csvdiff is a Perl script to diff/compare two csv files with the possibility
to select the separator.
Differences will be shown like:
"Column XYZ in record 999" is different.
After this, the actual and the expected result for this
column will be shown.
HTML::FormHandler allows you to define HTML form fields and validators.
It can be used for both database and non-database forms, and will
automatically update or create rows in a database. It can also be used
to process structured data that doesn't come from an HTML form.
Set HTTP::Recorder as the user agent for a proxy, and it rewrites HTTP
responses so that additional requests can be recorded.
Then, tell your web browser to use this proxy, and the script will be recorded
in the specified file.
This middleware provides a convenient way to modify requests in flight in Plack
apps. Rewrite rules are simply written in Perl, which means everything that can
be done with mod_rewrite can be done with this middleware much more intuitively
(if in syntactically wordier ways). Its primary purpose is rewriting paths, but
almost anything is possible very easily.
libsynaptics is a library to access the Xorg/XFree86 Synaptics TouchPad
Driver. Programs that want to access the touchpad should make use of this
library and will thereby not interfere with each other. Available parameters
can be read and written and the version of the installed driver can be
determined.
String eval is often used for dynamic code generation. For instance, Moose uses
it heavily, to generate inlined versions of accessors and constructors, which
speeds code up at runtime by a significant amount. String eval is not without
its issues however - it's difficult to control the scope it's used in (which
determines which variables are in scope inside the eval), and it can be quite
slow, especially if doing a large number of evals.
This module attempts to solve both of those problems. It provides an
eval_closure function, which evals a string in a clean environment, other than
a fixed list of specified variables. It also caches the result of the eval, so
that doing repeated evals of the same source, even with a different
environment, will be much faster (but note that the description is part of the
string to be evaled, so it must also be the same (or non-existent) if caching
is to work properly).
Skip test scripts if modules are not available. The requested modules will be
loaded, and optionally have their versions checked. If the module is missing,
the test script will be skipped. Modules that are found but fail to compile will
exit with an error rather than skip.
If used in a subtest, the remainder of the subtest will be skipped.
Skipping will work even if some tests have already been run, or if a plan has
been declared.
Versions are checked via a $module->VERSION($wanted_version) call. Versions must
be provided in a format that will be accepted. No extra processing is done on
them.
If perl is used as a module, the version is checked against the running perl
version ($]). The version can be specified as a number, dotted-decimal string,
v-string, or version object.
If the RELEASE_TESTING environment variable is set, the tests will fail rather
than skip. Subtests will be aborted, but the test script will continue running
after that point.
This module acts as a mix-in, adding the relationship method to
Class::DBI::Loader. Since Class::DBI::Loader knows how to map between
table names and class names, there ought to be no need to replicate
the names. In addition, it is common (but not universal) to want
reverse relationships defined for has-many relationships, and for
has-a relationships to be defined for the linkages surrounding a
many-to-many table.
Provides a simple but, hopefully, extensible way of having 'plugins'
for your module. Obviously this isn't going to be the be all and
end all of solutions but it works for me.
Essentially all it does is export a method into your namespace that
looks through a search path for .pm files and turn those into class
names.
Optionally it instantiates those classes for you.
Perl6::Form - Implements the Perl 6 'form' built-in
This module implements virtually all of the functionality of the
Perl 6 Form.pm module. The only differences are:
Option pairs must be passed in a hash reference;
Array data sources must be passed as array references;
Options specified on the use Perl6::Form line are not (yet)
lexically scoped;
User-defined line-breaking subroutines are passed their data
source as a reference to a scalar;