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Revision: 1.17
Committed: Tue Sep 8 16:04:52 2009 UTC (14 years, 10 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.16: +6 -0 lines
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File Contents

# Content
1 =head1 NAME
2
3 common::sense - save a tree AND a kitten, use common::sense!
4
5 =head1 SYNOPSIS
6
7 use common::sense;
8
9 # roughly the same as, with much lower memory usage:
10 #
11 # use strict qw(vars subs);
12 # use feature qw(say state switch);
13 # no warnings;
14 # use warnings qw(FATAL closed threads internal debugging pack substr malloc
15 # unopened portable prototype inplace io pipe unpack regexp
16 # deprecated exiting glob digit printf utf8 layer
17 # reserved parenthesis taint closure semicolon);
18 # no warnings qw(exec newline);
19
20 =head1 DESCRIPTION
21
22 This module implements some sane defaults for Perl programs, as defined by
23 two typical (or not so typical - use your common sense) specimens of Perl
24 coders.
25
26 =over 4
27
28 =item use strict qw(subs vars)
29
30 Using C<use strict> is definitely common sense, but C<use strict
31 'refs'> definitely overshoots its usefulness. After almost two
32 decades of Perl hacking, we decided that it does more harm than being
33 useful. Specifically, constructs like these:
34
35 @{ $var->[0] }
36
37 Must be written like this (or similarly), when C<use strict 'refs'> is in
38 scope, and C<$var> can legally be C<undef>:
39
40 @{ $var->[0] || [] }
41
42 This is annoying, and doesn't shield against obvious mistakes such as
43 using C<"">, so one would even have to write (at least for the time
44 being):
45
46 @{ defined $var->[0] ? $var->[0] : [] }
47
48 ... which nobody with a bit of common sense would consider
49 writing.
50
51 Curiously enough, sometimes perl is not so strict, as this works even with
52 C<use strict> in scope:
53
54 for (@{ $var->[0] }) { ...
55
56 If that isn't hypocrisy! And all that from a mere program!
57
58
59 =item use feature qw(say state given)
60
61 We found it annoying that we always have to enable extra features. If
62 something breaks because it didn't anticipate future changes, so be
63 it. 5.10 broke almost all our XS modules and nobody cared either (or at
64 least I know of nobody who really complained about gratuitous changes -
65 as opposed to bugs).
66
67 Few modules that are not actively maintained work with newer versions of
68 Perl, regardless of use feature or not, so a new major perl release means
69 changes to many modules - new keywords are just the tip of the iceberg.
70
71 If your code isn't alive, it's dead, Jim - be an active maintainer.
72
73
74 =item no warnings, but a lot of new errors
75
76 Ah, the dreaded warnings. Even worse, the horribly dreaded C<-w>
77 switch: Even though we don't care if other people use warnings (and
78 certainly there are useful ones), a lot of warnings simply go against the
79 spirit of Perl.
80
81 Most prominently, the warnings related to C<undef>. There is nothing wrong
82 with C<undef>: it has well-defined semantics, it is useful, and spitting
83 out warnings you never asked for is just evil.
84
85 The result was that every one of our modules did C<no warnings> in the
86 past, to avoid somebody accidentally using and forcing his bad standards
87 on our code. Of course, this switched off all warnings, even the useful
88 ones. Not a good situation. Really, the C<-w> switch should only enable
89 warnings for the main program only.
90
91 Funnily enough, L<perllexwarn> explicitly mentions C<-w> (and not in a
92 favourable way, calling it outright "wrong"), but standard utilities, such
93 as L<prove>, or MakeMaker when running C<make test>, still enable them
94 blindly.
95
96 For version 2 of common::sense, we finally sat down a few hours and went
97 through I<every single warning message>, identifiying - according to
98 common sense - all the useful ones.
99
100 This resulted in the rather impressive list in the SYNOPSIS. When we
101 weren't sure, we didn't include the warning, so the list might grow in
102 the future (we might have made a mistake, too, so the list might shrink
103 as well).
104
105 Note the presence of C<FATAL> in the list: we do not think that the
106 conditions caught by these warnings are worthy of a warning, we I<insist>
107 that they are worthy of I<stopping> your program, I<instantly>. They are
108 I<bugs>!
109
110 Therefore we consider C<common::sense> to be much stricter than C<use
111 warnings>, which is good if you are into strict things (we are not,
112 actually, but these things tend to be subjective).
113
114 After deciding on the list, we ran the module against all of our code that
115 uses C<common::sense> (that is almost all of our code), and found only one
116 occurence where one of them caused a problem: one of elmex's (unreleased)
117 modules contained:
118
119 $fmt =~ s/([^\s\[]*)\[( [^\]]* )\]/\x0$1\x1$2\x0/xgo;
120
121 We quickly agreed that indeed the code should be changed, even though it
122 happened to do the right thing when the warning was switched off.
123
124
125 =item mucho reduced memory usage
126
127 Just using all those pragmas mentioned in the SYNOPSIS together wastes
128 <blink>I<< B<776> kilobytes >></blink> of precious memory in my perl, for
129 I<every single perl process using our code>, which on our machines, is a
130 lot. In comparison, this module only uses I<< B<four> >> kilobytes (I even
131 had to write it out so it looks like more) of memory on the same platform.
132
133 The money/time/effort/electricity invested in these gigabytes (probably
134 petabytes globally!) of wasted memory could easily save 42 trees, and a
135 kitten!
136
137 Unfortunately, until everybods applies more common sense, there will still
138 often be modules that pull in the monster pragmas. But one can hope...
139
140 =cut
141
142 package common::sense;
143
144 our $VERSION = '2.0';
145
146 # paste this into pelr to find bitmask
147
148 # no warnings;
149 # use warnings qw(FATAL closed threads internal debugging pack substr malloc unopened portable prototype
150 # inplace io pipe unpack regexp deprecated exiting glob digit printf
151 # utf8 layer reserved parenthesis taint closure semicolon);
152 # no warnings qw(exec newline);
153 # BEGIN { warn join "", map "\\x$_", unpack "(H2)*", ${^WARNING_BITS}; exit 0 };
154
155 # overload should be included
156
157 sub import {
158 # verified with perl 5.8.0, 5.10.0
159 ${^WARNING_BITS} = "\xfc\x3f\xf3\x00\x0f\xf3\xcf\xc0\xf3\xfc\x33\x03";
160
161 # use strict vars subs
162 $^H |= 0x00000600;
163
164 # use feature
165 $^H{feature_switch} =
166 $^H{feature_say} =
167 $^H{feature_state} = 1;
168 }
169
170 1;
171
172 =back
173
174 =head1 THERE IS NO 'no common::sense'!!!! !!!! !!
175
176 This module doesn't offer an unimport. First of all, it wastes even more
177 memory, second, and more importantly, who with even a bit of common sense
178 would want no common sense?
179
180 =head1 STABILITY AND FUTURE VERSIONS
181
182 Future versions might change just about everything in this module. We
183 might test our modules and upload new ones working with newer versions of
184 this module, and leave you standing in the rain because we didn't tell
185 you. In fact, we did so when switching from 1.0 to 2.0, which enabled gobs
186 of warnings, and made them FATAL on top.
187
188 Maybe we will load some nifty modules that try to emulate C<say> or so
189 with perls older than 5.10 (this module, of course, should work with older
190 perl versions - supporting 5.8 for example is just common sense at this
191 time. Maybe not in the future, but of course you can trust our common
192 sense to be consistent with, uhm, our opinion).
193
194 =head1 WHAT OTHER PEOPLE HAD TO SAY ABOUT THIS MODULE
195
196 apeiron
197
198 "... wow"
199 "I hope common::sense is a joke."
200
201 crab
202
203 "i wonder how it would be if joerg schilling wrote perl modules."
204
205 Adam Kennedy
206
207 "Very interesting, efficient, and potentially something I'd use all the time."
208 [...]
209 "So no common::sense for me, alas."
210
211 H.Merijn Brand
212
213 "Just one more reason to drop JSON::XS from my distribution list"
214
215 Pista Palo
216
217 "Something in short supply these days..."
218
219 Steffen Schwigon
220
221 "This module is quite for sure *not* just a repetition of all the other
222 'use strict, use warnings'-approaches, and it's also not the opposite.
223 [...] And for its chosen middle-way it's also not the worst name ever.
224 And everything is documented."
225
226 BKB
227
228 "[Deleted - thanks to Steffen Schwigon for pointing out this review was
229 in error.]"
230
231 Somni
232
233 "the arrogance of the guy"
234 "I swear he tacked somenoe else's name onto the module
235 just so he could use the royal 'we' in the documentation"
236
237 dngor
238
239 "Heh. '"<elmex at ta-sa.org>"' The quotes are semantic
240 distancing from that e-mail address."
241
242 Jerad Pierce
243
244 "Awful name (not a proper pragma), and the SYNOPSIS doesn't tell you
245 anything either. Nor is it clear what features have to do with "common
246 sense" or discipline."
247
248 acme
249
250 "THERE IS NO 'no common::sense'!!!! !!!! !!"
251
252 apeiron (meta-comment about us commenting^Wquoting his comment)
253
254 How about quoting this: get a clue, you fucktarded amoeba.
255
256 =head1 AUTHOR
257
258 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
259 http://home.schmorp.de/
260
261 Robin Redeker, "<elmex at ta-sa.org>".
262
263 =cut
264