# Remember to update this in Catalyst::Runtime as well!
-our $VERSION = '5.7012';
+our $VERSION = '5.7013';
sub import {
my ( $class, @arguments ) = @_;
contain GET parameter key/value pairs, which will be appended to the URI
in standard fashion.
+Note that uri_for is destructive to the passed hashref. Subsequent calls
+with the same hashref may have unintended results.
+
Instead of C<$path>, you can also optionally pass a C<$action> object
which will be resolved to a path using
C<< $c->dispatcher->uri_for_action >>; if the first element of
$val = '' unless defined $val;
(map {
$_ = "$_";
- utf8::encode( $_ );
+ utf8::encode( $_ ) if utf8::is_utf8($_);
# using the URI::Escape pattern here so utf8 chars survive
s/([^A-Za-z0-9\-_.!~*'() ])/$URI::Escape::escapes{$1}/go;
s/ /+/g;
<p>That really depends on what <b>you</b> want to do.
We do, however, provide you with a few starting points.</p>
<p>If you want to jump right into web development with Catalyst
- you might want want to start with a tutorial.</p>
+ you might want to start with a tutorial.</p>
<pre>perldoc <a href="http://cpansearch.perl.org/dist/Catalyst-Manual/lib/Catalyst/Manual/Tutorial.pod">Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial</a></code>
</pre>
<p>Afterwards you can go on to check out a more complete look at our features.</p>