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[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / pod / perldelta.pod
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ba8251e8 1=head1 NAME
2
651a3225 3perldelta - what's new for perl v5.6 (as of v5.005_61)
ba8251e8 4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
f29c64d6 7This is an unsupported alpha release, meant for intrepid Perl developers
8only. The included sources may not even build correctly on some platforms.
9Subscribing to perl5-porters is the best way to monitor and contribute
10to the progress of development releases (see www.perl.org for info).
11
ba8251e8 12This document describes differences between the 5.005 release and this one.
13
14=head1 Incompatible Changes
15
e02fdbd2 16=head2 Perl Source Incompatibilities
17
f29c64d6 18TODO
e02fdbd2 19
20=head2 C Source Incompatibilities
21
22=over 4
23
24=item C<PERL_POLLUTE>
25
26Release 5.005 grandfathered old global symbol names by providing preprocessor
87275199 27macros for extension source compatibility. As of release 5.6, these
e02fdbd2 28preprocessor definitions are not available by default. You need to explicitly
14218588 29compile perl with C<-DPERL_POLLUTE> to get these definitions. For
30extensions still using the old symbols, this option can be
2aea4d40 31specified via MakeMaker:
32
14218588 33 perl Makefile.PL POLLUTE=1
e02fdbd2 34
f29c64d6 35=item C<PERL_IMPLICIT_CONTEXT>
36
37This new build option provides a set of macros for all API functions
38such that an implicit interpreter/thread context argument is passed to
39every API function. As a result of this, something like C<sv_setsv(foo,bar)>
2c2d71f5 40amounts to a macro invocation that actually translates to something like
f29c64d6 41C<Perl_sv_setsv(my_perl,foo,bar)>. While this is generally expected
42to not have any significant source compatibility issues, the difference
43between a macro and a real function call will need to be considered.
44
2c2d71f5 45This means that there B<is> a source compatibility issue as a result of
46this if your extensions attempt to use pointers to any of the Perl API
47functions.
48
f29c64d6 49Note that the above issue is not relevant to the default build of
50Perl, whose interfaces continue to match those of prior versions
51(but subject to the other options described here).
52
651a3225 53PERL_IMPLICIT_CONTEXT is automatically enabled whenever Perl is built
54with one of -Dusethreads, -Dusemultiplicity, or both.
f29c64d6 55
2c2d71f5 56See L<perlguts/"The Perl API"> for detailed information on the
57ramifications of building Perl using this option.
58
86058a2d 59=item C<PERL_POLLUTE_MALLOC>
60
14218588 61Enabling Perl's malloc in release 5.005 and earlier caused
86058a2d 62the namespace of system versions of the malloc family of functions to
14218588 63be usurped by the Perl versions, since by default they used the
64same names.
86058a2d 65
66Besides causing problems on platforms that do not allow these functions to
67be cleanly replaced, this also meant that the system versions could not
68be called in programs that used Perl's malloc. Previous versions of Perl
14218588 69have allowed this behaviour to be suppressed with the HIDEMYMALLOC and
86058a2d 70EMBEDMYMALLOC preprocessor definitions.
71
87275199 72As of release 5.6, Perl's malloc family of functions have default names
86058a2d 73distinct from the system versions. You need to explicitly compile perl with
14218588 74C<-DPERL_POLLUTE_MALLOC> to get the older behaviour. HIDEMYMALLOC
75and EMBEDMYMALLOC have no effect, since the behaviour they enabled is now
86058a2d 76the default.
77
78Note that these functions do B<not> constitute Perl's memory allocation API.
79See L<perlguts/"Memory Allocation"> for further information about that.
80
e02fdbd2 81=item C<PL_na> and C<dTHR> Issues
82
83The C<PL_na> global is now thread local, so a C<dTHR> declaration is needed
14218588 84in the scope in which the global appears. XSUBs should handle this automatically,
e02fdbd2 85but if you have used C<PL_na> in support functions, you either need to
86change the C<PL_na> to a local variable (which is recommended), or put in
87a C<dTHR>.
88
89=back
90
cceca5ed 91=head2 Compatible C Source API Changes
92
93=over
94
95=item C<PATCHLEVEL> is now C<PERL_VERSION>
96
14218588 97The cpp macros C<PERL_REVISION>, C<PERL_VERSION>, and C<PERL_SUBVERSION>
cceca5ed 98are now available by default from perl.h, and reflect the base revision,
14218588 99patchlevel, and subversion respectively. C<PERL_REVISION> had no
cceca5ed 100prior equivalent, while C<PERL_VERSION> and C<PERL_SUBVERSION> were
101previously available as C<PATCHLEVEL> and C<SUBVERSION>.
102
14218588 103The new names cause less pollution of the B<cpp> namespace and reflect what
cceca5ed 104the numbers have come to stand for in common practice. For compatibility,
14218588 105the old names are still supported when F<patchlevel.h> is explicitly
cceca5ed 106included (as required before), so there is no source incompatibility
14218588 107from the change.
cceca5ed 108
109=back
110
e02fdbd2 111=head2 Binary Incompatibilities
112
9c107f78 113The default build of this release is binary compatible with the 5.005
114release or its maintenance versions.
f29c64d6 115
116The usethreads or usemultiplicity builds are B<not> binary compatible
117with the corresponding builds in 5.005.
e02fdbd2 118
ba8251e8 119=head1 Core Changes
120
9d73390d 121=head2 Unicode and UTF-8 support
122
123Perl can optionally use UTF-8 as its internal representation for character
124strings. The C<use utf8> pragma enables this support in the current lexical
125scope. See L<utf8> for more information.
126
127=head2 Lexically scoped warning categories
128
129You can now control the granularity of warnings emitted by perl at a finer
4438c4b7 130level using the C<use warnings> pragma. See L<warnings> and L<perllexwarn>
0453d815 131for details.
9d73390d 132
5fdc711f 133=head2 Binary numbers supported
134
4f19785b 135Binary numbers are now supported as literals, in s?printf formats, and
136C<oct()>:
137
14218588 138 $answer = 0b101010;
139 printf "The answer is: %b\n", oct("0b101010");
4f19785b 140
5fdc711f 141=head2 syswrite() ease-of-use
142
6c67e1bb 143The length argument of C<syswrite()> is now optional.
144
5fdc711f 145=head2 64-bit support
146
9c107f78 147All platforms that have 64-bit integers either (a) natively as longs
148or ints (b) via special compiler flags (c) using long long are able to
149use "quads" (64-integers) as follows:
150
151=over 4
152
d0ba1bd2 153=item constants in the code
9c107f78 154
155=item arguments to oct() and hex()
156
157=item arguments to print(), printf() and sprintf()
158
d0ba1bd2 159=item pack() and unpack() "q" format
9c107f78 160
d0ba1bd2 161=item in basic arithmetics
9c107f78 162
d0ba1bd2 163=item vec() (but see the below note about bit arithmetics)
c5a0f51a 164
9c107f78 165=back
166
167Note that unless you have the case (a) you will have to configure
168and compile Perl using the -Duse64bits Configure flag.
169
d0ba1bd2 170Unfortunately bit arithmetics (&, |, ^, ~, <<, >>) are not 64-bit clean.
171
2d4389e4 172Last but not least: note that due to Perl's habit of always using
d0ba1bd2 173floating point numbers the quads are still not true integers.
174When quads overflow their limits (0...18_446_744_073_709_551_615 unsigned,
175-9_223_372_036_854_775_808...9_223_372_036_854_775_807 signed), they
176are silently promoted to floating point numbers, after which they will
177start losing precision (their lower digits).
2d4389e4 178
179=head2 Large file support
180
181If you have filesystems that support "large files" (files larger than
1822 gigabytes), you may now also be able to create and access them from Perl.
183
184Note that in addition to requiring a proper file system to do this you
d0ba1bd2 185may also need to adjust your per-process (or even your per-system)
186maximum filesize limits before running Perl scripts that try to handle
187large files, especially if you intend to write such files.
2d4389e4 188
189Adjusting your file system/system limits is outside the scope of Perl.
190For process limits, you may try to increase the limits using your
191shell's limit/ulimit command before running Perl. The BSD::Resource
192extension (not included with the standard Perl distribution) may also
193be of use.
194
195(Large file support is also related to 64-bit support, for obvious reasons)
09bef843 196
62c18ce2 197=head2 Better syntax checks on parenthesized unary operators
198
199Expressions such as:
200
14218588 201 print defined(&foo,&bar,&baz);
202 print uc("foo","bar","baz");
203 undef($foo,&bar);
62c18ce2 204
7711098a 205used to be accidentally allowed in earlier versions, and produced
14218588 206unpredictable behaviour. Some produced ancillary warnings
207when used in this way; others silently did the wrong thing.
62c18ce2 208
209The parenthesized forms of most unary operators that expect a single
14218588 210argument now ensure that they are not called with more than one
211argument, making the cases shown above syntax errors. The usual
212behaviour of:
62c18ce2 213
14218588 214 print defined &foo, &bar, &baz;
215 print uc "foo", "bar", "baz";
216 undef $foo, &bar;
62c18ce2 217
218remains unchanged. See L<perlop>.
219
3e3318e7 220=head2 POSIX character class syntax [: :] supported
221
222For example to match alphabetic characters use /[[:alpha:]]/.
223See L<perlre> for details.
224
5a929a98 225=head2 Improved C<qw//> operator
8127e0e3 226
26ef7447 227The C<qw//> operator is now evaluated at compile time into a true list
228instead of being replaced with a run time call to C<split()>. This
14218588 229removes the confusing misbehaviour of C<qw//> in scalar context, which
230had inherited that behaviour from split().
26ef7447 231
232Thus:
233
234 $foo = ($bar) = qw(a b c); print "$foo|$bar\n";
235
236now correctly prints "3|a", instead of "2|a".
8127e0e3 237
5a929a98 238=head2 pack() format 'Z' supported
239
240The new format type 'Z' is useful for packing and unpacking null-terminated
241strings. See L<perlfunc/"pack">.
242
4d0c1c44 243=head2 pack() format modifier '!' supported
ee3907e2 244
14218588 245The new format type modifier '!' is useful for packing and unpacking
ee3907e2 246native shorts, ints, and longs. See L<perlfunc/"pack">.
247
f29c64d6 248=head2 pack() and unpack() support counted strings
249
250The template character '#' can be used to specify a counted string
251type to be packed or unpacked. See L<perlfunc/"pack">.
252
2b92dfce 253=head2 $^X variables may now have names longer than one character
254
255Formerly, $^X was synonymous with ${"\cX"}, but $^XY was a syntax
256error. Now variable names that begin with a control character may be
257arbitrarily long. However, for compatibility reasons, these variables
258I<must> be written with explicit braces, as C<${^XY}> for example.
14218588 259C<${^XYZ}> is synonymous with ${"\cXYZ"}. Variable names with more
2b92dfce 260than one control character, such as C<${^XY^Z}>, are illegal.
261
14218588 262The old syntax has not changed. As before, `^X' may be either a
263literal control-X character or the two-character sequence `caret' plus
264`X'. When braces are omitted, the variable name stops after the
2b92dfce 265control character. Thus C<"$^XYZ"> continues to be synonymous with
7711098a 266C<$^X . "YZ"> as before.
2b92dfce 267
268As before, lexical variables may not have names beginning with control
269characters. As before, variables whose names begin with a control
14218588 270character are always forced to be in package `main'. All such variables
271are reserved for future extensions, except those that begin with
09bef843 272C<^_>, which may be used by user programs and are guaranteed not to
14218588 273acquire special meaning in any future version of Perl.
2b92dfce 274
09bef843 275=head2 C<use attrs> implicit in subroutine attributes
276
277Formerly, if you wanted to mark a subroutine as being a method call or
278as requiring an automatic lock() when it is entered, you had to declare
279that with a C<use attrs> pragma in the body of the subroutine.
280That can now be accomplished with a declaration syntax, like this:
281
282 sub mymethod : locked, method ;
283 ...
284 sub mymethod : locked, method {
285 ...
286 }
287
288F<AutoSplit.pm> and F<SelfLoader.pm> have been updated to keep the attributes
289with the stubs they provide. See L<attributes>.
290
fbad3eb5 291=head1 Significant bug fixes
292
293=head2 E<lt>HANDLEE<gt> on empty files
294
295With C<$/> set to C<undef>, slurping an empty file returns a string of
14218588 296zero length (instead of C<undef>, as it used to) the first time the
297HANDLE is read. Further reads yield C<undef>.
fbad3eb5 298
299This means that the following will append "foo" to an empty file (it used
14218588 300to do nothing):
fbad3eb5 301
302 perl -0777 -pi -e 's/^/foo/' empty_file
303
14218588 304The behaviour of:
fbad3eb5 305
306 perl -pi -e 's/^/foo/' empty_file
307
308is unchanged (it continues to leave the file empty).
309
0244c3a4 310=head2 C<eval '...'> improvements
311
312Line numbers (as reflected by caller() and most diagnostics) within
313C<eval '...'> were often incorrect when here documents were involved.
314This has been corrected.
315
316Lexical lookups for variables appearing in C<eval '...'> within
317functions that were themselves called within an C<eval '...'> were
14218588 318searching the wrong place for lexicals. The lexical search now
319correctly ends at the subroutine's block boundary.
0244c3a4 320
321Parsing of here documents used to be flawed when they appeared as
322the replacement expression in C<eval 's/.../.../e'>. This has
323been fixed.
324
45bc9206 325=head2 Automatic flushing of output buffers
326
14218588 327fork(), exec(), system(), qx//, and pipe open()s now flush buffers
328of all files opened for output when the operation
329was attempted. This mostly eliminates confusing
45bc9206 330buffering mishaps suffered by users unaware of how Perl internally
14218588 331handles I/O.
45bc9206 332
af8c498a 333=head2 Better diagnostics on meaningless filehandle operations
334
335Constructs such as C<open(E<lt>FHE<gt>)> and C<close(E<lt>FHE<gt>)>
336are compile time errors. Attempting to read from filehandles that
337were opened only for writing will now produce warnings (just as
338writing to read-only filehandles does).
339
54195c32 340=head2 Buffered data discarded from input filehandle when dup'ed.
341
342C<open(NEW, "E<lt>&OLD")> now discards any data that was previously
343read and buffered in C<OLD>. The next read operation on C<NEW> will
344return the same data as the corresponding operation on C<OLD>.
345Formerly, it would have returned the data from the start of the
346following disk block instead.
347
ba8251e8 348=head1 Supported Platforms
349
5fdc711f 350=over 4
351
352=item *
353
6c67e1bb 354VM/ESA is now supported.
355
5fdc711f 356=item *
357
ee3907e2 358Siemens BS2000 is now supported under the POSIX Shell.
359
360=item *
361
2bb14304 362The Mach CThreads (NEXTSTEP, OPENSTEP) are now supported by the Thread
363extension.
6c67e1bb 364
5fdc711f 365=item *
366
ee3907e2 367GNU/Hurd is now supported.
6c67e1bb 368
00ad96e1 369=item *
370
371Rhapsody is now supported.
372
27806c82 373=item *
374
375EPOC is is now supported (on Psion 5).
376
5fdc711f 377=back
378
6c67e1bb 379=head1 New tests
380
381=over 4
382
09bef843 383=item lib/attrs
384
385Compatibility tests for C<sub : attrs> vs the older C<use attrs>.
386
387=item lib/io_const
6c67e1bb 388
389IO constants (SEEK_*, _IO*).
14218588 390
09bef843 391=item lib/io_dir
6c67e1bb 392
393Directory-related IO methods (new, read, close, rewind, tied delete).
394
09bef843 395=item lib/io_multihomed
6c67e1bb 396
397INET sockets with multi-homed hosts.
398
09bef843 399=item lib/io_poll
6c67e1bb 400
401IO poll().
402
09bef843 403=item lib/io_unix
6c67e1bb 404
405UNIX sockets.
406
09bef843 407=item op/attrs
408
409Regression tests for C<my ($x,@y,%z) : attrs> and <sub : attrs>.
410
6c67e1bb 411=item op/filetest
412
413File test operators.
414
415=item op/lex_assign
416
5fdc711f 417Verify operations that access pad objects (lexicals and temporaries).
6c67e1bb 418
419=back
e02fdbd2 420
ba8251e8 421=head1 Modules and Pragmata
422
3e8c4fa0 423=head2 Modules
424
b7d8191e 425=over 4
426
09bef843 427=item attributes
428
429While used internally by Perl as a pragma, this module also
430provides a way to fetch subroutine and variable attributes.
431See L<attributes>.
432
f29c64d6 433=item ByteLoader
434
435The ByteLoader is a dedication extension to generate and run
436Perl bytecode. See L<ByteLoader>.
437
438=item B
439
440The Perl Compiler suite has been extensively reworked for this
441release.
442
443=item Devel::DProf
444
445Devel::DProf, a Perl source code profiler has been added.
446
b7d8191e 447=item Dumpvalue
448
449Added Dumpvalue module provides screen dumps of Perl data.
450
451=item Benchmark
452
868cb350 453You can now run tests for I<n> seconds instead of guessing the right
14218588 454number of tests to run: e.g. timethese(-5, ...) will run each
455code for at least 5 CPU seconds. Zero as the "number of repetitions"
155776c0 456means "for at least 3 CPU seconds". The output format has also
14218588 457changed. For example:
155776c0 458
459use Benchmark;$x=3;timethese(-5,{a=>sub{$x*$x},b=>sub{$x**2}})
460
461will now output something like this:
462
463Benchmark: running a, b, each for at least 5 CPU seconds...
464 a: 5 wallclock secs ( 5.77 usr + 0.00 sys = 5.77 CPU) @ 200551.91/s (n=1156516)
465 b: 4 wallclock secs ( 5.00 usr + 0.02 sys = 5.02 CPU) @ 159605.18/s (n=800686)
466
467New features: "each for at least N CPU seconds...", "wallclock secs",
468and the "@ operations/CPU second (n=operations)".
b7d8191e 469
f505c983 470=item Devel::Peek
471
472The Devel::Peek module provides access to the internal representation
14218588 473of Perl variables and data. It is a data debugging tool for the XS programmer.
f505c983 474
b7d8191e 475=item Fcntl
476
477More Fcntl constants added: F_SETLK64, F_SETLKW64, O_LARGEFILE for
14218588 478large (more than 4G) file access (64-bit support is not yet
b7d8191e 479working, though, so no need to get overly excited), Free/Net/OpenBSD
480locking behaviour flags F_FLOCK, F_POSIX, Linux F_SHLCK, and
481O_ACCMODE: the mask of O_RDONLY, O_WRONLY, and O_RDWR.
482
f505c983 483=item File::Spec
484
485New methods have been added to the File::Spec module: devnull() returns
19799a22 486the name of the null device (/dev/null on Unix) and tmpdir() the name of
14218588 487the temp directory (normally /tmp on Unix). There are now also methods
f505c983 488to convert between absolute and relative filenames: abs2rel() and
14218588 489rel2abs(). For compatibility with operating systems that specify volume
490names in file paths, the splitpath(), splitdir(), and catdir() methods
f505c983 491have been added.
492
493=item File::Spec::Functions
494
495The new File::Spec::Functions modules provides a function interface
14218588 496to the File::Spec module. Allows shorthand
f505c983 497
14218588 498 $fullname = catfile($dir1, $dir2, $file);
f505c983 499
500instead of
501
14218588 502 $fullname = File::Spec->catfile($dir1, $dir2, $file);
f505c983 503
e16b8f49 504=item Math::BigInt
505
14218588 506The logical operations C<E<lt>E<lt>>, C<E<gt>E<gt>>, C<&>, C<|>,
e16b8f49 507and C<~> are now supported on bigints.
508
b7d8191e 509=item Math::Complex
7711098a 510
14218588 511The accessor methods Re, Im, arg, abs, rho, and theta can now also
868cb350 512act as mutators (accessor $z->Re(), mutator $z->Re(3)).
b7d8191e 513
514=item Math::Trig
515
14218588 516A little bit of radial trigonometry (cylindrical and spherical),
517radial coordinate conversions, and the great circle distance were added.
b7d8191e 518
f4b9d880 519=item SDBM_File
520
521An EXISTS method has been added to this module (and sdbm_exists() has
522been added to the underlying sdbm library), so one can now call exists
14218588 523on an SDBM_File tied hash and get the correct result, rather than a
f4b9d880 524runtime error.
525
06ef4121 526=item Time::Local
527
528The timelocal() and timegm() functions used to silently return bogus
529results when the date exceeded the machine's integer range. They
14218588 530now consistently croak() if the date falls in an unsupported range.
06ef4121 531
8fe0a5c4 532=item Win32
533
534The error return value in list context has been changed for all functions
14218588 535that return a list of values. Previously these functions returned a list
536with a single element C<undef> if an error occurred. Now these functions
537return the empty list in these situations. This applies to the following
8fe0a5c4 538functions:
539
14218588 540 Win32::FsType
541 Win32::GetOSVersion
8fe0a5c4 542
543The remaining functions are unchanged and continue to return C<undef> on
544error even in list context.
545
546The Win32::SetLastError(ERROR) function has been added as a complement
547to the Win32::GetLastError() function.
548
549The new Win32::GetFullPathName(FILENAME) returns the full absolute
14218588 550pathname for FILENAME in scalar context. In list context it returns
551a two-element list containing the fully qualified directory name and
8fe0a5c4 552the filename.
553
9fe6733a 554=item DBM Filters
555
556A new feature called "DBM Filters" has been added to all the
14218588 557DBM modules--DB_File, GDBM_File, NDBM_File, ODBM_File, and SDBM_File.
558DBM Filters add four new methods to each DBM module:
9fe6733a 559
560 filter_store_key
561 filter_store_value
562 filter_fetch_key
563 filter_fetch_value
564
14218588 565These can be used to filter key-value pairs before the pairs are
9fe6733a 566written to the database or just after they are read from the database.
567See L<perldbmfilter> for further information.
568
b7d8191e 569=back
3e8c4fa0 570
571=head2 Pragmata
572
09bef843 573C<use attrs> is now obsolescent, and is only provided for
574backward-compatibility. It's been replaced by the C<sub : attributes>
575syntax. See L<perlsub/"Subroutine Attributes"> and L<attributes>.
576
14218588 577C<use utf8> to enable UTF-8 and Unicode support.
43165c05 578
579C<use caller 'encoding'> allows modules to inherit pragmatic attributes
580from the caller's context. C<encoding> is currently the only supported
581attribute.
9d73390d 582
4438c4b7 583Lexical warnings pragma, C<use warnings;>, to control optional warnings.
6c67e1bb 584
14218588 585C<use filetest> to control the behaviour of filetests (C<-r> C<-w> ...).
6c67e1bb 586Currently only one subpragma implemented, "use filetest 'access';",
14218588 587that enables the use of access(2) or equivalent to check
6c67e1bb 588permissions instead of using stat(2) as usual. This matters
14218588 589in filesystems where there are ACLs (access control lists): the
590stat(2) might lie, but access(2) knows better.
6c67e1bb 591
ba8251e8 592=head1 Utility Changes
593
e02fdbd2 594Todo.
595
ba8251e8 596=head1 Documentation Changes
597
5fdc711f 598=over 4
599
600=item perlopentut.pod
f8284313 601
5fdc711f 602A tutorial on using open() effectively.
603
604=item perlreftut.pod
605
606A tutorial that introduces the essentials of references.
607
14218588 608=item perltootc.pod
609
610A tutorial on managing class data for object modules.
611
5fdc711f 612=back
e02fdbd2 613
ba8251e8 614=head1 New Diagnostics
615
09bef843 616=item "my sub" not yet implemented
617
618(F) Lexically scoped subroutines are not yet implemented. Don't try that
619yet.
620
621=item %s package attribute may clash with future reserved word: %s
622
623(W) A lowercase attribute name was used that had a package-specific handler.
624That name might have a meaning to Perl itself some day, even though it
625doesn't yet. Perhaps you should use a mixed-case attribute name, instead.
626See L<attributes>.
627
6b121555 628=item /%s/: Unrecognized escape \\%c passed through
629
630(W) You used a backslash-character combination which is not recognized
7711098a 631by Perl. This combination appears in an interpolated variable or a
6b121555 632C<'>-delimited regular expression.
633
af8c498a 634=item Filehandle %s opened only for output
6b121555 635
af8c498a 636(W) You tried to read from a filehandle opened only for writing. If you
637intended it to be a read-write filehandle, you needed to open it with
638"+E<lt>" or "+E<gt>" or "+E<gt>E<gt>" instead of with "E<lt>" or nothing. If
639you intended only to read from the file, use "E<lt>". See
640L<perlfunc/open>.
e02fdbd2 641
09bef843 642=item Invalid %s attribute: %s
643
644The indicated attribute for a subroutine or variable was not recognized
645by Perl or by a user-supplied handler. See L<attributes>.
646
647=item Invalid %s attributes: %s
648
649The indicated attributes for a subroutine or variable were not recognized
650by Perl or by a user-supplied handler. See L<attributes>.
651
652=item Invalid separator character %s in attribute list
653
654(F) Something other than a comma or whitespace was seen between the
655elements of an attribute list. If the previous attribute
656had a parenthesised parameter list, perhaps that list was terminated
657too soon. See L<attributes>.
658
06eaf0bc 659=item Missing command in piped open
660
661(W) You used the C<open(FH, "| command")> or C<open(FH, "command |")>
662construction, but the command was missing or blank.
663
09bef843 664=item Missing name in "my sub"
665
666(F) The reserved syntax for lexically scoped subroutines requires that they
667have a name with which they can be found.
668
af8c498a 669=item Unrecognized escape \\%c passed through
670
671(W) You used a backslash-character combination which is not recognized
672by Perl.
673
09bef843 674=item Unterminated attribute parameter in attribute list
675
676(F) The lexer saw an opening (left) parenthesis character while parsing an
677attribute list, but the matching closing (right) parenthesis
678character was not found. You may need to add (or remove) a backslash
679character to get your parentheses to balance. See L<attributes>.
680
681=item Unterminated attribute list
682
683(F) The lexer found something other than a simple identifier at the start
684of an attribute, and it wasn't a semicolon or the start of a
685block. Perhaps you terminated the parameter list of the previous attribute
686too soon. See L<attributes>.
687
f10b0346 688=item defined(@array) is deprecated
69794302 689
690(D) defined() is not usually useful on arrays because it checks for an
691undefined I<scalar> value. If you want to see if the array is empty,
692just use C<if (@array) { # not empty }> for example.
693
f10b0346 694=item defined(%hash) is deprecated
69794302 695
696(D) defined() is not usually useful on hashes because it checks for an
697undefined I<scalar> value. If you want to see if the hash is empty,
698just use C<if (%hash) { # not empty }> for example.
699
09bef843 700=item Invalid separator character %s in subroutine attribute list
701
702(F) Something other than a comma or whitespace was seen between the
703elements of a subroutine attribute list. If the previous attribute
704had a parenthesised parameter list, perhaps that list was terminated
705too soon.
706
707=item Unterminated attribute parameter in subroutine attribute list
708
709(F) The lexer saw an opening (left) parenthesis character while parsing a
710subroutine attribute list, but the matching closing (right) parenthesis
711character was not found. You may need to add (or remove) a backslash
712character to get your parentheses to balance.
713
714=item Unterminated subroutine attribute list
715
716(F) The lexer found something other than a simple identifier at the start
717of a subroutine attribute, and it wasn't a semicolon or the start of a
718block. Perhaps you terminated the parameter list of the previous attribute
719too soon.
720
eb6e2d6f 721=item /%s/ should probably be written as "%s"
722
723(W) You have used a pattern where Perl expected to find a string,
724like in the first argument to C<join>. Perl will treat the true
725or false result of matching the pattern against $_ as the string,
726which is probably not what you had in mind.
727
4b4bcab6 728=item /%s/ should probably be written as "%s"
729
730(W) You have used a pattern where Perl expected to find a string,
731like in the first argument to C<join>. Perl will treat the true
732or false result of matching the pattern against $_ as the string,
733which is probably not what you had in mind.
734
ba8251e8 735=head1 Obsolete Diagnostics
736
e02fdbd2 737Todo.
738
04d420f9 739=head1 Configuration Changes
740
27806c82 741=head2 installusrbinperl
742
04d420f9 743You can use "Configure -Uinstallusrbinperl" which causes installperl
744to skip installing perl also as /usr/bin/perl. This is useful if you
745prefer not to modify /usr/bin for some reason or another but harmful
746because many scripts assume to find Perl in /usr/bin/perl.
747
27806c82 748=head2 SOCKS support
555834d1 749
27806c82 750You can use "Configure -Dusesocks" which causes Perl to probe
751for the SOCKS proxy protocol library, http://www.socks.nec.com/
04d420f9 752
ba8251e8 753=head1 BUGS
754
755If you find what you think is a bug, you might check the headers of
14218588 756articles recently posted to the comp.lang.perl.misc newsgroup.
ba8251e8 757There may also be information at http://www.perl.com/perl/, the Perl
758Home Page.
759
760If you believe you have an unreported bug, please run the B<perlbug>
14218588 761program included with your release. Make sure to trim your bug down
ba8251e8 762to a tiny but sufficient test case. Your bug report, along with the
14218588 763output of C<perl -V>, will be sent off to perlbug@perl.com to be
ba8251e8 764analysed by the Perl porting team.
765
766=head1 SEE ALSO
767
768The F<Changes> file for exhaustive details on what changed.
769
770The F<INSTALL> file for how to build Perl.
771
772The F<README> file for general stuff.
773
774The F<Artistic> and F<Copying> files for copyright information.
775
776=head1 HISTORY
777
778Written by Gurusamy Sarathy <F<gsar@umich.edu>>, with many contributions
779from The Perl Porters.
780
781Send omissions or corrections to <F<perlbug@perl.com>>.
782
783=cut