[10,"Hello", $obj, [11,12,13,...] ]; # Notice element 4 is an ArrayRef
In order to allow structured validation of, "and then some", arguments, you can
-use the </slurpy> method against a type constraint. For example:
+use the L</slurpy> method against a type constraint. For example:
use MooseX::Types::Structured qw(Tuple slurpy);
HashRef, also including other Dict constraints).
Please note the the technical way this works 'under the hood' is that the
-slurpy keywork transforms the target type constraint into a coderef. Please do
+slurpy keyword transforms the target type constraint into a coderef. Please do
not try to create your own custom coderefs; always use the slurpy method. The
underlying technology may change in the future but the slurpy keyword will be
supported.
=head1 AUTHOR
-John Napiorkowski C<< <jjnapiork@cpan.org> >>
+John Napiorkowski <jjnapiork@cpan.org>
=head1 CONTRIBUTORS
The following people have contributed to this module and agree with the listed
Copyright & license information included below:
- Florian Ragwitz, C<< <rafl@debian.org> >>
- Yuval Kogman, C<< <nothingmuch@woobling.org> >>
+ Florian Ragwitz, <rafl@debian.org>
+ Yuval Kogman, <nothingmuch@woobling.org>
=head1 COPYRIGHT & LICENSE