C<meth $obj> (no semicolon) at the end of a file won't be seen as an indirect object syntax, although it will as soon as there is another token before the end (as in C<meth $obj;> or C<meth $obj 1>).
=head1 CAVEATS
C<meth $obj> (no semicolon) at the end of a file won't be seen as an indirect object syntax, although it will as soon as there is another token before the end (as in C<meth $obj;> or C<meth $obj 1>).
@@ -79,6+80,12 @@ C<meth $obj> (no semicolon) at the end of a file won't be seen as an indirect ob
With 5.8 perls, the pragma does not propagate into C<eval STRING>.
This is due to a shortcoming in the way perl handles the hints hash, which is addressed in perl 5.10.
With 5.8 perls, the pragma does not propagate into C<eval STRING>.
This is due to a shortcoming in the way perl handles the hints hash, which is addressed in perl 5.10.
+=head1 DEPENDENCIES
+
+L<perl> 5.8.
+
+L<XSLoader> (standard since perl 5.006).
+
=head1 AUTHOR
Vincent Pit, C<< <perl at profvince.com> >>, L<http://www.profvince.com>.
=head1 AUTHOR
Vincent Pit, C<< <perl at profvince.com> >>, L<http://www.profvince.com>.
@@ -103,7+110,7 @@ Bram, for motivation and advices.
=head1 COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
=head1 COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
-Copyright 2008 Vincent Pit, all rights reserved.
+Copyright 2008-2009 Vincent Pit, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.