Classes for representing type constraints and coercion
The Specio distribution provides classes for representing type constraints and coercion, along with syntax sugar for declaring them. Note that this is not a proper type system for Perl. Nothing in this distribution will magically make the Perl interpreter start checking a value's type on assignment to a variable. In fact, there's no built-in way to apply a type to a variable at all. Instead, you can explicitly check a value against a type, and optionally coerce values to that type.
System | Target | Derivation | Build status |
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x86_64-linux | /gnu/store/vypfzmldb0gam4s5mnd7wcggyzlq45yj-perl-specio-0.38.drv | ||
mips64el-linux | /gnu/store/01l9cfbhhqqmgxdh6xalwwyplzjn35ad-perl-specio-0.38.drv | ||
i686-linux | /gnu/store/4jcr4hdzw0lwybs4sbzb9261f2fgs858-perl-specio-0.38.drv | ||
armhf-linux | /gnu/store/y95kjg6g4h7d4lyfykrxv0as3syywck4-perl-specio-0.38.drv | ||
aarch64-linux | /gnu/store/gkns89pgha9zfmmigi3y15fzi8lf2y41-perl-specio-0.38.drv |
Linter | Message | Location |
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description Validate package descriptions | sentences in description should be followed by two spaces; possible infractions at 185, 314 |