Hierarchy-wide accumulation of list and hash results.
This is a mixin class. By inheriting from it you get two methods that
are able to accumulate hierarchy-wide list and hash results.
Data::JavaScript::Anon provides the ability to dump large
simple data structures to JavaScript. That is, things that
don't need to be a class, or have special methods or whatever.
Data::Page::NoTotalEntries is a generic pager object, so it's very
similar with Data::Page. But so Data::Page::NoTotalEntries doesn't
support $pager->total_entries and other some methods.
This module provides a framework for generating UUIDs (Universally
Unique Identifiers, also known as GUIDs (Globally Unique Identifiers).
A UUID is 128 bits long, and is guaranteed to be different from all
other UUIDs/GUIDs generated until 3400 A.D. Currently many different
technologies rely on UUIDs to provide unique identity for various
software components.
The algorithm for UUID generation, used by this extension, is described
in the Internet Draft "UUIDs and GUIDs" by Paul J. Leach and Rich Salz.
It provides reasonably efficient and reliable framework for generating
UUIDs and supports fairly high allocation rates - 10 million per second
per machine, and therefore, is suitable for identifying both - extremely
short-lived and very persistent objects on a given system as well as
across the network.
Calculates Easter for a given year. Yes, Date::Manip already has
code in it to do this. But Date::Manip is very big, and rather slow.
I needed something faster and smaller, and did not need all that
other stuff.
Data::Throttler::Memcached accepts the same arguments as Data::Throttler,
plus the "cache" argument. The cache argument must be a hashref, which contains
the arguments passed to the cache backend.
This module exports a number of functions that are useful for
validating and converting data types. It is intended for use in
applications where data types are more important than they
typically are in Perl -- e.g., database applications.
DateTime::Calendar::Pataphysical is the implementation of the pataphysical
calendar. Each year in this calendar contains 13 months of 29 days. This
regularity makes this a convenient alternative for the irregular Gregorian
calendar.
No Time Zones
No Geographical Borders
How long is a Swatch .beat? In short, we have divided up the virtual and real
day into 1000 beats. One Swatch beat is the equivalent of 1 minute 26.4
seconds. That means that 12 noon in the old time system is the equivalent of
@500 Swatch .beats.
We are not just creating a new way of measuring time, we are also creating a
new meridian in Biel, Switzerland, home of Swatch.
Biel MeanTime (BMT) is the universal reference for Internet Time. A day in
Internet Time begins at midnight BMT (@000 Swatch .beats) (Central European
Wintertime). The meridian is marked for all to see on the facade of the Swatch
International Headquarters on Jakob-Staempfli Street, Biel, Switzerland. So,
it is the same time all over the world, be it night or day, the era of time
zones has disappeared.
The ELF shell 0.5 takes advantage of a hash based, lazy typed
object oriented architecture, a readline based interactive mode
(35+ builtin commands, with history, completion, regular
expression powered), a scripting mode (sample scripts and
session logs available on this page) and brings more
modification API (relocation tables, .interp, .dynamic,
.dynsym, PAX bits, and +), atomic operations with get/set and
add/sub/mul/div/mod commands, section injection by top (insert
unlimited amount of data in the executable PT_LOAD, even in
non-executable environments), a quiet output for tiny screens,
ELFsh modules support, sophisticated write/printf primitives,
SPARC PLT infection, experimental ET_EXEC relocation and
remapping features, ET_REL injection into ET_EXEC (with bss and
symtab merging support), disassembly (with good resolving) on
i386 binaries with libasm, and much more.