Name : perl-Path-Class
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Version : 0.25
| Vendor : openSUSE
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Release : 3.1.2
| Date : 2012-09-07 17:59:31
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Group : Development/Libraries/Perl
| Source RPM : perl-Path-Class-0.25-3.1.2.src.rpm
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Size : 0.08 MB
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Packager : http://bugs_opensuse_org
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Summary : Cross-Platform Path Specification Manipulation
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Description :
\'Path::Class\' is a module for manipulation of file and directory specifications (strings describing their locations, like \'\'/home/ken/foo.txt\'\' or \'\'C:\\Windows\\Foo.txt\'\') in a cross-platform manner. It supports pretty much every platform Perl runs on, including Unix, Windows, Mac, VMS, Epoc, Cygwin, OS/2, and NetWare.
The well-known module \'File::Spec\' also provides this service, but it\'s sort of awkward to use well, so people sometimes avoid it, or use it in a way that won\'t actually work properly on platforms significantly different than the ones they\'ve tested their code on.
In fact, \'Path::Class\' uses \'File::Spec\' internally, wrapping all the unsightly details so you can concentrate on your application code. Whereas \'File::Spec\' provides functions for some common path manipulations, \'Path::Class\' provides an object-oriented model of the world of path specifications and their underlying semantics. \'File::Spec\' doesn\'t create any objects, and its classes represent the different ways in which paths must be manipulated on various platforms (not a very intuitive concept). \'Path::Class\' creates objects representing files and directories, and provides methods that relate them to each other. For instance, the following \'File::Spec\' code:
my $absolute = File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute( File::Spec->catfile( AATTdirs, $file ) );
can be written using \'Path::Class\' as
my $absolute = Path::Class::File->new( AATTdirs, $file )->is_absolute;
or even as
my $absolute = file( AATTdirs, $file )->is_absolute;
Similar readability improvements should happen all over the place when using \'Path::Class\'.
Using \'Path::Class\' can help solve real problems in your code too - for instance, how many people actually take the \"volume\" (like \'C:\' on Windows) into account when writing \'File::Spec\'-using code? I thought not. But if you use \'Path::Class\', your file and directory objects will know what volumes they refer to and do the right thing.
The guts of the \'Path::Class\' code live in the \'Path::Class::File\' and \'Path::Class::Dir\' modules, so please see those modules\' documentation for more details about how to use them.
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RPM found in directory: /packages/linux-pbone/ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/repositories/openSUSE:/12.2:/ARM/standard/noarch |
Hmm ... It's impossible ;-) This RPM doesn't exist on any FTP server
Provides :
perl(Path::Class)
perl(Path::Class::Dir)
perl(Path::Class::Entity)
perl(Path::Class::File)
perl-Path-Class
Requires :