G'day Josh / p5p / p6l,
given ($@) {
# [snip]
default{ say "Not an autodie exception." }
}
If you're going to write that into some documentation, I wish you'd
make default say that it's exception suicide.
The documentation clearly needs
On Sun, Jun 1, 2008 at 7:31 PM, Paul Fenwick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Currently, when testing exceptions from autodie, we can use:
>
>given ($@) {
>when (undef) { say "No errors here" }
>when ('open') { say "Open died" }
>when (':file')
Hi all,
Auzon has written a few tests for the samecase() and samebase() (S29),
which raised a question:
For both the :samecase and there :samebase regex modifier (S05) there is
a "dumb" and a "smart" version. S29 is silent about which it refers to.
Should both have a second, optional argument wh
Sáb, 2008-06-07 às 16:01 +0200, Stéphane Payrard escreveu:
> what is the equivalent convention for yadayadayada in regex. Cuz ...
> is alread meaningful in regex. Should I use <...> or {...} ?
> Should the first be predefined?
If I understand correctly, {...} should already be parsed as a yada y
Hi,
When implementing prototype OO, the HOW for objects with different
behaviours will be shared. This issue is not new, but before we thought
that it would be possible to solve that by forcing $foo.HOW to be a
proxy object that would rewrite the call putting $foo as the invocant.
Me and nothingm
what is the equivalent convention for yadayadayada in regex. Cuz ...
is alread meaningful in regex. Should I use <...> or {...} ?
Should the first be predefined?
I want something that is a placeholder that parses but fails if
someone pastes it. In other words the equivalent of
a sub yada yada ya