NAME
Acme::Boolean - There is more then one way to be true.
VERSION
version 0.6
SYNOPSIS
To be more literalistic:
use Acme::Boolean;
$decision = correct if verifiable;
sub do_me_a_favor {
nah;
}
DESCRIPTION
This module provides a lot of words for you to express from the very trustful to the toally errorneous;
TRUE
These words can be used to refer to a true value:
yes verifiable trusty accurate actual appropriate authentic authoritative correct dependable direct exact factual fitting genuine honest indubitable kosher lawful legal legitimate natural normal perfect precise proper pure regular right rightful sincere straight trustworthy truthful typical undeniable undesigning undoubted unerring unfaked unfeigned unquestionable veracious veridical veritable wash
FALSE
And these words evaluates to false:
no untrue wrong incorrect errorneous fallacious untruthful nah apocryphal beguiling bogus casuistic concocted counterfactual deceitful deceiving delusive dishonest distorted erroneous ersatz fake fanciful faulty fictitious fishy fraudulent illusive imaginary improper inaccurate inexact invalid lying mendacious misleading misrepresentative mistaken phony sham sophistical specious spurious unfounded unreal unsound
Adjectives
Optionally it's possible to say it more nicely:
$that = so correct;
(I wish I could alias "is" to "=" in that statement.)
Or you can:
return very wrong;
In your lovely sub.
At this moment you can use these adjectives in front of any of those true/false vocabularies:
so totally very definitely really certainly surely unquestionably undoubtedly absolutely.
Adjectives can be stacked too:
say "ok" if very very very perfect; #=> ok
Caveats
Noted here that the word no
is also a keyword for unimporting pragmas/modules and thus one must write &no
to get the wanted boolean. Alternatively, one may go with the all caps version NO
, although that may accidently include some emotions to the logic.
In fact, if strong emotion is intentionally wished for, all the introduced words comes with a all caps version at your disposal.
Here are some notable examles:
my $p = SO true;
my $q = NOT exactly lying;
Be notified that readers my not preceive such embedded emotion the same way writers put it.
Special mention
The builtin keyword not
that flips true/false value is a nice add-on to boolean words but the all caps version is not provided by perl. There it is provided by this module.
SEE ALSO
boolean, the plain version of this module.
AUTHOR
Kang-min Liu <gugod@gugod.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is Copyright (c) 2021 by Kang-min Liu.
This is free software, licensed under:
The MIT (X11) License