Jifty::Test::Dist(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Jifty::Test::Dist(3pm)NAME
Jifty::Test::Dist - Tests in Jifty distributions inside of Jifty
SYNOPSIS
use Jifty::Test::Dist tests => 5;
DESCRIPTION
Jifty::Test::Dist is a utility wrapper around Jifty::Test; it changes the current working directory to be the one step above where the test
file is, so that Jifty will detect the correct application root for the tests.
perl v5.14.2 2010-09-25 Jifty::Test::Dist(3pm)
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Jifty::Manual::Style(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Jifty::Manual::Style(3pm)NAME
Jifty::Manual::Style - Jifty coding style guide
Default style
When in doubt, default to whatever Damian Conway's Perl Best Practices says.
Private documentation
When documenting a private method, or providing documentation which is not useful to the user of the module (and is presumably useful to
the developer), wrap it in =begin/end private. This way it does not show up in perldoc where a user would see it and yet is still
available and well formatted (that is, not just a lump comment) when looking at the code.
=begin private
=head2 import_extra
Called by L<Test::More>'s C<import> code when L<Jifty::Test> is first
C<use>'d, it calls L</setup>, and asks Test::More to export its
symbols to the namespace that C<use>'d this one.
=end private
sub import_extra {
...
}
Test temp files
Files created by tests should be declared as such using Jifty::Test->test_file() so they are cleaned up on a successful test run.
Use Shell::Command
Shell::Command has a number of functions which work like common shell file commands such as "touch", "cp" and "mv". They are battle tested
and cross-platform. Use them instead of coding your own.
For example, instead of this:
open my $file, ">foo";
close $file;
Do this:
use Shell::Command;
touch $file;
Case insensitive matching
To check if a string equals another string case insensitively, do this
lc $foo eq lc $bar;
lc $foo eq 'bar';
not this:
$foo =~ /^Q$barE/i;
$foo =~ /^bar$/i;
perl v5.14.2 2010-12-08 Jifty::Manual::Style(3pm)
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