that file's contents.

merge

merge(%hash, key1 = $value1, key2 => $value2, ...)>

This function is to a hash what push is to an array. It will allow you to add as many keys as you want to an existing hash without having to create an splice or having to use the name of the hash for each assignment. If keys are repeated or existent, the last used one will be the one remaining. For example:

use Perlmazing;

my %hash = (
    name        => 'Francisco',
    lastname    => 'Zarabozo',
    age         => 'Unknown',
    email       => undef,
);

merge %hash, (
    age     => 20,
    age     => 30,
    age     => 40,
    email   => 'zarabozo@cpan.org',
    gender  => 'male',
    pet     => 'dog',
);

# Now %hash contains the following:

%hash = (
    age         => 40, # Last one used
    email       => 'zarabozo@cpan.org',
    gender      => 'male',
    lastname    => 'Zarabozo',
    name        => 'Francisco',
    pet         => 'dog',
);

mkdir

Works just like Perl's core mkdir, except it will use File::Path::make_path() to create any missing directories in the requested path. It will return a list with the directories that were actually created.

move

Same as File::Copy::Recursive::rmove(). Moves a file using the native OS file-copy implementation. It will recursively move directories when passed as argument.

no_void

This function is meant to be called from inside a subroutine. The purpose of it is to break the execution of that subroutine and immediatly return with a warning if that subroutine was called in void context. This is useful when a certain function will do some time or memory consuming operations in order to return the result of those operations, which would be all for nothing if that function was called in void context. For example:

use Perlmazing;

# This will execute and will take a second to return
my $result = some_function();
say "Result is $result";

# Don't even bother, this will return immediatly without executing anything. Also a warning is issued:
# Useless call to main::some_function in void context at file.pl line 9.
some_function();

sub some_function {
    no_void;
    sleep 1; # Some time consuming operation;
    return time;
}

not_empty

not_empty($var)

This is just an idiomatic way to test if a scalar value is something other than undef or an empty string (''). It avoids warnings when using an undefined value in eq ''. You would use it like this:

use Perlmazing;

my $values = {
    undefined   => undef,
    empty       => '',
    filled      => 'Hello!';
}

for my $key (keys %$values) {
    if (not_empty $values->{$key}) {
        say "Key $key conatins $values->{$key}";
    }
}

# Only key 'filled' will get to say "Key filled contains Hello!"

numeric

sort numeric @something

This function is written to be used in conjuntion with sort. It will sort values numerically when that's possible, numbers before strings and strings before undefined values. Example:

use Perlmazing;

my @values = qw(
    3
    8
    2
    0
    1
    3
    7
    5
    bee
    4
    ark
    9
    code
    6
    20
    10
    123string
    100
    1000
    1001
    001000
);

@values = sort numeric @values;

# Now @values looks like this:
# 0, 1, 2, 3, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 20, 100, 001000, 1000, 1001, 123string, ark, bee, code

# Without 'numeric' it would have been sorted like this:
# 0, 001000, 1, 10, 100, 1000, 1001, 123string, 2, 20, 3, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, ark, bee, code

This sort order will also work for mixed cases between numeric and non-numeric cases. For example:

use Perlmazing;

my @values = qw(
    book_1_page_3
    book_1_page_1
    book_1_page_2
    book_1_page_03
    book_1_page_01
    book_1_page_02
    book_01_page_3
    book_01_page_1
    book_01_page_2
    book_10_page_3
    book_10_page_3z
    book_10_page_3a
    book_10_page_3k
    book_010_page_1
    book_0010_page_2
);

@values = sort numeric @values;

# Now @values looks like this:
# book_01_page_1
# book_1_page_01
# book_1_page_1
# book_01_page_2
# book_1_page_02
# book_1_page_2
# book_01_page_3
# book_1_page_03
# book_1_page_3
# book_010_page_1
# book_0010_page_
# book_10_page_3
# book_10_page_3a
# book_10_page_3k
# book_10_page_3z

# Without 'numeric' it would have been sorted like this:
# book_0010_page_2
# book_010_page_1
# book_01_page_1
# book_01_page_2
# book_01_page_3
# book_10_page_3
# book_10_page_3a
# book_10_page_3k
# book_10_page_3z
# book_1_page_01
# book_1_page_02
# book_1_page_03
# book_1_page_1
# book_1_page_2
# book_1_page_3

pl

pl "something"

pl "more", "something else"

pl @anything

This function's name is short for "print lines". It was written way before core say was announced and released. It was kept because it's not precisely the same as say and I still find it much more useful.

It will print on separate lines everything that it receives as an argument - EXCEPT if you are assigning the return value of it to something else: in that case it will not print anything and will return a string containing what it would have printed. If assigning in list context, then an element for each line including a trailing "\n" on each one.

Examples:

use Perlmazing;

my @arr = (1..10);

pl "Hello world!";
# prints a "Hello world!" followed by a "\n"

pl @arr;
# Will print this:
# 1
# 2
# 3
# 4
# 5
# 6
# 7
# 8
# 9
# 10

my $r = pl @arr;
# Same, but it will ASSIGN to $r the output instead of printing it

my @r = pl @arr;
# An element in @r is created for each line that would be printed, including a trailing "\n" in each element

rel2abs

Same as File::Spec-rel2abs()|File::Spec>. Just much more readable and easier/shorter to type.

remove_duplicates

remove_duplicates(@array)

A very useful function that will remove dumplicate entries from an array. The behavior and return value will be different according to whether it was called in void, scalar or list context. Look at these examples:

use Perlmazing;

my @values = qw(
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7
        3 4 5 6 7 8 9
            5 6 7 8 9 10 11
        3 4 5 6 7 8 9
    1 2 3 4 5 6 7
);

# Try scalar context:
my $scalar = remove_duplicates @values;
# $scalar now contains the number of found duplicates (24) and nothing else is affected.

# Try list context:
my @list = remove_duplicates @values;
# Now @list contains a copy of @values WITHOUT duplicates (so it's now 1..11). @values remains untouched.

# Try void context:
remove_duplicates @values;
# You guessed. @values now has no duplicates (so it's now 1..11).

replace_accented_characters

replace_accented_characters($value)

replace_accented_characters(@values)

my @result = replace_accented_characters(@values)

Listable function

This function replaces any accented character (such as accented vowels in spanish) with it's closest representation in standard english alphabeth. For example, the character á is replaced with a simple a, or the character ü is replaced with a simple u. It works as any other listable function from this module.

rmdir

Works like core rmdir, except it will remove the requested dir even if it's not empty.

scalar_context

This function is meant to be used from inside a subroutine. It will return true if the function was called in scalar context. Example:

use Perlmazing;

sub my_function {
    my @array;
    # do something with @array...
    return $array[0] if scalar_context;
    return @array;
}

shortmess

Same as Carp::shortmess().

shuffle

Same as List::Util::shuffle().

sleep

Same as core sleep, except it will accept fractions and behave accordingly. Example:

use Perlmazing;

# Sleep a quarter of a second:
sleep 0.25;

# Sleep a second and a half:
sleep 1.5;

slurp

slurp($path_to_file, $force_binary_read)

This function will efficiently read and return the content of a file. Example:

use Perlmazing;

my $data = slurp 'some/file.txt';

It will use binmode on binary files only. If the second argument is a true value, then binmode will be used no matter what type of file is being read.

sort_by_key

sort_by_key(%hash)

sort_by_key($hashref)

This is a useful function that sorts its argument (a hash or a hashref) by key. The reason it's not a simple keyword like the case of numeric is the difficulty of knowing if core sort is passing a key or a value in $a and $b.

This function will send a warning (and do nothing) if called in void context. The reason for this is that a regular hash cannot be sorted (or remain sorted after sorting it). Otherwise it will return a series of key-value pairs if called in list context, or an arrayref if called in scalar context. The following is an example of using it in list context:

use Perlmazing;

my @sorted = sort_by_key %ENV;
for (my $i = 0; $i < @sorted; $i += 2) {
    say "$sorted[$i]: $sorted[$i + 1]";
}

sort_by_value

This is the same as the previously explained sort_by_key function, except it will sort its argument by value instead of by key.

splitidir

Same as File::Spec-splitdir()|File::Spec>. Just much more readable and easier/shorter to type.

splitpath

Same as File::Spec-splitpath()|File::Spec>. Just much more readable and easier/shorter to type.

taint

taint($value)

taint(@values)

my @result = taint(@values)

Listable function

Same as Taint::Util::taint() - except that it is a listable function and it will behave like any other listable function from this module.

tainted

Same as Taint::Util::tainted().

time

Same as core time, except it will include decimals for nanoseconds.

time_hashref

time_hashref()

time_hashref($some_time_in_seconds)

This function will return a hashref the current local time if no argument is passed, or the time corresponding to its argument in seconds (e.g. the return value of core time()).

The following is an example of a hashref returned by this function:

{
  day          => 16,
  hour         => 20,
  is_leap_year => 1,
  isdst        => 0,
  minute       => 16,
  month        => "02",
  second       => "31.8393230",
  wday         => 2,
  yday         => 46,
  year         => 2016,
}

timegm

Same as Time::Local::timegm(), except it will include nanoseconds in its return value.

timelocal

Same as Time::Local::timelocal(), except it will include nanoseconds in its return value.

to_number

to_number($value)

to_number(@values)

my @result = to_number(@values)

Listable function

It makes any valid numeric value that is currently treated as string, a valid number. It works with any value that, if it wasn't treated as string, Perl would see as a number (e.g. 123_456), but that when treated as string, fails to to something like $value +=0. The value becomes a real numeric representation. It becomes zero when the value has no numeric interpretation. It is a listable function and will behave like any other listable function from this module.

Note: Octal formated numbers will become decimal, because of the way this function treats strings that should become numbers.

to_string

to_string($value)

to_string(@values)

my @result = to_string(@values)

Listable function

It will simply treat any provided value as a string, making its last use to be seen as string by Perl (e.g. 123 will become "123"). Has no real effect on strings. It is a listable function and will behave like any other listable function from this module.

to_utf8

to_utf8($value)

to_utf8(@values)

my @result = to_utf8(@values)

Listable function

This is short for Encode::encode('utf8', $_[0]) if defined $_[0] and not is_utf8 $_[0], using Encode::encode(). It is a listable function and will behave like any other listable function from this module.

trim

trim($value)

trim(@values)

my @result = trim(@values)

Listable function

A very usefull function to remove any whitespace from the beginning or the ending of a string. It is a listable function (which makes it even more useful) and will act like any other listable function from this module. Example:

use Perlmazing;

my @lines = slurp $some_file;
trim @lines;

# Now each element of @lines is trimmed.

truncate_text

truncate_text($string, $length)

This is almost the same as substr($string, 0, $length), except this function will try not to cut words in the middle. Instead, it will look for the longest possible substring (according to $length) where no word is cut in half. If that's not possible (e.g. there's no space between position 0 and $length), then the string will be cut.

For example:

use Perlmazing;

my $string = 'This is an awesome string for testing.';

say truncate_text $string, 1;
# T

say truncate_text $string, 2;
# Th

say truncate_text $string, 3;
# Thi

say truncate_text $string, 4;
# This

say truncate_text $string, 5;
# This

say truncate_text $string, 6;
# This

say truncate_text $string, 7;
# This is

say truncate_text $string, 8;
# This is

say truncate_text $string, 9;
# This is

say truncate_text $string, 10;
# This is an

say truncate_text $string, 11;
# This is an

say truncate_text $string, 12;
# This is an

say truncate_text $string, 13;
# This is an

say truncate_text $string, 14;
# This is an

say truncate_text $string, 15;
# This is an

say truncate_text $string, 16;
# This is an

say truncate_text $string, 17;
# This is an

say truncate_text $string, 18;
# This is an awesome

# ...and so on.

unescape_html

unescape_html($value)

unescape_html(@values)

my @result = unescape_html(@values)

Listable function

This is the undo function for escape_html. It is a listable function and it will behave like any other listable function from this module.

unescape_uri

unescape_uri($value)

unescape_uri(@values)

my @result = unescape_uri(@values)

Listable function

This is the undo function for escape_uri. It is a listable function and it will behave like any other listable function from this module.

untaint

untaint($value)

untaint(@values)

my @result = untaint(@values)

Listable function

This is the undo function for taint. It is a listable function and it will behave like any other listable function from this module.

void_context

This function is meant to be called from inside a subroutine. It will return true if the function was called in void context. For example:

use Perlmazing;

# Will do nothing:
my_function();

# Will return '1':
my $r = my_function();

# Will return (1..10):
my @list = my_function();

sub my_function {
    return if void_context; # Don't do anything if there's nothing using the return value
    return 1 if scalar_context;
    return (1..10) if list_context;
}

AUTHOR

Francisco Zarabozo, <zarabozo at cpan.org>

BUGS

Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-perlmazing at rt.cpan.org, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Perlmazing. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.

SUPPORT

You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.

perldoc Perlmazing

You can also look for information at:

LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2015 Francisco Zarabozo.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either: the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; or the Artistic License.

See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.

2 POD Errors

The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:

Around line 54:

=pod directives shouldn't be over one line long! Ignoring all 2 lines of content

Around line 1054:

Non-ASCII character seen before =encoding in 'C<á>'. Assuming CP1252