Tie::FileLRUCache
Provides a lightweight Least Recently Used cache of data via
either an object or tied interface. Keys and data are both
allowed to be references and objects as well as scalars. Requires
'Digest::SHA1' to be installed.
The same as lib, but makes relative path absolute
This module is an attempt to enhance Perl's built-in
alarm/$SIG{ALRM} functionality.
Tie::ShareLite provides for a tied hash interface to the IPC::ShareLite module
that is very similar to the one provided by IPC::Shareable. Only hashes can be
tied at this time. The hashes can be of any complexity allowed by the Storable
module, however, there are some caveats covered in the REFERENCES section of
man page.
This module generalises the mechanism of the wantarray function,
allowing a function to determine in some detail how its return value is
going to be immediately used.
This module adds the ability to quickly create new types of tie objects without
creating a complete class. It does so in such a way as to try and make the
programmers life easier when it comes to single-use ties that I find myself
wanting to use from time-to-time.
The Tie::Simple package is actually a front-end to other classes which really do
all the work once tied, but this package does the dwimming to automatically
figure out what you're trying to do.
I've tried to make this as intuitive as possible and dependent on other bits of
Perl where I can to minimize the need for documentation and to make this extra,
extra spiffy.
Tie::ToObject - Tie to an existing object.
A Time::Clock object is a twenty-four hour clock with nanosecond precision
and wrap-around. It is a clock only; it has absolutely no concept of dates.
Vagaries of date/time such as leap seconds and daylight savings time are
unsupported.
Time::Crontab is a parser for crontab date and time field. And it
provides simple matcher.
Allows you to both load one or more modules, while setting up inheritance
from those modules at the same time. Mostly similar in effect to
package Baz;
BEGIN {
require Foo;
require Bar;
push @ISA, qw(Foo Bar);
}