liblexical-var-perl 0.009-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

liblexical-var-perl (0.009-1) unstable; urgency=low


  * Imported Upstream version 0.009

 -- Salvatore Bonaccorso <email address hidden>  Tue, 03 Sep 2013 23:24:42 +0200

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Uploaded by:
Debian Perl Group
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Perl Group
Architectures:
any
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Low Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Trusty release universe misc

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liblexical-var-perl_0.009-1.dsc 2.1 KiB 8c1c52dbcfee8e8ca880df3c7a615aa2acef4cb923a0611229849e2d9164ad94
liblexical-var-perl_0.009.orig.tar.gz 31.1 KiB 3a88efbef138dd7392169ed155c340db10d4d7c784b5e13eb7ec094ced98e319
liblexical-var-perl_0.009-1.debian.tar.gz 1.8 KiB be7662e17251afe588e80aa71ae66ff17c0cdece5120893e46af88b54ec3dfd6

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Binary packages built by this source

liblexical-var-perl: Perl module for using static variables without namespace pollution

 Lexical::Var implements lexical scoping of subroutines. Although it can be
 used directly, it is mainly intended to be infrastructure for modules that
 manage namespaces.
 .
 This module influences the meaning of single-part subroutine names that
 appear directly in code, such as "&foo" and "foo(123)". Normally, in the
 absence of any particular declaration, these would refer to the subroutine of
 that name located in the current package. A Lexical::Sub declaration can
 change this to refer to any particular subroutine, bypassing the package
 system entirely. A subroutine name that includes an explicit package part,
 such as "&main::foo", always refers to the subroutine in the specified
 package, and is unaffected by this module. A symbolic reference through a
 string value, such as "&{'foo'}", also looks in the package system, and so is
 unaffected by this module.
 .
 The types of name that can be influenced are scalar ("$foo"), array
 ("@foo"), hash ("%foo"), subroutine ("&foo"), and glob ("*foo").