=head1 VERSION
-Version 0.03
+Version 0.07
=cut
our $VERSION;
BEGIN {
- $VERSION = '0.03';
+ $VERSION = '0.07';
}
=head1 SYNOPSIS
croak "Invalid $r reference for 'as'";
}
} else {
- $hint = _tag(0);
+ $hint = _tag(sub { @_ });
}
$^H |= 0x020000;
sub new { ... }
-=head1 CAVEATS
-
-For C<perl> to be able to parse C<my Str $x>, you need :
-
-=over 4
-
-=item *
-
-either the C<Str> package to be defined ;
+=head1 CONSTANTS
-=item *
+=head2 C<LT_THREADSAFE>
-or for C<Str> to be a constant sub returning a valid defined package.
+True iff the module could have been built with thread-safety features enabled.
-=back
+=head1 CAVEATS
The restrictions on the type (being either a defined package name or a constant) apply even if you use the C<'as'> option to redirect to another package, and are unlikely to find a workaround as this happens deep inside the lexer - far from the reach of an extension.
Only one mangler or prefix can be in use at the same time in a given scope.
+The implementation was tweaked to work around several limitations of vanilla C<perl> pragmas : it's thread safe, and doesn't suffer from a C<perl 5.8.x-5.10.0> bug that causes all pragmas to propagate into C<require>d scopes.
+
+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>.