From: Jarkko Hietaniemi Date: Tue, 26 Jun 2001 13:37:30 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Doc patch for #10959. X-Git-Url: http://git.shadowcat.co.uk/gitweb/gitweb.cgi?a=commitdiff_plain;h=51d2bbcca5d4cebbfa5f145c68787d3b7bdd42c4;p=p5sagit%2Fp5-mst-13.2.git Doc patch for #10959. p4raw-id: //depot/perl@10961 --- diff --git a/pod/perlfunc.pod b/pod/perlfunc.pod index 67c305c..bb0c195 100644 --- a/pod/perlfunc.pod +++ b/pod/perlfunc.pod @@ -3000,7 +3000,7 @@ with it. B: This is an experimental feature that may be changed or removed in future releases of Perl. It should not be relied upon. -The only currently recognized attribute is C which indicates +The only currently recognized attribute is C which indicates that a single copy of the global is to be used by all interpreters should the program happen to be running in a multi-interpreter environment. (The default behaviour would be for each interpreter to @@ -3008,13 +3008,13 @@ have its own copy of the global.) In such an environment, this attribute also has the effect of making the global readonly. Examples: - our @EXPORT : shared = qw(foo); - our %EXPORT_TAGS : shared = (bar => [qw(aa bb cc)]); - our $VERSION : shared = "1.00"; + our @EXPORT : unique = qw(foo); + our %EXPORT_TAGS : unique = (bar => [qw(aa bb cc)]); + our $VERSION : unique = "1.00"; Multi-interpreter environments can come to being either through the fork() emulation on Windows platforms, or by embedding perl in a -multi-threaded application. The C attribute does nothing in +multi-threaded application. The C attribute does nothing in all other environments. =item pack TEMPLATE,LIST