C<perlio> provides this, but the interface could be a lot more
straightforward.
-=head2 Eliminate need for "use utf8";
-
-While the C<utf8> pragma is autoloaded when necessary, it's still needed
-for things like Unicode characters in a source file. The UTF8 hint can
-always be set to true, but it needs to be set to false when F<utf8.pm>
-is being compiled. (To stop Perl trying to autoload the C<utf8>
-pragma...)
-
-=head2 Autoload byte.pm
+=head2 Autoload bytes.pm
When the lexer sees, for instance, C<bytes::length>, it should
automatically load the C<bytes> pragma.
C<"\xF00"> and C<"\U{F00}"> on P5P I<will> lead to a long and boring
flamewar.
+=head2 Create a char *sv_pvprintify(sv, STRLEN *lenp, UV flags)
+
+For displaying PVs with control characters, embedded nulls, and Unicode.
+This would be useful for printing warnings, or data and regex dumping,
+not_a_number(), and so on.
+
+Requirements: should handle both byte and UTF8 strings. isPRINT()
+characters printed as-is, character less than 256 as \xHH, Unicode
+characters as \x{HHH}. Don't assume ASCII-like, either, get somebody
+on EBCDIC to test the output.
+
+Possible options, controlled by the flags:
+- whitespace (other than ' ' of isPRINT()) printed as-is
+- use isPRINT_LC() instead of isPRINT()
+- print control characters like this: "\cA"
+- print control characters like this: "^A"
+- non-PRINTables printed as '.' instead of \xHH
+- use \OOO instead of \xHH
+- use the C/Perl-metacharacters like \n, \t
+- have a maximum length for the produced string (read it from *lenp)
+- append a "..." to the produced string if the maximum length is exceeded
+- really fancy: print unicode characters as \N{...}
+
=head2 Overloadable regex assertions
This may or may not be possible with the current regular expression
=head2 Unicode regular expression character classes
-They have some tricks Perl doesn't yet implement.
+They have some tricks Perl doesn't yet implement like character
+class subtraction.
http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr18/
Artur Bergman's C<iThreads> module is a start on this, but needs to
be more mature.
+=head2 make perl_clone optionally clone ops
+
+So that pseudoforking, mod_perl, iThreads and nvi will work properly
+(but not as efficiently) until the regex engine is fixed to be threadsafe.
+
=head2 Work out exit/die semantics for threads
=head2 Typed lexicals for compiler
target systems sees is not the same what the build host sees, various
input, output, and (Perl) library files need to be copied back and forth.
+As of 5.8.0 Configure mostly works for cross-compilation
+(used successfully for iPAQ Linux), miniperl gets built,
+but then building DynaLoader (and other extensions) fails
+since MakeMaker knows nothing of cross-compilation.
+(See INSTALL/Cross-compilation for the state of things.)
+
=head2 Perl preprocessor / macros
Source filters help with this, but do not get us all the way. For
There should be a way of restarting the debugger on demand.
+=head2 Test Suite for the Debugger
+
+The debugger is a complex piece of software and fixing something
+here may inadvertently break something else over there. To tame
+this chaotic behaviour, a test suite is necessary.
+
=head2 my sub foo { }
The basic principle is sound, but there are problems with the semantics
It's unclear what this should do or how to do it without breaking old
code.
-=head2 Make tr/// return histogram
+=head2 Make tr/// return histogram of characters in list context
There is a patch for this, but it may require Unicodification.
=head2 "class"-based lexicals
Use flyweight objects, secure hashes or, dare I say it, pseudo-hashes instead.
+(Or whatever will replace pseudohashes in 5.10.)
=head2 byteperl
=head2 Lazy evaluation / tail recursion removal
-C<List::Util> in core gives some of these; tail recursion removal is
-done manually, with C<goto &whoami;>. (However, MJD has found that
-C<goto &whoami> introduces a performance penalty, so maybe there should
-be a way to do this after all: C<sub foo {START: ... goto START;> is
-better.)
+C<List::Util> gives first() (a short-circuiting grep); tail recursion
+removal is done manually, with C<goto &whoami;>. (However, MJD has
+found that C<goto &whoami> introduces a performance penalty, so maybe
+there should be a way to do this after all: C<sub foo {START: ... goto
+START;> is better.)
+
+=head2 Make "use utf8" the default
+
+Because of backward compatibility this is difficult: scripts could not
+contain B<any legacy eight-bit data> (like Latin-1) anymore, even in
+string literals or pod. Also would introduce a measurable slowdown of
+at least few percentages since all regular expression operations would
+be done in full UTF-8. But if you want to try this, add
+-DUSE_UTF8_SCRIPTS to your compilation flags.
+
+