This is a quick implementation of the minimal interface to Readline
libraries.
ReadLine::TTYtter is a fork of the Term::ReadLine::Perl module, allowing
to edit a command line.
This module have UTF-8 support, let erase or repaint the prompt and
to hook a process to further line control.
This package provides a set of modules that form an interactive input buffer
written in plain perl with minimal dependencies. It features almost all
key-bindings described in the posix spec for the sh(1) utility with some
extensions like multi-line editing; this includes a vi-command mode with a
save-buffer (for copy-pasting) and an undo-stack.
Term::Size::Any is a unified interface to retrieve terminal size. It loads one
module of a list of known alternatives, each implementing some way to get the
desired terminal information. This loaded module will actually do the job on
behalf of Term::Size::Any.
Term::Size::Perl is yet another implementation of Term::Size in pure Perl, with
the exception of a C probe run on build time.
This is a subclass of Term::VT102 that will grow the virtual screen to
accomodate arbitrary width and height of text.
The behavior is more similar to the buffer of a scrolling terminal
emulator than to a real terminal, making it useful for output displays
in scrolling media.
Provides basic test runner via use_test_packages by base package or a list
of test packages. Allows you to choose your test paths.
Use Test::Able without a bunch of boilerplate.
Test::CPAN::Meta::YAML was written to ensure that a META.yml file, provided with
a standard distribution uploaded to CPAN, meets the specifications that slowly
being introduced to module uploads, via the use of ExtUtils::MakeMaker,
Module::Build and Module::Install.
See CPAN::Meta for further details of the CPAN Meta Specification.
Test::CPAN::Meta was written to ensure that a META.yml file, provided with a
standard distribution uploaded to CPAN, meets the specifications that are slowly
being introduced to module uploads, via the use of package makers and installers
such as ExtUtils::MakeMaker, Module::Build and Module::Install.
Test Perl Classes the easy way