Author: lwall
Date: 2009-04-28 06:14:10 +0200 (Tue, 28 Apr 2009)
New Revision: 26511

Modified:
   docs/Perl6/Spec/S03-operators.pod
   docs/Perl6/Spec/S12-objects.pod
Log:
[S12] doc syntax for exporting subset and enum
[S12] enum uses (...) rather than [...], since <...> is defined as ()-like
[S03] mention temp and let as named unary ops


Modified: docs/Perl6/Spec/S03-operators.pod
===================================================================
--- docs/Perl6/Spec/S03-operators.pod   2009-04-28 04:11:21 UTC (rev 26510)
+++ docs/Perl6/Spec/S03-operators.pod   2009-04-28 04:14:10 UTC (rev 26511)
@@ -40,7 +40,7 @@
     X  Concatenation     ~
     X  Junctive and      & also
     X  Junctive or       | ^
-    L  Named unary       sleep abs sin
+    L  Named unary       sleep abs sin temp let
     N  Nonchaining infix but does <=> leg cmp .. ..^ ^.. ^..^
     C  Chaining infix    != == < <= > >= eq ne lt le gt ge ~~ === eqv !eqv
     X  Tight and         &&

Modified: docs/Perl6/Spec/S12-objects.pod
===================================================================
--- docs/Perl6/Spec/S12-objects.pod     2009-04-28 04:11:21 UTC (rev 26510)
+++ docs/Perl6/Spec/S12-objects.pod     2009-04-28 04:14:10 UTC (rev 26511)
@@ -12,9 +12,9 @@
 
   Maintainer: Larry Wall <la...@wall.org>
   Date: 27 Oct 2004
-  Last Modified: 19 Mar 2009
+  Last Modified: 27 Apr 2009
   Number: 12
-  Version: 79
+  Version: 80
 
 =head1 Overview
 
@@ -1335,6 +1335,10 @@
 preferred if the constraint matches, and otherwise the second is
 preferred.
 
+To export a subset type, put the export trait just before the C<where>:
+
+    subset Positive of Int is export where * > 0;
+
 =head2 Multiple constraints
 
 [Conjecture: This entire section is considered a guess at our
@@ -1461,9 +1465,10 @@
 
 An enum is a low-level class that can function as a role or property.
 A given enum value can function as a subtype, a method, or as an ordinary
-value.  The names of the values are specified as a list:
+value.  The names of the values are specified as a parenthesized list, or
+an equivalent angle bracket list:
 
-    my enum Day ['Sun','Mon','Tue','Wed','Thu','Fri','Sat'];
+    my enum Day ('Sun','Mon','Tue','Wed','Thu','Fri','Sat');
     my enum Day <Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat>;
 
 If the first value is unspecified, it defaults to 0.  To specify the
@@ -1476,7 +1481,7 @@
 The type can be specified:
 
     my bit enum maybe <no yes>;
-    my Int enum day ['Sun','Mon','Tue','Wed','Thu','Fri','Sat'];
+    my Int enum day ('Sun','Mon','Tue','Wed','Thu','Fri','Sat');
     my enum day of uint4 <Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat>;
 
 For any enum value of an object type, the object itself knows its own
@@ -1522,10 +1527,10 @@
                             Quebec Romeo Sierra Tango Uniform
                             Victor Whiskey X-ray Yankee Zulu»;
 
-    enum roman [i => 1,   v => 5,
+    enum roman (i => 1,   v => 5,
                 x => 10,  l => 50,
                 c => 100, d => 500,
-                m => 1000];
+                m => 1000);
 
     my Item enum hex «:zero(0) one two three four five six seven eight nine
                       :ten<a> eleven twelve thirteen fourteen fifteen»;
@@ -1641,6 +1646,10 @@
 is done without replacement.  (If it I<does> return Five Aces,
 it's time to walk away.  Or maybe run.)
 
+To export an enum, place the export trait just before the list:
+
+    enum Maybe is export <No Yes Dunno>;
+
 =head1 Open vs Closed Classes
 
 By default, all classes in Perl are non-final, which means

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