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7711098a GS |
1 | =head1 NAME |
2 | ||
3 | perltodo - Perl TO-DO List | |
4 | ||
5 | =head1 DESCRIPTION | |
e50bb9a1 | 6 | |
722d2a37 | 7 | This is a list of wishes for Perl. Send updates to |
e50bb9a1 GS |
8 | I<perl5-porters@perl.org>. If you want to work on any of these |
9 | projects, be sure to check the perl5-porters archives for past ideas, | |
10 | flames, and propaganda. This will save you time and also prevent you | |
11 | from implementing something that Larry has already vetoed. One set | |
12 | of archives may be found at: | |
13 | ||
14 | http://www.xray.mpe.mpg.de/mailing-lists/perl5-porters/ | |
15 | ||
722d2a37 | 16 | =head1 To do during 5.6.x |
e50bb9a1 | 17 | |
722d2a37 | 18 | =head2 Support for I/O disciplines |
e50bb9a1 | 19 | |
722d2a37 SC |
20 | C<perlio> provides this, but the interface could be a lot more |
21 | straightforward. | |
e50bb9a1 | 22 | |
4b3b956a | 23 | =head2 Autoload bytes.pm |
e50bb9a1 | 24 | |
4b3b956a JH |
25 | When the lexer sees, for instance, C<bytes::length>, it should |
26 | automatically load the C<bytes> pragma. | |
27 | ||
28 | =head2 Make "\u{XXXX}" et al work | |
29 | ||
30 | Danger, Will Robinson! Discussing the semantics of C<"\x{F00}">, | |
31 | C<"\xF00"> and C<"\U{F00}"> on P5P I<will> lead to a long and boring | |
32 | flamewar. | |
e50bb9a1 | 33 | |
c6287c21 | 34 | =head2 Create a char *sv_pvprintify(sv, STRLEN *lenp, UV flags) |
0562c0e3 JH |
35 | |
36 | For displaying PVs with control characters, embedded nulls, and Unicode. | |
37 | This would be useful for printing warnings, or data and regex dumping, | |
38 | not_a_number(), and so on. | |
39 | ||
1e54db1a | 40 | Requirements: should handle both byte and UTF-8 strings. isPRINT() |
f35392ae | 41 | characters printed as-is, character less than 256 as \xHH, Unicode |
0661e9a4 JH |
42 | characters as \x{HHH}. Don't assume ASCII-like, either, get somebody |
43 | on EBCDIC to test the output. | |
f35392ae JH |
44 | |
45 | Possible options, controlled by the flags: | |
0661e9a4 | 46 | - whitespace (other than ' ' of isPRINT()) printed as-is |
f35392ae JH |
47 | - use isPRINT_LC() instead of isPRINT() |
48 | - print control characters like this: "\cA" | |
49 | - print control characters like this: "^A" | |
0661e9a4 JH |
50 | - non-PRINTables printed as '.' instead of \xHH |
51 | - use \OOO instead of \xHH | |
52 | - use the C/Perl-metacharacters like \n, \t | |
f35392ae JH |
53 | - have a maximum length for the produced string (read it from *lenp) |
54 | - append a "..." to the produced string if the maximum length is exceeded | |
0661e9a4 | 55 | - really fancy: print unicode characters as \N{...} |
f35392ae | 56 | |
1626a787 JH |
57 | NOTE: pv_display(), pv_uni_display(), sv_uni_display() are already |
58 | doing something like the above. | |
c5fc23ff | 59 | |
722d2a37 | 60 | =head2 Overloadable regex assertions |
e50bb9a1 | 61 | |
722d2a37 SC |
62 | This may or may not be possible with the current regular expression |
63 | engine. The idea is that, for instance, C<\b> needs to be | |
64 | algorithmically computed if you're dealing with Thai text. Hence, the | |
65 | B<\b> assertion wants to be overloaded by a function. | |
e50bb9a1 | 66 | |
776f8809 JH |
67 | =head2 Unicode |
68 | ||
69 | =over 4 | |
70 | ||
71 | =item * | |
e50bb9a1 | 72 | |
f34dec15 JH |
73 | Allow for long form of the General Category Properties, e.g |
74 | C<\p{IsOpenPunctuation}>, not just the abbreviated form, e.g. | |
75 | C<\p{IsPs}>. | |
76 | ||
77 | =item * | |
78 | ||
1ac13f9a JH |
79 | Allow for the metaproperties: C<XID Start>, C<XID Continue>, |
80 | C<NF*_NO>, C<NF*_MAYBE> (require the DerivedCoreProperties and | |
81 | DerviceNormalizationProperties files). | |
f34dec15 | 82 | |
71d929cb JH |
83 | There are also multiple value properties still unimplemented: |
84 | C<Numeric Type>, C<East Asian Width>. | |
f34dec15 JH |
85 | |
86 | =item * | |
87 | ||
722d2a37 | 88 | Case Mappings? http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr21/ |
e50bb9a1 | 89 | |
d8b6afd3 JH |
90 | Mostly implemented (all of 1:1, 1:N, N:1), only the "final sigma" |
91 | and locale-specific rules of SpecCase are not implemented. | |
ac1256e8 | 92 | |
776f8809 | 93 | =item * |
e50bb9a1 | 94 | |
8d3e8850 | 95 | UTF-8 identifier names should probably be canonicalized: NFC? |
e50bb9a1 | 96 | |
20eafb1c JH |
97 | =item * |
98 | ||
99 | UTF-8 in package names and sub names? The first is problematic | |
8d3e8850 | 100 | because of the mapping to pathnames, ditto for the second one if |
8f8cf39c JH |
101 | one does autosplitting, for example. Some of this works already |
102 | in 5.8.0, but essentially it is unsupported. Constructs to consider, | |
103 | at the very least: | |
104 | ||
105 | use utf8; | |
106 | package UnicodePackage; | |
107 | sub new { bless {}, shift }; | |
108 | sub UnicodeMethod1 { ... $_[0]->UnicodeMethod2(...) ... } | |
109 | sub UnicodeMethod2 { ... } # in here caller(0) should contain Unicode | |
110 | ... | |
111 | package main; | |
112 | my $x = UnicodePackage->new; | |
113 | print ref $x, "\n"; # should be Unicode | |
114 | $x->UnicodeMethod1(...); | |
115 | my $y = UnicodeMethod3 UnicodePackage ...; | |
116 | ||
117 | In the above all I<UnicodeXxx> contain (identifier-worthy) characters | |
118 | beyond the code point 255, for example 256. Wherever package/class or | |
119 | subroutine names can be returned needs to be checked for Unicodeness. | |
e50bb9a1 | 120 | |
776f8809 JH |
121 | =back |
122 | ||
123 | See L<perlunicode/UNICODE REGULAR EXPRESSION SUPPORT LEVEL> for what's | |
f34dec15 JH |
124 | there and what's missing. Almost all of Levels 2 and 3 is missing, |
125 | and as of 5.8.0 not even all of Level 1 is there. | |
8d3e8850 | 126 | They have some tricks Perl doesn't yet implement, such as character |
20eafb1c JH |
127 | class subtraction. |
128 | ||
129 | http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr18/ | |
776f8809 | 130 | |
56490ca2 | 131 | =head2 Work out exit/die semantics for threads |
e50bb9a1 | 132 | |
97b33923 JH |
133 | There are some suggestions to use for example something like this: |
134 | default to "(thread exiting first will) wait for the other threads | |
135 | until up to 60 seconds". Other possibilities: | |
136 | ||
137 | use threads wait => 0; | |
138 | ||
139 | Do not wait. | |
140 | ||
141 | use threads wait_for => 10; | |
142 | ||
143 | Wait up to 10 seconds. | |
144 | ||
145 | use threads wait_for => -1; | |
146 | ||
147 | Wait for ever. | |
e50bb9a1 | 148 | |
56490ca2 | 149 | http://archive.develooper.com/perl5-porters@perl.org/msg79618.html |
dd0afe54 | 150 | |
b2f9d798 | 151 | =head2 Better support for nonpreemptive threading systems like GNU pth |
dd0afe54 | 152 | |
b2f9d798 JH |
153 | To better support nonpreemptive threading systems, perhaps some of the |
154 | blocking functions internally in Perl should do a yield() before a | |
155 | blocking call. (Now certain threads tests ({basic,list,thread.t}) | |
156 | simply do a yield() before they sleep() to give nonpreemptive thread | |
157 | implementations a chance). | |
cfde3649 | 158 | |
b2f9d798 JH |
159 | In some cases, like the GNU pth, which has replacement functions that |
160 | are nonblocking (pth_select instead of select), maybe Perl should be | |
161 | using them instead when built for threading. | |
e50bb9a1 | 162 | |
722d2a37 | 163 | =head2 Typed lexicals for compiler |
e50bb9a1 | 164 | |
722d2a37 | 165 | =head2 Compiler workarounds for Win32 |
e50bb9a1 | 166 | |
722d2a37 | 167 | =head2 AUTOLOADing in the compiler |
e50bb9a1 | 168 | |
722d2a37 | 169 | =head2 Fixing comppadlist when compiling |
e50bb9a1 | 170 | |
722d2a37 | 171 | =head2 Cleaning up exported namespace |
e50bb9a1 | 172 | |
722d2a37 | 173 | =head2 Complete signal handling |
e50bb9a1 | 174 | |
722d2a37 SC |
175 | Add C<PERL_ASYNC_CHECK> to opcodes which loop; replace C<sigsetjmp> with |
176 | C<sigjmp>; check C<wait> for signal safety. | |
e50bb9a1 | 177 | |
722d2a37 | 178 | =head2 Out-of-source builds |
e50bb9a1 | 179 | |
722d2a37 | 180 | This was done for 5.6.0, but needs reworking for 5.7.x |
e50bb9a1 | 181 | |
722d2a37 | 182 | =head2 POSIX realtime support |
e50bb9a1 | 183 | |
722d2a37 SC |
184 | POSIX 1003.1 1996 Edition support--realtime stuff: POSIX semaphores, |
185 | message queues, shared memory, realtime clocks, timers, signals (the | |
186 | metaconfig units mostly already exist for these) | |
e50bb9a1 | 187 | |
722d2a37 | 188 | =head2 UNIX98 support |
e50bb9a1 | 189 | |
722d2a37 | 190 | Reader-writer locks, realtime/asynchronous IO |
e50bb9a1 | 191 | |
722d2a37 | 192 | =head2 IPv6 Support |
e50bb9a1 | 193 | |
fe854a6f | 194 | There are non-core modules, such as C<Socket6>, but these will need |
722d2a37 SC |
195 | integrating when IPv6 actually starts to really happen. See RFC 2292 |
196 | and RFC 2553. | |
e50bb9a1 | 197 | |
722d2a37 | 198 | =head2 Long double conversion |
e50bb9a1 | 199 | |
722d2a37 | 200 | Floating point formatting is still causing some weird test failures. |
e50bb9a1 | 201 | |
722d2a37 | 202 | =head2 Locales |
e50bb9a1 | 203 | |
722d2a37 SC |
204 | Locales and Unicode interact with each other in unpleasant ways. |
205 | One possible solution would be to adopt/support ICU: | |
e50bb9a1 | 206 | |
d085b7b6 | 207 | http://oss.software.ibm.com/icu/index.html |
e50bb9a1 | 208 | |
722d2a37 | 209 | =head2 Arithmetic on non-Arabic numerals |
e50bb9a1 | 210 | |
722d2a37 | 211 | C<[1234567890]> aren't the only numerals any more. |
e50bb9a1 | 212 | |
722d2a37 | 213 | =head2 POSIX Unicode character classes |
e50bb9a1 | 214 | |
97b33923 | 215 | (C<[=a=]> for equivalence classes, C<[.ch.]> for collation.) |
722d2a37 | 216 | These are dependent on Unicode normalization and collation. |
e50bb9a1 | 217 | |
722d2a37 | 218 | =head2 Factoring out common suffices/prefices in regexps (trie optimization) |
c47ff5f1 | 219 | |
722d2a37 SC |
220 | Currently, the user has to optimize C<foo|far> and C<foo|goo> into |
221 | C<f(?:oo|ar)> and C<[fg]oo> by hand; this could be done automatically. | |
e50bb9a1 | 222 | |
722d2a37 | 223 | =head2 Security audit shipped utilities |
e50bb9a1 | 224 | |
722d2a37 SC |
225 | All the code we ship with Perl needs to be sensible about temporary file |
226 | handling, locking, input validation, and so on. | |
e50bb9a1 | 227 | |
c8d2171d JH |
228 | =head2 Sort out the uid-setting mess |
229 | ||
230 | Currently there are several problems with the setting of uids ($<, $> | |
231 | for the real and effective uids). Firstly, what exactly setuid() call | |
232 | gets invoked in which platform is simply a big mess that needs to be | |
233 | untangled. Secondly, the effects are apparently not standard across | |
234 | platforms, (if you first set $< and then $>, or vice versa, being | |
666f95b9 | 235 | uid == euid == zero, or just euid == zero, or as a normal user, what are |
c8d2171d JH |
236 | the results?). The test suite not (usually) being run as root means |
237 | that these things do not get much testing. Thirdly, there's quite | |
238 | often a third uid called saved uid, and Perl has no knowledge of that | |
239 | feature in any way. (If one has the saved uid of zero, one can get | |
240 | back any real and effective uids.) As an example, to change also the | |
241 | saved uid, one needs to set the real and effective uids B<twice>-- in | |
242 | most systems, that is: in HP-UX that doesn't seem to work. | |
666f95b9 | 243 | |
722d2a37 | 244 | =head2 Custom opcodes |
e50bb9a1 | 245 | |
722d2a37 SC |
246 | Have a way to introduce user-defined opcodes without the subroutine call |
247 | overhead of an XSUB; the user should be able to create PP code. Simon | |
248 | Cozens has some ideas on this. | |
e50bb9a1 | 249 | |
722d2a37 | 250 | =head2 DLL Versioning |
e50bb9a1 | 251 | |
d1be9408 | 252 | Windows needs a way to know what version of an XS or C<libperl> DLL it's |
722d2a37 | 253 | loading. |
e50bb9a1 | 254 | |
722d2a37 | 255 | =head2 Introduce @( and @) |
e50bb9a1 | 256 | |
722d2a37 SC |
257 | C<$(> may return "foo bar baz". Unfortunately, since groups can |
258 | theoretically have spaces in their names, this could be one, two or | |
259 | three groups. | |
e50bb9a1 | 260 | |
722d2a37 | 261 | =head2 Floating point handling |
e50bb9a1 | 262 | |
722d2a37 SC |
263 | C<NaN> and C<inf> support is particularly troublesome. |
264 | (fp_classify(), fp_class(), fp_class_d(), class(), isinf(), | |
265 | isfinite(), finite(), isnormal(), unordered(), <ieeefp.h>, | |
266 | <fp_class.h> (there are metaconfig units for all these) (I think), | |
267 | fp_setmask(), fp_getmask(), fp_setround(), fp_getround() | |
268 | (no metaconfig units yet for these). Don't forget finitel(), fp_classl(), | |
269 | fp_class_l(), (yes, both do, unfortunately, exist), and unorderedl().) | |
e50bb9a1 | 270 | |
210b36aa | 271 | As of Perl 5.6.1, there is a Perl macro, Perl_isnan(). |
e50bb9a1 | 272 | |
722d2a37 | 273 | =head2 IV/UV preservation |
e50bb9a1 | 274 | |
722d2a37 SC |
275 | Nicholas Clark has done a lot of work on this, but work is continuing. |
276 | C<+>, C<-> and C<*> work, but guards need to be in place for C<%>, C</>, | |
277 | C<&>, C<oct>, C<hex> and C<pack>. | |
e50bb9a1 | 278 | |
722d2a37 | 279 | =head2 Replace pod2html with something using Pod::Parser |
83df6a1d | 280 | |
fe854a6f | 281 | The CPAN module C<Marek::Pod::Html> may be a more suitable basis for a |
97b33923 | 282 | C<pod2html> converter; the current one duplicates the functionality |
722d2a37 SC |
283 | abstracted in C<Pod::Parser>, which makes updating the POD language |
284 | difficult. | |
e50bb9a1 | 285 | |
722d2a37 | 286 | =head2 Automate module testing on CPAN |
e50bb9a1 | 287 | |
722d2a37 SC |
288 | When a new Perl is being beta tested, porters have to manually grab |
289 | their favourite CPAN modules and test them - this should be done | |
290 | automatically. | |
e50bb9a1 | 291 | |
722d2a37 | 292 | =head2 sendmsg and recvmsg |
83df6a1d | 293 | |
722d2a37 SC |
294 | We have all the other BSD socket functions but these. There are |
295 | metaconfig units for these functions which can be added. To avoid these | |
296 | being new opcodes, a solution similar to the way C<sockatmark> was added | |
297 | would be preferable. (Autoload the C<IO::whatever> module.) | |
e50bb9a1 | 298 | |
722d2a37 | 299 | =head2 Rewrite perlre documentation |
e50bb9a1 | 300 | |
722d2a37 SC |
301 | The new-style patterns need full documentation, and the whole document |
302 | needs to be a lot clearer. | |
e50bb9a1 | 303 | |
722d2a37 | 304 | =head2 Convert example code to IO::Handle filehandles |
e50bb9a1 | 305 | |
722d2a37 | 306 | =head2 Document Win32 choices |
e50bb9a1 | 307 | |
722d2a37 | 308 | =head2 Check new modules |
e50bb9a1 | 309 | |
722d2a37 | 310 | =head2 Make roffitall find pods and libs itself |
e50bb9a1 | 311 | |
722d2a37 | 312 | Simon Cozens has done some work on this but it needs a rethink. |
e50bb9a1 | 313 | |
722d2a37 | 314 | =head1 To do at some point |
e50bb9a1 | 315 | |
722d2a37 SC |
316 | These are ideas that have been regularly tossed around, that most |
317 | people believe should be done maybe during 5.8.x | |
e50bb9a1 | 318 | |
722d2a37 | 319 | =head2 Remove regular expression recursion |
e50bb9a1 | 320 | |
722d2a37 SC |
321 | Because the regular expression engine is recursive, badly designed |
322 | expressions can lead to lots of recursion filling up the stack. Ilya | |
323 | claims that it is easy to convert the engine to being iterative, but | |
324 | this has still not yet been done. There may be a regular expression | |
325 | engine hit squad meeting at TPC5. | |
e50bb9a1 | 326 | |
722d2a37 | 327 | =head2 Memory leaks after failed eval |
e50bb9a1 | 328 | |
722d2a37 SC |
329 | Perl will leak memory if you C<eval "hlagh hlagh hlagh hlagh">. This is |
330 | partially because it attempts to build up an op tree for that code and | |
331 | doesn't properly free it. The same goes for non-syntactically-correct | |
332 | regular expressions. Hugo looked into this, but decided it needed a | |
333 | mark-and-sweep GC implementation. | |
e50bb9a1 | 334 | |
722d2a37 SC |
335 | Alan notes that: The basic idea was to extend the parser token stack |
336 | (C<YYSTYPE>) to include a type field so we knew what sort of thing each | |
210b36aa | 337 | element of the stack was. The F<perly.c> code would then have to be |
722d2a37 SC |
338 | postprocessed to record the type of each entry on the stack as it was |
339 | created, and the parser patched so that it could unroll the stack | |
340 | properly on error. | |
e50bb9a1 | 341 | |
722d2a37 SC |
342 | This is possible to do, but would be pretty messy to implement, as it |
343 | would rely on even more sed hackery in F<perly.fixer>. | |
e50bb9a1 | 344 | |
722d2a37 | 345 | =head2 bitfields in pack |
e50bb9a1 | 346 | |
722d2a37 | 347 | =head2 Cross compilation |
e50bb9a1 | 348 | |
722d2a37 | 349 | Make Perl buildable with a cross-compiler. This will play havoc with |
da75cd15 | 350 | Configure, which needs to know how the target system will respond to |
722d2a37 SC |
351 | its tests; maybe C<microperl> will be a good starting point here. |
352 | (Indeed, Bart Schuller reports that he compiled up C<microperl> for | |
353 | the Agenda PDA and it works fine.) A really big spanner in the works | |
354 | is the bootstrapping build process of Perl: if the filesystem the | |
355 | target systems sees is not the same what the build host sees, various | |
356 | input, output, and (Perl) library files need to be copied back and forth. | |
e50bb9a1 | 357 | |
f86a8bc5 JH |
358 | As of 5.8.0 Configure mostly works for cross-compilation |
359 | (used successfully for iPAQ Linux), miniperl gets built, | |
360 | but then building DynaLoader (and other extensions) fails | |
361 | since MakeMaker knows nothing of cross-compilation. | |
362 | (See INSTALL/Cross-compilation for the state of things.) | |
363 | ||
722d2a37 | 364 | =head2 Perl preprocessor / macros |
e50bb9a1 | 365 | |
722d2a37 SC |
366 | Source filters help with this, but do not get us all the way. For |
367 | instance, it should be possible to implement the C<??> operator somehow; | |
368 | source filters don't (quite) cut it. | |
e50bb9a1 | 369 | |
722d2a37 | 370 | =head2 Perl lexer in Perl |
a45bd81d | 371 | |
722d2a37 | 372 | Damian Conway is planning to work on this, but it hasn't happened yet. |
e50bb9a1 | 373 | |
722d2a37 | 374 | =head2 Using POSIX calls internally |
e50bb9a1 | 375 | |
210b36aa | 376 | When faced with a BSD vs. SysV -style interface to some library or |
722d2a37 SC |
377 | system function, perl's roots show in that it typically prefers the BSD |
378 | interface (but falls back to the SysV one). One example is getpgrp(). | |
379 | Other examples include C<memcpy> vs. C<bcopy>. There are others, mostly in | |
210b36aa | 380 | F<pp_sys.c>. |
e50bb9a1 | 381 | |
722d2a37 SC |
382 | Mostly, this item is a suggestion for which way to start a journey into |
383 | an C<#ifdef> forest. It is not primarily a suggestion to eliminate any of | |
384 | the C<#ifdef> forests. | |
e50bb9a1 | 385 | |
722d2a37 SC |
386 | POSIX calls are perhaps more likely to be portable to unexpected |
387 | architectures. They are also perhaps more likely to be actively | |
388 | maintained by a current vendor. They are also perhaps more likely to be | |
389 | available in thread-safe versions, if appropriate. | |
e50bb9a1 | 390 | |
722d2a37 | 391 | =head2 -i rename file when changed |
e50bb9a1 | 392 | |
722d2a37 SC |
393 | It's only necessary to rename a file when inplace editing when the file |
394 | has changed. Detecting a change is perhaps the difficult bit. | |
e50bb9a1 | 395 | |
722d2a37 | 396 | =head2 All ARGV input should act like E<lt>E<gt> |
e50bb9a1 | 397 | |
2d84a16a DM |
398 | eg C<read(ARGV, ...)> doesn't currently read across multiple files. |
399 | ||
722d2a37 | 400 | =head2 Support for rerunning debugger |
e50bb9a1 | 401 | |
722d2a37 | 402 | There should be a way of restarting the debugger on demand. |
e50bb9a1 | 403 | |
c6287c21 JH |
404 | =head2 Test Suite for the Debugger |
405 | ||
406 | The debugger is a complex piece of software and fixing something | |
407 | here may inadvertently break something else over there. To tame | |
408 | this chaotic behaviour, a test suite is necessary. | |
409 | ||
722d2a37 | 410 | =head2 my sub foo { } |
c47ff5f1 | 411 | |
722d2a37 SC |
412 | The basic principle is sound, but there are problems with the semantics |
413 | of self-referential and mutually referential lexical subs: how to | |
414 | declare the subs? | |
c47ff5f1 | 415 | |
722d2a37 | 416 | =head2 One-pass global destruction |
c47ff5f1 | 417 | |
722d2a37 SC |
418 | Sweeping away all the allocated memory in one go is a laudable goal, but |
419 | it's difficult and in most cases, it's easier to let the memory get | |
420 | freed by exiting. | |
e50bb9a1 | 421 | |
722d2a37 | 422 | =head2 Rewrite regexp parser |
e50bb9a1 | 423 | |
722d2a37 SC |
424 | There has been talk recently of rewriting the regular expression parser |
425 | to produce an optree instead of a chain of opcodes; it's unclear whether | |
426 | or not this would be a win. | |
e50bb9a1 | 427 | |
722d2a37 | 428 | =head2 Cache recently used regexps |
e50bb9a1 | 429 | |
722d2a37 | 430 | This is to speed up |
e50bb9a1 | 431 | |
722d2a37 SC |
432 | for my $re (@regexps) { |
433 | $matched++ if /$re/ | |
434 | } | |
e50bb9a1 | 435 | |
722d2a37 SC |
436 | C<qr//> already gives us a way of saving compiled regexps, but it should |
437 | be done automatically. | |
e50bb9a1 | 438 | |
722d2a37 | 439 | =head2 Cross-compilation support |
04c70446 | 440 | |
722d2a37 SC |
441 | Bart Schuller reports that using C<microperl> and a cross-compiler, he |
442 | got Perl working on the Agenda PDA. However, one cannot build a full | |
443 | Perl because Configure needs to get the results for the target platform, | |
444 | for the host. | |
e50bb9a1 | 445 | |
722d2a37 | 446 | =head2 Bit-shifting bitvectors |
e50bb9a1 | 447 | |
722d2a37 | 448 | Given: |
e50bb9a1 | 449 | |
722d2a37 | 450 | vec($v, 1000, 1) = 1; |
e50bb9a1 | 451 | |
722d2a37 | 452 | One should be able to do |
e50bb9a1 | 453 | |
722d2a37 | 454 | $v <<= 1; |
e50bb9a1 | 455 | |
722d2a37 | 456 | and have the 999'th bit set. |
e50bb9a1 | 457 | |
722d2a37 SC |
458 | Currently if you try with shift bitvectors you shift the NV/UV, instead |
459 | of the bits in the PV. Not very logical. | |
e50bb9a1 | 460 | |
722d2a37 | 461 | =head2 debugger pragma |
e50bb9a1 | 462 | |
722d2a37 SC |
463 | The debugger is implemented in Perl in F<perl5db.pl>; turning it into a |
464 | pragma should be easy, but making it work lexically might be more | |
465 | difficult. Fiddling with C<$^P> would be necessary. | |
e50bb9a1 | 466 | |
722d2a37 | 467 | =head2 use less pragma |
e50bb9a1 | 468 | |
722d2a37 SC |
469 | Identify areas where speed/memory tradeoffs can be made and have a hint |
470 | to switch between them. | |
e50bb9a1 | 471 | |
722d2a37 | 472 | =head2 switch structures |
e50bb9a1 | 473 | |
722d2a37 SC |
474 | Although we have C<Switch.pm> in core, Larry points to the dormant |
475 | C<nswitch> and C<cswitch> ops in F<pp.c>; using these opcodes would be | |
476 | much faster. | |
e50bb9a1 | 477 | |
722d2a37 | 478 | =head2 Cache eval tree |
e50bb9a1 | 479 | |
722d2a37 | 480 | =head2 rcatmaybe |
e50bb9a1 | 481 | |
722d2a37 | 482 | =head2 Shrink opcode tables |
e50bb9a1 | 483 | |
722d2a37 | 484 | =head2 Optimize away @_ |
e50bb9a1 | 485 | |
722d2a37 | 486 | Look at the "reification" code in C<av.c> |
e50bb9a1 | 487 | |
722d2a37 | 488 | =head2 Prototypes versus indirect objects |
e50bb9a1 | 489 | |
722d2a37 | 490 | Currently, indirect object syntax bypasses prototype checks. |
e50bb9a1 | 491 | |
210b36aa | 492 | =head2 Install HTML |
e50bb9a1 | 493 | |
722d2a37 SC |
494 | HTML versions of the documentation need to be installed by default; a |
495 | call to C<installhtml> from C<installperl> may be all that's necessary. | |
e50bb9a1 | 496 | |
722d2a37 | 497 | =head2 Prototype method calls |
e50bb9a1 | 498 | |
722d2a37 | 499 | =head2 Return context prototype declarations |
e50bb9a1 | 500 | |
722d2a37 | 501 | =head2 magic_setisa |
e50bb9a1 | 502 | |
722d2a37 | 503 | =head2 Garbage collection |
e50bb9a1 | 504 | |
722d2a37 SC |
505 | There have been persistent mumblings about putting a mark-and-sweep |
506 | garbage detector into Perl; Alan Burlison has some ideas about this. | |
e50bb9a1 | 507 | |
722d2a37 | 508 | =head2 IO tutorial |
e50bb9a1 | 509 | |
722d2a37 | 510 | Mark-Jason Dominus has the beginnings of one of these. |
e50bb9a1 | 511 | |
722d2a37 | 512 | =head2 Rewrite perldoc |
e50bb9a1 | 513 | |
722d2a37 SC |
514 | There are a few suggestions for what to do with C<perldoc>: maybe a |
515 | full-text search, an index function, locating pages on a particular | |
516 | high-level subject, and so on. | |
e50bb9a1 | 517 | |
3958b146 | 518 | =head2 Install .3p manpages |
e50bb9a1 | 519 | |
3958b146 | 520 | This is a bone of contention; we can create C<.3p> manpages for each |
722d2a37 SC |
521 | built-in function, but should we install them by default? Tcl does this, |
522 | and it clutters up C<apropos>. | |
e50bb9a1 | 523 | |
722d2a37 | 524 | =head2 Unicode tutorial |
e50bb9a1 | 525 | |
722d2a37 | 526 | Simon Cozens promises to do this before he gets old. |
e50bb9a1 | 527 | |
722d2a37 | 528 | =head2 Update POSIX.pm for 1003.1-2 |
3958b146 | 529 | |
722d2a37 | 530 | =head2 Retargetable installation |
e50bb9a1 | 531 | |
722d2a37 | 532 | Allow C<@INC> to be changed after Perl is built. |
e50bb9a1 | 533 | |
722d2a37 | 534 | =head2 POSIX emulation on non-POSIX systems |
e50bb9a1 | 535 | |
722d2a37 SC |
536 | Make C<POSIX.pm> behave as POSIXly as possible everywhere, meaning we |
537 | have to implement POSIX equivalents for some functions if necessary. | |
e50bb9a1 | 538 | |
722d2a37 | 539 | =head2 Rename Win32 headers |
e50bb9a1 | 540 | |
722d2a37 SC |
541 | =head2 Finish off lvalue functions |
542 | ||
543 | They don't work in the debugger, and they don't work for list or hash | |
544 | slices. | |
e50bb9a1 | 545 | |
722d2a37 | 546 | =head2 Update sprintf documentation |
e50bb9a1 | 547 | |
722d2a37 | 548 | Hugo van der Sanden plans to look at this. |
e50bb9a1 | 549 | |
722d2a37 | 550 | =head2 Use fchown/fchmod internally |
e50bb9a1 | 551 | |
722d2a37 SC |
552 | This has been done in places, but needs a thorough code review. |
553 | Also fchdir is available in some platforms. | |
e50bb9a1 | 554 | |
d45541b3 | 555 | =head2 Make v-strings overloaded objects |
c5fc23ff | 556 | |
d45541b3 JH |
557 | Instead of having to guess whether a string is a v-string and thus |
558 | needs to be displayed with %vd, make v-strings (readonly) objects | |
559 | (class "vstring"?) with a stringify overload. | |
c5fc23ff | 560 | |
49293501 MS |
561 | =head2 Allow restricted hash assignment |
562 | ||
563 | Currently you're not allowed to assign to a restricted hash at all, | |
564 | even with the same keys. | |
565 | ||
566 | %restricted = (foo => 42); # error | |
567 | ||
568 | This should be allowed if the new keyset is a subset of the old | |
569 | keyset. May require more extra code than we'd like in pp_aassign. | |
570 | ||
5387ccf1 JH |
571 | =head2 Should overload be inheritable? |
572 | ||
573 | Should overload be 'contagious' through @ISA so that derived classes | |
574 | would inherit their base classes' overload definitions? What to do | |
575 | in case of overload conflicts? | |
576 | ||
cbda53d5 JH |
577 | =head2 Taint rethink |
578 | ||
579 | Should taint be stopped from affecting control flow, if ($tainted)? | |
580 | Should tainted symbolic method calls and subref calls be stopped? | |
581 | (Look at Ruby's $SAFE levels for inspiration?) | |
582 | ||
7619c85e RG |
583 | =head2 Perform correctly when XSUBs call subroutines that exit via goto(LABEL) and friends |
584 | ||
585 | If an XSUB calls a subroutine that exits using goto(LABEL), | |
586 | last(LABEL) or next(LABEL), then the interpreter will very probably crash | |
587 | with a segfault because the execution resumes in the XSUB instead of | |
588 | never returning there. | |
589 | ||
722d2a37 | 590 | =head1 Vague ideas |
e50bb9a1 | 591 | |
722d2a37 | 592 | Ideas which have been discussed, and which may or may not happen. |
e50bb9a1 | 593 | |
722d2a37 | 594 | =head2 ref() in list context |
e50bb9a1 | 595 | |
722d2a37 SC |
596 | It's unclear what this should do or how to do it without breaking old |
597 | code. | |
e50bb9a1 | 598 | |
f86a8bc5 | 599 | =head2 Make tr/// return histogram of characters in list context |
e50bb9a1 | 600 | |
722d2a37 | 601 | There is a patch for this, but it may require Unicodification. |
e50bb9a1 | 602 | |
722d2a37 | 603 | =head2 Compile to real threaded code |
3958b146 | 604 | |
722d2a37 | 605 | =head2 Structured types |
3958b146 | 606 | |
722d2a37 | 607 | =head2 Modifiable $1 et al. |
e50bb9a1 | 608 | |
722d2a37 SC |
609 | ($x = "elephant") =~ /e(ph)/; |
610 | $1 = "g"; # $x = "elegant" | |
e50bb9a1 | 611 | |
722d2a37 SC |
612 | What happens if there are multiple (nested?) brackets? What if the |
613 | string changes between the match and the assignment? | |
e50bb9a1 | 614 | |
722d2a37 | 615 | =head2 Procedural interfaces for IO::*, etc. |
e50bb9a1 | 616 | |
722d2a37 SC |
617 | Some core modules have been accused of being overly-OO. Adding |
618 | procedural interfaces could demystify them. | |
e50bb9a1 | 619 | |
722d2a37 | 620 | =head2 RPC modules |
e50bb9a1 | 621 | |
722d2a37 | 622 | =head2 Attach/detach debugger from running program |
e50bb9a1 | 623 | |
722d2a37 SC |
624 | With C<gdb>, you can attach the debugger to a running program if you |
625 | pass the process ID. It would be good to do this with the Perl debugger | |
626 | on a running Perl program, although I'm not sure how it would be done. | |
e50bb9a1 | 627 | |
722d2a37 | 628 | =head2 GUI::Native |
e50bb9a1 | 629 | |
722d2a37 SC |
630 | A non-core module that would use "native" GUI to create graphical |
631 | applications. | |
e50bb9a1 | 632 | |
722d2a37 | 633 | =head2 foreach(reverse ...) |
e50bb9a1 | 634 | |
722d2a37 | 635 | Currently |
e50bb9a1 | 636 | |
722d2a37 | 637 | foreach (reverse @_) { ... } |
e50bb9a1 | 638 | |
722d2a37 SC |
639 | puts C<@_> on the stack, reverses it putting the reversed version on the |
640 | stack, then iterates forwards. Instead, it could be special-cased to put | |
641 | C<@_> on the stack then iterate backwards. | |
e50bb9a1 | 642 | |
722d2a37 | 643 | =head2 Constant function cache |
e50bb9a1 | 644 | |
722d2a37 | 645 | =head2 Approximate regular expression matching |
e50bb9a1 | 646 | |
722d2a37 | 647 | =head1 Ongoing |
e50bb9a1 | 648 | |
722d2a37 | 649 | These items B<always> need doing: |
e50bb9a1 | 650 | |
722d2a37 | 651 | =head2 Update guts documentation |
e50bb9a1 | 652 | |
722d2a37 SC |
653 | Simon Cozens tries to do this when possible, and contributions to the |
654 | C<perlapi> documentation is welcome. | |
e50bb9a1 | 655 | |
722d2a37 | 656 | =head2 Add more tests |
e50bb9a1 | 657 | |
722d2a37 SC |
658 | Michael Schwern will donate $500 to Yet Another Society when all core |
659 | modules have tests. | |
e50bb9a1 | 660 | |
722d2a37 | 661 | =head2 Update auxiliary tools |
e50bb9a1 | 662 | |
722d2a37 | 663 | The code we ship with Perl should look like good Perl 5. |
e50bb9a1 | 664 | |
1e278fd9 JH |
665 | =head2 Create debugging macros |
666 | ||
667 | Debugging macros (like printsv, dump) can make debugging perl inside a | |
668 | C debugger much easier. A good set for gdb comes with mod_perl. | |
669 | Something similar should be distributed with perl. | |
670 | ||
671 | The proper way to do this is to use and extend Devel::DebugInit. | |
672 | Devel::DebugInit also needs to be extended to support threads. | |
673 | ||
674 | See p5p archives for late May/early June 2001 for a recent discussion | |
675 | on this topic. | |
676 | ||
677 | =head2 truncate to the people | |
678 | ||
679 | One can emulate ftruncate() using F_FREESP and F_CHSIZ fcntls | |
680 | (see the UNIX FAQ for details). This needs to go somewhere near | |
681 | pp_sys.c:pp_truncate(). | |
682 | ||
683 | One can emulate truncate() easily if one has ftruncate(). | |
684 | This emulation should also go near pp_sys.pp_truncate(). | |
685 | ||
686 | =head2 Unicode in Filenames | |
687 | ||
613693f3 JH |
688 | chdir, chmod, chown, chroot, exec, glob, link, lstat, mkdir, open, |
689 | opendir, qx, readdir, readlink, rename, rmdir, stat, symlink, sysopen, | |
1e8e8236 | 690 | system, truncate, unlink, utime, -X. All these could potentially accept |
613693f3 JH |
691 | Unicode filenames either as input or output (and in the case of system |
692 | and qx Unicode in general, as input or output to/from the shell). | |
693 | Whether a filesystem - an operating system pair understands Unicode in | |
694 | filenames varies. | |
1e278fd9 JH |
695 | |
696 | Known combinations that have some level of understanding include | |
697 | Microsoft NTFS, Apple HFS+ (In Mac OS 9 and X) and Apple UFS (in Mac | |
698 | OS X), NFS v4 is rumored to be Unicode, and of course Plan 9. How to | |
699 | create Unicode filenames, what forms of Unicode are accepted and used | |
700 | (UCS-2, UTF-16, UTF-8), what (if any) is the normalization form used, | |
701 | and so on, varies. Finding the right level of interfacing to Perl | |
702 | requires some thought. Remember that an OS does not implicate a | |
703 | filesystem. | |
704 | ||
1aad1664 JH |
705 | (The Windows -C command flag "wide API support" has been at least |
706 | temporarily retired in 5.8.1, and the -C has been repurposed, see | |
707 | L<perlrun>.) | |
708 | ||
709 | =head1 Unicode in %ENV | |
710 | ||
711 | Currently the %ENV entries are always byte strings. | |
eb450546 | 712 | |
722d2a37 | 713 | =head1 Recently done things |
e50bb9a1 | 714 | |
722d2a37 SC |
715 | These are things which have been on the todo lists in previous releases |
716 | but have recently been completed. | |
e50bb9a1 | 717 | |
b0b7f283 | 718 | =head2 Alternative RE syntax module |
719 | ||
720 | The C<Regexp::English> module, available from the CPAN, provides this: | |
721 | ||
722 | my $re = Regexp::English | |
723 | -> start_of_line | |
724 | -> literal('Flippers') | |
725 | -> literal(':') | |
726 | -> optional | |
727 | -> whitespace_char | |
728 | -> end | |
729 | -> remember | |
730 | -> multiple | |
731 | -> digit; | |
732 | ||
733 | /$re/; | |
734 | ||
722d2a37 | 735 | =head2 Safe signal handling |
e50bb9a1 | 736 | |
722d2a37 SC |
737 | A new signal model went into 5.7.1 without much fanfare. Operations and |
738 | C<malloc>s are no longer interrupted by signals, which are handled | |
739 | between opcodes. This means that C<PERL_ASYNC_CHECK> now actually does | |
740 | something. However, there are still a few things that need to be done. | |
e50bb9a1 | 741 | |
722d2a37 | 742 | =head2 Tie Modules |
e50bb9a1 | 743 | |
722d2a37 SC |
744 | Modules which implement arrays in terms of strings, substrings or files |
745 | can be found on the CPAN. | |
e50bb9a1 | 746 | |
722d2a37 | 747 | =head2 gettimeofday |
e50bb9a1 | 748 | |
210b36aa | 749 | C<Time::HiRes> has been integrated into the core. |
e50bb9a1 | 750 | |
722d2a37 | 751 | =head2 setitimer and getimiter |
e50bb9a1 | 752 | |
210b36aa | 753 | Adding C<Time::HiRes> got us this too. |
e50bb9a1 | 754 | |
722d2a37 SC |
755 | =head2 Testing __DIE__ hook |
756 | ||
757 | Tests have been added. | |
758 | ||
759 | =head2 CPP equivalent in Perl | |
e50bb9a1 | 760 | |
722d2a37 SC |
761 | A C Yardley will probably have done this by the time you can read this. |
762 | This allows for a generalization of the C constant detection used in | |
763 | building C<Errno.pm>. | |
e50bb9a1 | 764 | |
722d2a37 | 765 | =head2 Explicit switch statements |
e50bb9a1 | 766 | |
722d2a37 SC |
767 | C<Switch.pm> has been integrated into the core to give you all manner of |
768 | C<switch...case> semantics. | |
e50bb9a1 | 769 | |
722d2a37 | 770 | =head2 autocroak |
e50bb9a1 | 771 | |
722d2a37 | 772 | This is C<Fatal.pm>. |
e50bb9a1 | 773 | |
722d2a37 | 774 | =head2 UTF/EBCDIC |
e50bb9a1 | 775 | |
722d2a37 | 776 | Nick Ing-Simmons has made UTF-EBCDIC (UTR13) work with Perl. |
e50bb9a1 | 777 | |
722d2a37 | 778 | EBCDIC? http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr16/ |
e50bb9a1 | 779 | |
722d2a37 | 780 | =head2 UTF Regexes |
e50bb9a1 | 781 | |
722d2a37 SC |
782 | Although there are probably some small bugs to be rooted out, Jarkko |
783 | Hietaniemi has made regular expressions polymorphic between bytes and | |
784 | characters. | |
e50bb9a1 | 785 | |
722d2a37 | 786 | =head2 perlcc to produce executable |
e50bb9a1 | 787 | |
722d2a37 SC |
788 | C<perlcc> was recently rewritten, and can now produce standalone |
789 | executables. | |
e50bb9a1 | 790 | |
722d2a37 | 791 | =head2 END blocks saved in compiled output |
e50bb9a1 | 792 | |
722d2a37 | 793 | =head2 Secure temporary file module |
e50bb9a1 | 794 | |
722d2a37 | 795 | Tim Jenness' C<File::Temp> is now in core. |
e50bb9a1 | 796 | |
722d2a37 | 797 | =head2 Integrate Time::HiRes |
e50bb9a1 | 798 | |
722d2a37 | 799 | This module is now part of core. |
e50bb9a1 | 800 | |
722d2a37 | 801 | =head2 Turn Cwd into XS |
e50bb9a1 | 802 | |
722d2a37 | 803 | Benjamin Sugars has done this. |
e50bb9a1 | 804 | |
722d2a37 | 805 | =head2 Mmap for input |
e50bb9a1 | 806 | |
722d2a37 | 807 | Nick Ing-Simmons' C<perlio> supports an C<mmap> IO method. |
e50bb9a1 | 808 | |
1e54db1a | 809 | =head2 Byte to/from UTF-8 and UTF-8 to/from local conversion |
e50bb9a1 | 810 | |
722d2a37 | 811 | C<Encode> provides this. |
e50bb9a1 | 812 | |
722d2a37 | 813 | =head2 Add sockatmark support |
e50bb9a1 | 814 | |
722d2a37 | 815 | Added in 5.7.1 |
e50bb9a1 | 816 | |
722d2a37 SC |
817 | =head2 Mailing list archives |
818 | ||
f224927c | 819 | http://lists.perl.org/ , http://archive.develooper.com/ |
722d2a37 SC |
820 | |
821 | =head2 Bug tracking | |
822 | ||
ee8e686d RF |
823 | Since 5.8.0 perl uses the RT bug tracking system from Jesse Vincent, |
824 | implemented by Robert Spier at http://bugs.perl.org/ | |
e50bb9a1 | 825 | |
722d2a37 | 826 | =head2 Integrate MacPerl |
e50bb9a1 | 827 | |
722d2a37 SC |
828 | Chris Nandor and Matthias Neeracher have integrated the MacPerl changes |
829 | into 5.6.0. | |
e50bb9a1 | 830 | |
722d2a37 | 831 | =head2 Web "nerve center" for Perl |
e50bb9a1 | 832 | |
722d2a37 | 833 | http://use.perl.org/ is what you're looking for. |
e50bb9a1 | 834 | |
722d2a37 | 835 | =head2 Regular expression tutorial |
e50bb9a1 | 836 | |
722d2a37 | 837 | C<perlretut>, provided by Mark Kvale. |
e50bb9a1 | 838 | |
722d2a37 | 839 | =head2 Debugging Tutorial |
e50bb9a1 | 840 | |
722d2a37 | 841 | C<perldebtut>, written by Richard Foley. |
e50bb9a1 | 842 | |
722d2a37 | 843 | =head2 Integrate new modules |
e50bb9a1 | 844 | |
722d2a37 | 845 | Jarkko has been integrating madly into 5.7.x |
e50bb9a1 | 846 | |
722d2a37 | 847 | =head2 Integrate profiler |
e50bb9a1 | 848 | |
722d2a37 | 849 | C<Devel::DProf> is now a core module. |
e50bb9a1 | 850 | |
722d2a37 | 851 | =head2 Y2K error detection |
e50bb9a1 | 852 | |
722d2a37 SC |
853 | There's a configure option to detect unsafe concatenation with "19", and |
854 | a CPAN module. (C<D'oh::Year>) | |
e50bb9a1 | 855 | |
722d2a37 | 856 | =head2 Regular expression debugger |
e50bb9a1 | 857 | |
722d2a37 SC |
858 | While not part of core, Mark-Jason Dominus has written C<Rx> and has |
859 | also come up with a generalised strategy for regular expression | |
860 | debugging. | |
e50bb9a1 | 861 | |
722d2a37 | 862 | =head2 POD checker |
e50bb9a1 | 863 | |
722d2a37 | 864 | That's, uh, F<podchecker> |
e50bb9a1 | 865 | |
722d2a37 | 866 | =head2 "Dynamic" lexicals |
e50bb9a1 | 867 | |
722d2a37 | 868 | =head2 Cache precompiled modules |
e50bb9a1 | 869 | |
0eec9087 NC |
870 | =head2 "or" tests defined, not truth |
871 | ||
872 | See C<dor> and C<//> | |
873 | ||
722d2a37 | 874 | =head1 Deprecated Wishes |
e50bb9a1 | 875 | |
722d2a37 SC |
876 | These are items which used to be in the todo file, but have been |
877 | deprecated for some reason. | |
e50bb9a1 | 878 | |
722d2a37 | 879 | =head2 Loop control on do{} |
e50bb9a1 | 880 | |
722d2a37 | 881 | This would break old code; use C<do{{ }}> instead. |
e50bb9a1 | 882 | |
722d2a37 | 883 | =head2 Lexically scoped typeglobs |
e50bb9a1 | 884 | |
722d2a37 | 885 | Not needed now we have lexical IO handles. |
e50bb9a1 | 886 | |
722d2a37 | 887 | =head2 format BOTTOM |
3958b146 | 888 | |
722d2a37 | 889 | =head2 report HANDLE |
e50bb9a1 | 890 | |
722d2a37 | 891 | Damian Conway's text formatting modules seem to be the Way To Go. |
e50bb9a1 | 892 | |
722d2a37 | 893 | =head2 Generalised want()/caller()) |
3958b146 | 894 | |
638ae6a9 MJD |
895 | Robin Houston's C<Want> module does this. |
896 | ||
722d2a37 | 897 | =head2 Named prototypes |
e50bb9a1 | 898 | |
638ae6a9 | 899 | This seems to be delayed until Perl 6. |
e50bb9a1 | 900 | |
722d2a37 | 901 | =head2 Built-in globbing |
e50bb9a1 | 902 | |
722d2a37 | 903 | The C<File::Glob> module has been used to replace the C<glob> function. |
e50bb9a1 | 904 | |
722d2a37 | 905 | =head2 Regression tests for suidperl |
e50bb9a1 | 906 | |
722d2a37 | 907 | C<suidperl> is deprecated in favour of common sense. |
e50bb9a1 | 908 | |
722d2a37 | 909 | =head2 Cached hash values |
e50bb9a1 | 910 | |
722d2a37 | 911 | We have shared hash keys, which perform the same job. |
e50bb9a1 | 912 | |
722d2a37 | 913 | =head2 Add compression modules |
e50bb9a1 | 914 | |
0eec9087 | 915 | The compression modules are a little heavy; meanwhile, Nicholas Clark is |
722d2a37 SC |
916 | working on experimental pragmata to do transparent decompression on |
917 | input. | |
e50bb9a1 | 918 | |
722d2a37 | 919 | =head2 Reorganise documentation into tutorials/references |
e50bb9a1 | 920 | |
722d2a37 | 921 | Could not get consensus on P5P about this. |
e50bb9a1 | 922 | |
722d2a37 SC |
923 | =head2 Remove distinction between functions and operators |
924 | ||
925 | Caution: highly flammable. | |
926 | ||
927 | =head2 Make XS easier to use | |
e50bb9a1 | 928 | |
722d2a37 | 929 | Use C<Inline> instead, or SWIG. |
e50bb9a1 | 930 | |
722d2a37 | 931 | =head2 Make embedding easier to use |
e50bb9a1 | 932 | |
722d2a37 | 933 | Use C<Inline::CPR>. |
e50bb9a1 | 934 | |
722d2a37 | 935 | =head2 man for perl |
04c70446 | 936 | |
1577cd80 | 937 | See the Perl Power Tools. ( http://language.perl.com/ppt/ ) |
04c70446 | 938 | |
722d2a37 | 939 | =head2 my $Package::variable |
04c70446 | 940 | |
722d2a37 | 941 | Use C<our> instead. |
04c70446 | 942 | |
722d2a37 | 943 | =head2 "class"-based lexicals |
04c70446 | 944 | |
cbb3fa72 | 945 | Use flyweight objects, secure hashes or, dare I say it, pseudo-hashes instead. |
f86a8bc5 | 946 | (Or whatever will replace pseudohashes in 5.10.) |
04c70446 | 947 | |
722d2a37 | 948 | =head2 byteperl |
04c70446 | 949 | |
722d2a37 | 950 | C<ByteLoader> covers this. |
04c70446 | 951 | |
722d2a37 | 952 | =head2 Lazy evaluation / tail recursion removal |
04c70446 | 953 | |
f86a8bc5 JH |
954 | C<List::Util> gives first() (a short-circuiting grep); tail recursion |
955 | removal is done manually, with C<goto &whoami;>. (However, MJD has | |
956 | found that C<goto &whoami> introduces a performance penalty, so maybe | |
957 | there should be a way to do this after all: C<sub foo {START: ... goto | |
958 | START;> is better.) | |
0562c0e3 JH |
959 | |
960 | =head2 Make "use utf8" the default | |
961 | ||
f86a8bc5 JH |
962 | Because of backward compatibility this is difficult: scripts could not |
963 | contain B<any legacy eight-bit data> (like Latin-1) anymore, even in | |
964 | string literals or pod. Also would introduce a measurable slowdown of | |
965 | at least few percentages since all regular expression operations would | |
966 | be done in full UTF-8. But if you want to try this, add | |
967 | -DUSE_UTF8_SCRIPTS to your compilation flags. | |
968 | ||
3298bd4d JH |
969 | =head2 Unicode collation and normalization |
970 | ||
971 | The Unicode::Collate and Unicode::Normalize modules | |
972 | by SADAHIRO Tomoyuki have been included since 5.8.0. | |
973 | ||
974 | Collation? http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr10/ | |
975 | Normalization? http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr15/ | |
0562c0e3 | 976 | |
1626a787 JH |
977 | =head2 pack/unpack tutorial |
978 | ||
979 | Wolfgang Laun finished what Simon Cozens started. | |
980 | ||
3298bd4d | 981 | =cut |