package UNIVERSAL;
-our $VERSION = '1.05';
+our $VERSION = '1.11';
# UNIVERSAL should not contain any extra subs/methods beyond those
# that it exists to define. The use of Exporter below is a historical
# anything unless called on UNIVERSAL.
sub import {
return unless $_[0] eq __PACKAGE__;
+ return unless @_ > 1;
require warnings;
warnings::warnif(
'deprecated',
C<eval> block to catch the exception if C<VAL> is undefined.
If you want to be sure that you're calling C<isa> as a method, not a class,
-check the invocant with C<blessed> from L<Scalar::Util> first:
+check the invocand with C<blessed> from L<Scalar::Util> first:
use Scalar::Util 'blessed';
- if ( blessed( $obj ) && $obj->isa("Some::Class") {
+ if ( blessed( $obj ) && $obj->isa("Some::Class") ) {
...
}
C<DOES> and C<isa> are similar, in that if either is true, you know that the
object or class on which you call the method can perform specific behavior.
However, C<DOES> is different from C<isa> in that it does not care I<how> the
-invocant performs the operations, merely that it does. (C<isa> of course
+invocand performs the operations, merely that it does. (C<isa> of course
mandates an inheritance relationship. Other relationships include aggregation,
delegation, and mocking.)
C<VAL>.
C<can> cannot know whether an object will be able to provide a method through
-AUTOLOAD (unless the object's class has overriden C<can> appropriately), so a
+AUTOLOAD (unless the object's class has overridden C<can> appropriately), so a
return value of I<undef> does not necessarily mean the object will not be able
to handle the method call. To get around this some module authors use a forward
declaration (see L<perlsub>) for methods they will handle via AUTOLOAD. For
You may call C<can> as a class (static) method or an object method.
-Again, the same rule about having a valid invocant applies -- use an C<eval>
+Again, the same rule about having a valid invocand applies -- use an C<eval>
block or C<blessed> if you need to be extra paranoid.
=item C<VERSION ( [ REQUIRE ] )>
C<VERSION> will return the value of the variable C<$VERSION> in the
package the object is blessed into. If C<REQUIRE> is given then
it will do a comparison and die if the package version is not
-greater than or equal to C<REQUIRE>.
+greater than or equal to C<REQUIRE>, or if either C<$VERSION> or C<REQUIRE>
+is not a "lax" version number (as defined by the L<version> module).
+
+The return from C<VERSION> will actually be the stringified version object
+using the package C<$VERSION> scalar, which is guaranteed to be equivalent
+but may not be precisely the contents of the C<$VERSION> scalar. If you want
+the actual contents of C<$VERSION>, use C<$CLASS::VERSION> instead.
C<VERSION> can be called as either a class (static) method or an object
method.