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ALT Linux repos
S:1.001001-alt1

Group :: Development/Perl
RPM: perl-Data-Printer

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%define _unpackaged_files_terminate_build 1
%define module_name Data-Printer
# BEGIN SourceDeps(oneline):
BuildRequires: perl(B.pm) perl(B/Deparse.pm) perl(Capture/Tiny.pm) perl(Carp.pm) perl(Clone/PP.pm) perl(DBIx/Class/Core.pm) perl(DBIx/Class/Schema.pm) perl(ExtUtils/MakeMaker.pm) perl(Fcntl.pm) perl(File/HomeDir.pm) perl(File/HomeDir/Test.pm) perl(File/Spec.pm) perl(File/Temp.pm) perl(MRO/Compat.pm) perl(Package/Stash.pm) perl(Scalar/Util.pm) perl(Sort/Naturally.pm) perl(Term/ANSIColor.pm) perl(Test/More.pm) perl(base.pm) perl(if.pm) perl(mro.pm) perl(version.pm) perl(charnames.pm)
# END SourceDeps(oneline)
BuildRequires: rpm-build-perl perl-devel perl-podlators

Name: perl-%module_name
Version: 1.001001
Release: alt1
Summary: colored pretty-print of Perl data structures and objects
Group: Development/Perl
License: perl
Url: %CPAN %module_name

Source0: http://www.cpan.org/authors/id/G/GA/GARU/%{module_name}-%{version}.tar.gz
BuildArch: noarch
BuildRequires: perl(DBD/DBM.pm)

%description
Want to see what's inside a variable in a complete, colored
and human-friendly way?

 use Data::Printer;   # or just "use DDP" for short
 
 p  at array;            # no need to pass references

Code above might output something like this (with colors!):

  [
      [0] "a",
      [1] "b",
      [2] undef,
      [3] "c",
  ]

You can also inspect objects:

   my $obj = SomeClass->new;

   p($obj);

Which might give you something like:

 \ SomeClass  {
     Parents       Moose::Object
     Linear  at ISA   SomeClass, Moose::Object
     public methods (3) : bar, foo, meta
     private methods (0)
     internals: {
        _something => 42,
     }
 }

Data::Printer is fully customizable. If you want to change how things
are displayed, or even its standard behavior. Take a look at the
available customizations. Once you figure out
your own preferences, create a
configuration file for
yourself and Data::Printer will automatically use it!

That's about it! Feel free to stop reading now and start dumping
your data structures! For more information, including feature set,
how to create filters, and general tips, just keep reading :)

Oh, if you are just experimenting and/or don't want to use a
configuration file, you can set all options during initialization,
including coloring, identation and filters!

 use Data::Printer {
     color => {
        'regex' => 'blue',
        'hash'  => 'yellow',
     },
     filters => {
        'DateTime' => sub { $_[0]->ymd },
        'SCALAR'   => sub { "oh noes, I found a scalar! $_[0]" },
     },
 };

The first `{}' block is just syntax sugar, you can safely ommit it
if it makes things easier to read:

 use DDP colored => 1;

 use Data::Printer  deparse => 1, sort_keys => 0;



%prep
%setup -q -n %{module_name}-%{version}

%build
%perl_vendor_build

%install
%perl_vendor_install

%files
%doc Changes README* examples CONTRIBUTING.md
%perl_vendor_privlib/D*

%changelog

Full changelog you can see here

 
design & coding: Vladimir Lettiev aka crux © 2004-2005, Andrew Avramenko aka liks © 2007-2008
current maintainer: Michael Shigorin