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What that is... (Score:1)
DateTime::Locale needs to call stuff as a method, not a function.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Compare:
$ foo->isa('UNIVERSAL') and print "yes\n"
<nothing>
to
$ package foo;
$ foo->isa('UNIVERSAL') and print "yes\n"
yes
I think U::can might get upset in this case... but who knows.
Another possibility... didn't that line use can as a function in an older version of the module? I can't get the warning to happen with the latest DateTime::Locale, but I could about a year ago.
Re: (Score:1)
$ use UNIVERSAL::can;
$ UNIVERSAL->can('can') and print "can can\n";
can can
$ FOOBAR->can('can') or print "cannot can\n";
Called UNIVERSAL::can() as a function, not a method at (eval 59) line 5
cannot can
$ package FOOBAR;
$ FOOBAR->can('can') and print "now can can\n";
now can can
Re: (Score:2)
canis a way to check if the module has been loaded. It's quicker than blindly usingrequirein every case, I think.That smells like a really bad idea (Score:1)
Furthermore pity the poor programmer who has to figure out your code. Do you always put comments on your uses of that idiom? If not, then will it make sense to someone else that you're checki
Re:That smells like a really bad idea (Score:1)
I'll just go hide in a corner then.
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