This module provides filesystem and stream iterator functions. See the
Iterator module for more information about how to use iterators.
This module contains miscellaneous iterator utility functions that I think
aren't as broadly useful as the ones in Iterator::Util. They are here to
keep the size of Iterator::Util down.
For more information on iterators and how to use them, see the Iterator
module documentation.
This module implements many useful functions for creating and manipulating
iterator objects.
An "iterator" is an object, represented as a code block that generates the
"next value" of a sequence, and generally implemented as a closure. For
further information, including a tutorial on using iterator objects, see
the Iterator documentation.
This module is meant to be the definitive implementation of iterators, as
popularized by Mark Jason Dominus's lectures and recent book (Higher Order
Perl, Morgan Kauffman, 2005).
An "iterator" is an object, represented as a code block that generates the
"next value" of a sequence, and generally implemented as a closure. When
you need a value to operate on, you pull it from the iterator. If it
depends on other iterators, it pulls values from them when it needs to.
Iterators can be chained together (see Iterator::Util for functions that
help you do just that), queuing up work to be done but not actually doing
it until a value is needed at the front end of the chain. At that time,
one data value is pulled through the chain.
Iterator.pm provides a class that simplifies creation and use of these
iterator objects. Other Iterator:: modules (see "SEE ALSO") provide many
general-purpose and special-purpose iterator functions.
JIRA is a proprietary bug tracking system from Atlassian
(http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/).
This module implements an Object Oriented wrapper around JIRA's
REST API.
Moreover, it implements some other methods to make it easier to do
some common operations.
JQuery is a frontend for the jQuery language. I use JQuery to refer to the Perl
part or the package, and jQuery to reference the javascript part or the package.
A quote from http://jquery.com: jQuery is a fast, concise, JavaScript Library
that simplifies how you traverse HTML documents, handle events, perform
animations, and add Ajax interactions to your web pages.
Arch is a really nifty revision control system. It's "whole-tree changeset
based" which means, roughly, that it can handle (with atomic commits) file
and directory adds, deletes, and renames cleanly, and that it does branching
simply and easily. Arch is also "distributed" which means, for example that
you can make arch branches of your own from remote projects, even if you do
not have write access to the revision control archives for those projects.
Extract links from JSON via a schema
search nested hashref/arrayref structures using JSONPath
This library is implemented JSON Pointer
(http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6901) and some useful operator from
JSON Patch (http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6902).
JSON Pointer is available to identify a specified value in JSON
document, and it is simillar to XPath. Please read the both of
specifications for details.