feature - Perl pragma to enable new syntactic features
- use feature qw(switch say);
- given ($foo) {
- when (1) { say "\$foo == 1" }
- when ([2,3]) { say "\$foo == 2 || \$foo == 3" }
- when (/^a[bc]d$/) { say "\$foo eq 'abd' || \$foo eq 'acd'" }
- when ($_ > 100) { say "\$foo > 100" }
- default { say "None of the above" }
- }
- use feature ':5.10'; # loads all features available in perl 5.10
It is usually impossible to add new syntax to Perl without breaking
some existing programs. This pragma provides a way to minimize that
risk. New syntactic constructs can be enabled by use feature 'foo'
,
and will be parsed only when the appropriate feature pragma is in
scope.
Like other pragmas (use strict
, for example), features have a lexical
effect. use feature qw(foo)
will only make the feature "foo" available
from that point to the end of the enclosing block.
no feature
Features can also be turned off by using no feature "foo"
. This too
has lexical effect.
no feature
with no features specified will turn off all features.
use feature 'switch'
tells the compiler to enable the Perl 6
given/when construct.
See Switch statements in perlsyn for details.
use feature 'say'
tells the compiler to enable the Perl 6
say
function.
See say for details.
use feature 'state'
tells the compiler to enable state
variables.
See Persistent Private Variables in perlsub for details.
It's possible to load a whole slew of features in one go, using
a feature bundle. The name of a feature bundle is prefixed with
a colon, to distinguish it from an actual feature. At present, the
only feature bundle is use feature ":5.10"
which is equivalent
to use feature qw(switch say state)
.
Specifying sub-versions such as the 0
in 5.10.0
in feature bundles has
no effect: feature bundles are guaranteed to be the same for all sub-versions.
There are two ways to load the feature
pragma implicitly :
By using the -E
switch on the command-line instead of -e
. It enables
all available features in the main compilation unit (that is, the one-liner.)
By requiring explicitly a minimal Perl version number for your program, with
the use VERSION
construct, and when the version is higher than or equal to
5.10.0. That is,
- use 5.10.0;
will do an implicit
- use feature ':5.10';
and so on. Note how the trailing sub-version is automatically stripped from the version.
But to avoid portability warnings (see use), you may prefer:
- use 5.010;
with the same effect.