Name : perl-IO-Interactive
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Version : 1.025
| Vendor : openSUSE
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Release : 1.4
| Date : 2023-07-06 05:07:27
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Group : Unspecified
| Source RPM : perl-IO-Interactive-1.025-1.4.src.rpm
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Size : 0.02 MB
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Packager : https://bugs_opensuse_org
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Summary : Utilities for interactive I/O
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Description :
This module provides three utility subroutines that make it easier to develop interactive applications.
The \'ARGV\' filehandle, the one that \'< >\' or an empty \'readline()\' uses, has various magic associated with it. It\'s not actually opened until you try to read from it. Checking \'-t ARGV\' before you\'ve tried to read from it might give you the wrong answer. Not only that, you might not read from \'ARGV\'. If the value in \'AATTARGV\' is the magic filename \'-\' (a convention to mean the standard filehandle for input or output), \'ARGV\' might actually be \'STDIN\'. You don\'t want to think about all of this. This module is discussed in _Perl Best Practices_ on page 218. Also see the \'ARGV\' entry in perlvar and the \'readline\' entry in perlfunc.
* \'is_interactive()\'
This subroutine returns true if \'*ARGV\' and the currently selected filehandle (usually \'*STDOUT\') are connected to the terminal. The test is considerably more sophisticated than:
-t *ARGV && -t *STDOUT
as it takes into account the magic behaviour of \'*ARGV\'.
You can also pass \'is_interactive\' a writable filehandle, in which case it requires that filehandle be connected to a terminal (instead of the currently selected). The usual suspect here is \'*STDERR\':
if ( is_interactive(*STDERR) ) { carp $warning; }
Note that \'is_interactive\' may return true in a Windows Scheduled Task. See Github #6 (https://github.com/briandfoy/io-interactive/issues/6).
* \'interactive()\'
This subroutine returns \'*STDOUT\' if \'is_interactive\' is true. If \'is_interactive()\' is false, \'interactive\' returns a filehandle that does not print.
This makes it easy to create applications that print out only when the application is interactive:
print {interactive} \"Please enter a value: \"; my $value = < >
You can also pass \'interactive\' a writable filehandle, in which case it writes to that filehandle if it is connected to a terminal (instead of writing to \'*STDOUT\'). Once again, the usual suspect is \'*STDERR\':
print {interactive(*STDERR)} $warning;
* \'busy {...}\'
This subroutine takes a block as its single argument and executes that block. Whilst the block is executed, \'*ARGV\' is temporarily replaced by a closed filehandle. That is, no input from \'*ARGV\' is possible in a \'busy\' block. Furthermore, any attempts to send input into the \'busy\' block through \'*ARGV\' is intercepted and a warning message is printed to \'*STDERR\'. The \'busy\' call returns a filehandle that contains the intercepted input.
A \'busy\' block is therefore useful to prevent attempts at input when the program is busy at some non-interactive task.
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RPM found in directory: /packages/linux-pbone/ftp5.gwdg.de/pub/opensuse/repositories/openSUSE:/ALP:/Experimental:/Slowroll/base.20240429/repo/oss/noarch |