[ this is a template for a new perldelta file. Any text flagged as XXX needs
to be processed before release. ]
-perldelta - what is new for perl v5.35.5
+perldelta - what is new for perl v5.35.9
=head1 DESCRIPTION
-This document describes differences between the 5.35.4 release and the 5.35.5
+This document describes differences between the 5.35.8 release and the 5.35.9
release.
-If you are upgrading from an earlier release such as 5.35.3, first read
-L<perl5354delta>, which describes differences between 5.35.3 and 5.35.4.
+If you are upgrading from an earlier release such as 5.35.7, first read
+L<perl5358delta>, which describes differences between 5.35.7 and 5.35.8.
=head1 Notice
[ List each enhancement as a =head2 entry ]
+=head2 @_ is now experimental within signatured subs
+
+Even though subroutine signatures currently remain experimental, use of the
+default arguments array (C<@_>) with a subroutine that has a signature is
+specifically also experimental, with its own warning category. Silencing the
+C<experimental::signatures> warning category is not sufficient to dismiss
+this. The new warning is emitted with the category name
+C<experimental::args_array_with_signatures>.
+
+Any subroutine that has a signature and tries to make use of the defaults
+argument array or an element thereof (C<@_> or C<$_[INDEX]>), either
+explicitly or implicitly (such as C<shift> or C<pop> with no argument) will
+provoke a warning at compile-time:
+
+ use experimental 'signatures';
+
+ sub f ($x, $y = 123) {
+ say "The first argument is $_[0]";
+ }
+
+Z<>
+
+ Use of @_ in array element with signatured subroutine is experimental
+ at file.pl line 4.
+
+The behaviour of code which attempts to do this is no longer specified, and
+may be subject to change in a future version.
+
+=head2 The C<isa> operator is no longer experimental
+
+Introduced in Perl version 5.32.0, this operator has remained unchanged
+since then. The operator is now considered a stable languauge feature.
+
+For more detail see L<perlop/Class Instance Operator>.
+
=head1 Security
XXX Any security-related notices go here. In particular, any security
XXX Any deprecated features, syntax, modules etc. should be listed here.
+=head2 Downgrading a C<use VERSION> statement to below v5.11
+
+Attempting to issue a second C<use VERSION> statement that requests a version
+lower than C<v5.11> when an earlier statement that requested a version at
+least C<v5.11> has already been seen, will now print a deprecation warning.
+
+For example:
+
+ use v5.14;
+ say "The say statement is permitted";
+ use v5.8; # This will print a warning
+ print "We must use print\n";
+
+This is because of an intended related change to the interaction between
+C<use VERSION> and C<use strict>. If you specify a version >= 5.11, strict is
+enabled implicitly. If you request a version < 5.11, strict will become
+disabled I<even if you had previously written> C<use strict>. This was not
+the previous behaviour of C<use VERSION>, which at present will track
+explicitly-enabled strictness flags independently.
+
+Code which wishes to mix versions in this manner should use lexical scoping
+with block syntax to ensure that the differently versioned regions remain
+lexically isolated.
+
+ {
+ use v5.14;
+ say "The say statement is permitted";
+ }
+ {
+ use v5.8; # No warning is emitted
+ print "We must use print\n";
+ }
+
=head2 Module removals
XXX Remove this section if not applicable.
=item *
-XXX Describe change here
+L<Subroutine %s redefined|perldiag/"Subroutine %s redefined">
+
+Localized subroutine redefinitions no longer trigger this warning.
=back
=over 4
-=item NetWare
-
-Support code for Novell NetWare has been removed. NetWare was a
-server operating system by Novell. The port was last updated in July
-2002, and the platform itself in May 2009.
+=item XXX-some-platform
-Unrelated changes accidentally broke the build for the NetWare port in
-September 2009, and in years 12 no-one has reported this.
+XXX
=back
=item *
-XXX
+New equality-test functions C<sv_numeq> and C<sv_streq> have been added, along
+with C<..._flags>-suffixed variants. These expose a simple and consistent API
+to perform numerical or string comparison which is aware of operator
+overloading.
=back
=item *
-Calling C<untie> on a tied hash that is partway through iteration now frees the
-iteration state immediately.
-
-Iterating a tied hash causes perl to store a copy of the current hash key to
-track the iteration state, with this stored copy passed as the second parameter
-to C<NEXTKEY>. This internal state is freed immediately when tie hash iteration
-completes, or if the hash is destroyed, but due to an implementation oversight,
-it was not freed if the hash was untied. In that case, the internal copy of the
-key would persist until the earliest of
-
-=over 4
-
-=item 1
-
-C<tie> was called again on the same hash
-
-=item 2
-
-The (now untied) hash was iterated (ie passed to any of C<keys>, C<values> or
-C<each>)
-
-=item 3
-
-The hash was destroyed.
-
-=back
-
-This inconsistency is now fixed - the internal state is now freed immediately by
-C<untie>.
-
-As the precise timing of this behaviour can be observed with pure Perl code
-(the timing of C<DESTROY> on objects returned from C<FIRSTKEY> and C<NEXTKEY>)
-it's just possible that some code is sensitive to it.
-
-=item *
-
-The C<Internals::getcwd()> function added for bootstrapping miniperl
-in perl 5.30.0 is now only available in miniperl. [github #19122]
+XXX
=back
XXX Generate this with:
- perl Porting/acknowledgements.pl v5.35.4..HEAD
+ perl Porting/acknowledgements.pl v5.35.8..HEAD
=head1 Reporting Bugs