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Name: perl-Carp-Assert | Distribution: openSUSE Tumbleweed |
Version: 0.22 | Vendor: openSUSE |
Release: 1.7 | Build date: Sun Mar 5 04:06:07 2023 |
Group: Unspecified | Build host: reproducible |
Size: 27682 | Source RPM: perl-Carp-Assert-0.22-1.7.src.rpm |
Packager: https://bugs.opensuse.org | |
Url: https://metacpan.org/release/Carp-Assert | |
Summary: Executable comments |
"We are ready for any unforseen event that may or may not occur." - Dan Quayle Carp::Assert is intended for a purpose like the ANSI C library at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assert.h. If you're already familiar with assert.h, then you can probably skip this and go straight to the FUNCTIONS section. Assertions are the explicit expressions of your assumptions about the reality your program is expected to deal with, and a declaration of those which it is not. They are used to prevent your program from blissfully processing garbage inputs (garbage in, garbage out becomes garbage in, error out) and to tell you when you've produced garbage output. (If I was going to be a cynic about Perl and the user nature, I'd say there are no user inputs but garbage, and Perl produces nothing but...) An assertion is used to prevent the impossible from being asked of your code, or at least tell you when it does. For example: sub my_sqrt { my($num) = shift; assert($num >= 0); return sqrt $num; } The assertion will warn you if a negative number was handed to your subroutine, a reality the routine has no intention of dealing with. An assertion should also be used as something of a reality check, to make sure what your code just did really did happen: open(FILE, $filename) || die $!; @stuff = <FILE>; @stuff = do_something(@stuff); assert(@stuff > 0); The assertion makes sure you have some @stuff at the end. Maybe the file was empty, maybe do_something() returned an empty list... either way, the assert() will give you a clue as to where the problem lies, rather than 50 lines down at when you wonder why your program isn't printing anything. Since assertions are designed for debugging and will remove themelves from production code, your assertions should be carefully crafted so as to not have any side-effects, change any variables, or otherwise have any effect on your program. Here is an example of a bad assertation: assert($error = 1 if $king ne 'Henry'); # Bad! It sets an error flag which may then be used somewhere else in your program. When you shut off your assertions with the $DEBUG flag, $error will no longer be set. Here's another example of *bad* use: assert($next_pres ne 'Dan Quayle' or goto Canada); # Bad! This assertion has the side effect of moving to Canada should it fail. This is a very bad assertion since error handling should not be placed in an assertion, nor should it have side-effects. In short, an assertion is an executable comment. For instance, instead of writing this $life = begin_life(); you'd replace the comment with an assertion which *enforces* the comment. $life = begin_life(); assert( $life =~ /!$/ );
Artistic-1.0 OR GPL-1.0-or-later
* Sun Mar 05 2023 Tina Müller <timueller+perl@suse.de> - updated to 0.22 see /usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Carp-Assert/Changes 0.22 2023-03-04 - Removed shouldn't. As of perl 5.37.9 use of apostrophe as a package separator warns. As of 5.42 it will be removed. Really Schwern, you should have resisted the urge. :-) - Changed the Makefile.PL metadata to point at my repo, not the Schwern repo. * Mon Apr 13 2015 coolo@suse.com - updated to 0.21 see /usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Carp-Assert/Changes * Thu Nov 17 2011 coolo@suse.com - regenerate with cpanspec 1.78.05 * Tue Aug 30 2011 andrea.turrini@gmail.com - standardized "Authors:" format in description of perl-Carp-Assert.spec * Tue Nov 30 2010 coolo@novell.com - switch to perl_requires macro * Tue Mar 09 2010 chris@computersalat.de - cleanup spec o dep perl-macro o Provides * Sun Jan 10 2010 jengelh@medozas.de - enable parallel build * Sat Jul 25 2009 chris@computersalat.de - spec mods * removed ^---------- * removed ^#--------- * Sun Jun 28 2009 chris@computersalat.de - added perl-macros o autogen filelist with perl_gen_filelist - spec mods o fixed deps * Tue Jan 09 2007 anicka@suse.cz - update to 0.20 * The tests will no longer fail should the user have NDEBUG or PERL_NDEBUG environment variables set * Update the license link to point to the whole Perl license, not just the Artistic license. * Fixed installation for those who have Pod::Tests but pod2test is not in their PATH as some CPAN shell configurations do.
/usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.40.0/Carp /usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.40.0/Carp/Assert.pm /usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Carp-Assert /usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Carp-Assert/Changes /usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Carp-Assert/README /usr/share/man/man3/Carp::Assert.3pm.gz
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Fabrice Bellet, Fri Jan 31 23:50:31 2025