It's one of those things that everyone has always done and can't remember why!
Essentially it is because use
statements allow multiple modules to be in compilation at the same time, so although it looks like a module is complete it may have only just started compiling.
Any code being compiled can check the value of $Module::VERSION
by using the inherited UNIVERSAL::VERSION
subroutine, which is already defined implicitly before a module even starts compiling.
Remember that, if Module.pm
contains
use Another::Module;
Then compilation of Module.pm
is put on hold while Another/Module.pm
is compiled.
There is nothing to stop Another::Module
from doing
use Module 1.5;
which will call Module::VERSION(1.5)
(inherited from UNIVERSAL::VERSION
) to check that $Module::VERSION
is 1.5 or greater.
If $Module::VERSION
is defined outside a BEGIN
block, it won't be set until after all use
statements have been completed, and so too late for other modules to do version checking on Module
.
I hope this is clear. I can't help thinking there must be a simpler explanation, but nothing comes to mind.