Lot's of ways to set your modules $VERSION
in perl, some even have advantages. What I don't know is why we do it? I mean the META.yml has a version... which is what cpan
uses? so why do we set it in the module? what's the point?
5 Answers
So you can say
use Module::Name 4.5.6;
And the code will fail if you don't have at least version 4.5.6 of Module::Name installed.
It is also helpful when you need to know what version is installed, you can just say:
perl -MScalar::Util=99999999999999
This is roughly equivalent to
#!/usr/bin/perl
use Scalar::Util 99999999999999;
It will fail (becuase Scalar::Util
is nowhere near version 99999999999999) and tell you the version number. In my case it says:
Scalar::Util version v.Inf required--this is only version 1.22 at
/Users/cowens/apps/perlbrew/perls/perl-5.12.1/lib/5.12.1/Exporter/Heavy.pm
line 120.
BEGIN failed--compilation aborted.
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1I like the one-liner trick. I beats having to type the full module name twice:
perl -MScalar::Util -e "print $Scalar::Util::VERSION"
– toolicSep 3, 2010 at 0:31 -
1@toolic You can save yourself one character when you do that way by using the
VERSION
method, rather than the$VERSION
scalar:perl -MScalar::Util -E "say Scalar::Util->VERSION"
, but yeah, having to repeat yourself sucks. Sep 3, 2010 at 10:33 -
have a look at
pmvers
from the pmtools package if you want to know which version of a package is installed– plusplusSep 3, 2010 at 14:32 -
1@plusplus Will
pmtools
be installed on every machine I got to? No? Thanks, but I will stick with the simple command that works everywhere. Sep 3, 2010 at 15:29 -
2@Ether I guess it saves you from hitting shift, but it doesn't really do anything here. Sep 3, 2010 at 15:32
From perlmodlib: Guidelines for Module Creation:
To be fully compatible with the Exporter and MakeMaker modules you should store your module's version number in a non-my package variable called $VERSION.
To supplement the Answers given by others, here is the link to use MODULE VERSION
So if your module is widely used and actively maintained, people can reference the version easily in their code to activate/deactivate their code depending on what version they use. Just a guess.
$VERSION
is available in code. For example, a user of your module can write
use YourModule 2.3;
to ensure that a minimum version of YourModule is available. This is important for API changes, bug fixes, etc.
This might be a little off topic, but since perl 5.12 you can set your modules VERSION simply by doing
package Foo::Bar 1.23;
See perl 5.12 changes.
The version number must adhere to the "strict" format though, see $version::STRICT in version::Internals.
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Thanks, because my reputations is so low the spam prevention kicks in and denies me more than 1 link pr. post. Sep 3, 2010 at 10:35
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yeah I was aware of that ;) it's why I said there are many ways to define $VERSION. I can think of no less than 4. But I won't start using that syntax until 5.14.1 (is available out of testing in Arch ) at the earliest. Sep 4, 2010 at 1:13
authors/id/A/AU/AUTHOR/Dist-Name-X.Y.meta
, but you need to know the author, distribution and version already to get it so there's a clear chicken/egg problem.