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Operating Systems Linux SuSE your thoughts on the KDE desktop environmt Post 39710 by OllieTech on Thursday 28th of August 2003 11:52:09 AM
Old 08-28-2003
Well in relation to email clients, there is only so many ways you can layout such a thing before it starts to get impractical to use. Microsoft Outlook (express) are good mail clients. Microsoft has spent a lot of time in researching how users are most productive in the email client layout.

To say that a particular open source app is copying a MS app is not totally true. The concept of ease of use and most productive environment is the goal for any program and you have to stick with what works.

For the record, I use SuSE 8.2 Pro w/ Ximian Evolution
 

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Plack::Test(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					  Plack::Test(3pm)

NAME
Plack::Test - Test PSGI applications with various backends SYNOPSIS
use Plack::Test; # named params test_psgi app => sub { my $env = shift; return [ 200, [ 'Content-Type' => 'text/plain' ], [ "Hello World" ] ], }, client => sub { my $cb = shift; my $req = HTTP::Request->new(GET => "http://localhost/hello"); my $res = $cb->($req); like $res->content, qr/Hello World/; }; use HTTP::Request::Common; # positional params (app, client) my $app = sub { return [ 200, [], [ "Hello "] ] }; test_psgi $app, sub { my $cb = shift; my $res = $cb->(GET "/"); is $res->content, "Hello"; }; DESCRIPTION
Plack::Test is a unified interface to test PSGI applications using HTTP::Request and HTTP::Response objects. It also allows you to run PSGI applications in various ways. The default backend is "Plack::Test::MockHTTP", but you may also use any Plack::Handler implementation to run live HTTP requests against at web server FUNCTIONS
test_psgi test_psgi $app, $client; test_psgi app => $app, client => $client; Runs the client test code $client against a PSGI application $app. The client callback gets one argument $cb, a callback that accepts an "HTTP::Request" object and returns an "HTTP::Response" object. Use HTTP::Request::Common to import shortcuts for creating requests for "GET", "POST", "DELETE", and "PUT" operations. For your convenience, the "HTTP::Request" given to the callback automatically uses the HTTP protocol and the localhost (127.0.0.1 by default), so the following code just works: use HTTP::Request::Common; test_psgi $app, sub { my $cb = shift; my $res = $cb->(GET "/hello"); }; Note that however, it is not a good idea to pass an arbitrary (i.e. user-input) string to "GET" or even "HTTP::Request->new" by assuming that it always represents a path, because: my $req = GET "//foo/bar"; would represent a request for a URL that has no scheme, has a hostname foo and a path /bar, instead of a path //foo/bar which you might actually want. OPTIONS
Specify the Plack::Test backend using the environment variable "PLACK_TEST_IMPL" or $Plack::Test::Impl package variable. The available values for the backend are: MockHTTP (Default) Creates a PSGI env hash out of HTTP::Request object, runs the PSGI application in-process and returns HTTP::Response. Server Runs one of Plack::Handler backends ("Standalone" by default) and sends live HTTP requests to test. ExternalServer Runs tests against an external server specified in the "PLACK_TEST_EXTERNALSERVER_URI" environment variable instead of spawning the application in a server locally. For instance, test your application with the "HTTP::Server::ServerSimple" server backend with: > env PLACK_TEST_IMPL=Server PLACK_SERVER=HTTP::Server::ServerSimple prove -l t/test.t AUTHOR
Tatsuhiko Miyagawa perl v5.14.2 2011-09-20 Plack::Test(3pm)
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