Acme-CPANModules-Import-CPANRatings-User-stevenharyanto

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        sys = 0.27 CPU) @ 11711.11/s (n=3162) <br><br>(warning: too few
        iterations for a reliable count) <br> =head2 #

        <br><br>Also: 1) the syntax is rather inconsistent: ':n' for array
        index access, but '.@' (instead of ':@') for grabbing all elements.
        2) currently cannot select subtree (must always select leaf node).
        <br><br>As alternatives, I recommend the much simpler JSON::Path, or
        the more powerful Data::DPath. <br>

    Games::2048
        Author: BLAIZER <https://metacpan.org/author/BLAIZER>

        My favorite 2048 implementation (it's text-mode, written in Perl,
        uses my module Color::ANSI::Util, and what else... oh yeah, it's the
        only implementation where I've reached 2048 :-) ). <br><br>One tip:
        enlarge the fonts of your terminal emulator (e.g. Ctrl-+ on Konsole)
        until it's big and convenient enough.

    App::D
        Author: BESSARABV <https://metacpan.org/author/BESSARABV>

        As an alternative, one can also do: <br><br>alias d=' <br><br>TZ=UTC
        date; # show date in UTC <br><br>date ; # show date in local
        timezone <br><br>cal -3 ; # show monthly calendar for curmon-1,
        curmon, curmon+1 <br> ' <br><br>

    Getopt::Long
        Author: JV <https://metacpan.org/author/JV>

        Having worked for quite some time with option processing and several
        other similar modules, I have to say that most of the time you
        probably want to use Getopt::Long instead of the other alternatives.
        Or at least pick the alternatives which are based on Getopt::Long,
        instead of those that reinvent the wheel and do their own option
        parsing. <br><br>Most other modules that reinvent option parsing
        either don't bother to do short option bundling (-abc instead of -a
        -b -c), or abbreviation (--long-o instead --long-option-name), or
        the choice to (dis)allow mix-mashing options and arguments, or
        support '--' to end option processing, or respect ordering, or
        support multiple options (--verbose --verbose), or support
        '--foo=val' *as well as* '--foo val', and so on. These are features
        and conveniences that are taken for granted by people working daily
        in Unix command-line. <br>

    Text::Table::Tiny
        Author: NEILB <https://metacpan.org/author/NEILB>

        Very fast, several times faster than Text::TabularDisplay or
        Text::Table (and many times faster than the other slower
        table-generator modules). It uses sprintf() to format a whole row
        instead of formatting each cell separately using sprintf() and
        joining cells together with join(). <br><br>I did a comparison in:
        <a
        href="http://blogs.perl.org/users/steven_haryanto/2014/07/benchmarki
        ng-several-ascii-table-generator-modules.html"
        rel="nofollow">blogs.perl.org/users/steven_haryanto/...</a>

    Mo  Author: TINITA <https://metacpan.org/author/TINITA>

        A great alternative when Moo is a bit too much for you. Useful for
        scripts that must start really fast. Mind you, Moo loads about 5K
        lines of code and more than a dozen files, all of which takes +-
        10ms on my computer. Mo on the other hand is only a single line of
        +-500 characters, and it's inlinable. It loads in under 1ms. If a
        script must be executed thousands of times a day, that 9ms
        difference will matter more. <br><br>I use this for a very
        lightweight parent class. A richer subclass then uses Moo.
        <br><br>Isn't it great that we have the choices and upgrade path
        from the very minimal Mo, to Moo for normal cases, to Moos and Moose
        for even richer (but heavier) alternatives. Truly TIMTOWTDI! <br>

    App::ChangeShebang
        Author: SKAJI <https://metacpan.org/author/SKAJI>

        Given that the name of this module/app is &quot;change shebang&quot;
        (instead of &quot;change shebang to samedir perl&quot;) perhaps this
        app can be made more generic? For example, I've had to change all
        shebangs from &quot;#!/usr/bin/env perl&quot; to &quot;#!perl&quot;
        and vice versa. Perhaps this module/app can become a tool to easily
        switch between shebangs. <br>

    Hash::Ordered
        Author: DAGOLDEN <https://metacpan.org/author/DAGOLDEN>

        Overall looks ok, with the exception that it does not look and feel
        like a regular Perl hash at all. Now someone just needs to create a
        tie interface on top of this :) <br>

    App::whatthecommit
        Author: MUDLER <https://metacpan.org/author/MUDLER>

        From the description: &quot;App::whatthecommit is just another
        lazy-to-lazy line command utility.&quot; I'd thought the definition
        of laziness would be something like 'alias gc=git commit
        --allow-empty-message'. This is more like hubris. Or whatever. :)
        <br>

    Opt::Imistic
        Author: ALTREUS <https://metacpan.org/author/ALTREUS>

        Very nifty for short scripts and some clever design inside (all
        options are stored as arrayref, but there is some overloading to
        make getting boolean/flag and normal scalar value convenient).
        <br><br>For more &quot;proper&quot; scripts though (anything above
        say 20-30 lines) I'd recommend using something like Getopt::Long
        with a real spec. Some of the features I like in G::L not in
        Opt::Imistic: the ability to get --noOPT for free for flag options,
        the ability to configure permute/no_permute (mix mashing options
        with arguments), some data validation, and of course:
        autoabbreviation of long option names, which requires a spec after
        all.

    Devel::STrace
        Author: DARNOLD <https://metacpan.org/author/DARNOLD>

        The doc looks promising, it really looks like it could be the
        &quot;strace for Perl functions&quot;, but the usage is awkward (you
        have to open two terminals, one for running your program and
        producing trace file, and another for reading this file). And I'm
        probably an idiot, but I can't get this module to work for me.
        <br><br>One alternative if you're looking for a similar module is

README  view on Meta::CPAN

        At the current form, simply too simplistic to be an alternative to
        Data::Dump or Data::Dumper. No support for blessed refs,
        filehandle/globs, circular references, and so on. Changes numbers to
        stringy numbers or vice versa. <br><br>Currently also contains some
        bugs like for -1 (changes it to string), &quot;\&quot; (produces
        invalid dump, does not handle backslash yet currently), <br><br>And
        Data::Dump's dump of {} and [] are currently more compact ;-)
        <br><br>Need to be improved significantly first. But keep up the
        effort.

    P   Author: LAWALSH <https://metacpan.org/author/LAWALSH>

        I personally don't mind the namespace choice. There are other
        single-letter CPAN modules too like B, L, U, V. If you have a beef
        with regard to namespace, don't single out P and perhaps downvote
        the other modules too. <br><br>Having said that, I would like to
        comment on the design and implementation of this module. <br><br>1)
        The choice of Unicode character U+2204 as representation of undef.
        Unless one does something like 'binmode STDOUT, &quot;:utf8&quot;',
        with 'say P undef' I am just trading one warning (&quot;Use of
        uninitialized value&quot;) with another (&quot;Wide character in
        say/print&quot;). The wide character warning is avoided if you do 'P
        &quot;%s&quot;, undef' though, which means... <br><br>2) P loads
        utf8 by default. For ultra-lightweight cases, this is sometimes not
        desirable. There is currently no way to turn this off. <br><br>3)
        The arbitrary choice of three levels deep when printing references.
        This can be customized but with an unusual syntax. But again, the
        arbitrary choice of three. <br><br>4) The &quot;complex&quot; rules
        of newline printing. p() is like puts, it can optionally add a
        newline. But unlike puts, the doc says it can also remove newlines.
        The behavior can also change if the string to be printed ends with
        0x83. <br><br>I might use P for a sprintf/printf replacement, but
        for debugging values, I'd prefer something &quot;dumber&quot; like
        Data::Dump::Color (or Data::Printer, if that's your thing).

    Xporter
        Author: LAWALSH <https://metacpan.org/author/LAWALSH>

        A couple of comments. First, if you want to import the default
        exports *as well as* some additional others, you can use Exporter's
        feature (the :DEFAULT tag): <br><br>use SomeModule qw(:DEFAULT a b
        c); <br><br>or you can also &quot;use&quot; twice: <br><br>use
        SomeModule; # imports default exports <br><br>use SomeModule qw(a b
        c); # import a, b, c <br><br>Second, if you use Xporter, your module
        will behave unlike most CPAN modules out there, because a majority
        of modules use Exporter. When people see this Perl code: <br><br>use
        SomeModule qw(a b c); <br><br>normally they will expect only a, b,
        and c are exported. If SomeModule uses Xporter, it will also by
        default export the default exports. <br><br>Basically Xporter is
        just Exporter with a different default (not arguably better or more
        user-friendly). For the sake of minimizing surprise to my users, I
        would avoid the use of Xporter. <br><br>UPDATE 2014-01-24: some
        edits. I appreciate the effort of the author to defend her module,
        though I am not convinced by her arguments.

    Dist::Zilla::Shell
        Author: DOLMEN <https://metacpan.org/author/DOLMEN>

        Nice tool that lets you type dzil commands like 'build', 'test', etc
        while sending all the other unknown commands like 'ls -l', 'man Foo'
        to the underlying shell. Also lets you avoid multiple startup
        overhead of dzil :-)

    CPANPLUS::Shell::Curses
        Author: MARCUS <https://metacpan.org/author/MARCUS>

        Unmaintained. Installs but no longer runs.

        Rating: 2/10

    Task::Mechanistic
        If you peek into its Makefile.PL, you'll see a seemingly
        random/heterogenous collection of modules to install (instead of
        just WWW::Mechanize). This is probably a Task::BeLike::$AUTHOR in
        disguise. <br><br>

    Sereal
        Author: YVES <https://metacpan.org/author/YVES>

        So far the best of the bunch. <br><br>FAST: much faster than
        Storable, roughly the same speed as (sometimes slightly faster than)
        Data::Clone for cloning. <br><br>FEATUREFUL: Can handle circular
        references, Regexp objects (trips out-of-the-box Storable),
        JSON::{PP,XS}::Boolean objects (trips Data::Clone). <br><br>COMPACT:
        definitely more compact (up to several times) than Storable.
        <br><br>I'm sold. What more do you want? Le Storable est mort, vive
        le Sereal!

    Test::Tester
        Author: EXODIST <https://metacpan.org/author/EXODIST>

        If you write test functions, you need this. It's like the
        &quot;Test::More&quot; for &quot;Test::More&quot;. However, it
        currently does not work out of the box with subtests (submitted as
        wishlist to RT). <br><br>PS: Thanks to Toby Inkster for pointing
        this module out. <br><br>

    Text::CharWidth
        Author: KUBOTA <https://metacpan.org/author/KUBOTA>

        It's faster than Unicode::GCString-&gt;new($str)-&gt;columns, but it
        gives wrong answers to lots of characters, e.g. control characters
        like &quot;\n&quot;, &quot;\t&quot;, etc are currently assumed to
        have width of -1 character. You're better off with
        Unicode::GCString.

        Rating: 2/10

    App::Options
        Author: SPADKINS <https://metacpan.org/author/SPADKINS>

        2010-10-13: <br><br>I admit, this is not the most flexible
        configuration framework out there as it enforces some convention.
        And I don't/can't use it on every project. But it's certainly one of
        the easiest. You can slap a few lines of options declaration in your
        code and voila, your script suddenly can accept command line
        arguments, has --help message et al, read from config files (in
        several preset locations). <br><br>There are still a few annoyances
        (I submitted them in the RT), but in general, this is a very handy
        module to use for lazy coders who just want to accept
        configuration/options from outside the code. <br><br>&lt;shameless
        plug&gt;I'm trying to do somewhat the same with Config::Tree, but as
        of now the module is not really done yet.&lt;/shameless plug&gt;
        <br><br>UPDATE 2013-08-15: <br><br>I'm reducing the ratings from 5
        to 2. I've now avoided using this module due to two lingering issue
        since 2010: 1) App::Options does not accept '--opt val', only
        '--opt=val' which is incompatible with how most command-line
        programs work, causing confusion for some of my users. 2) 'perl -c'
        doesn't work under this module, it will still trigger command-line
        processing. <br><br>I'm now using Perinci::CmdLine as replacement,
        but I cannot recommend it in general, as the two modules are not
        equivalent.

        Rating: 4/10

    Filesys::Notify::Simple
        Author: MIYAGAWA <https://metacpan.org/author/MIYAGAWA>

        It's rather unfortunate that currently the choice for general
        purpose cross-platform filesystem notification modules on CPAN falls
        between this module (FNS) or File::ChangeNotify (F::CN). The other
        CPAN modules are either OS-/framework-specific. <br><br>FNS has a
        simple API but is perhaps too simple for some uses, while F::CN uses
        Moose and has a big startup overhead. <br><br>If you simply want to
        check from time to time whether a change has occured, you need to
        wrap the wait() method with alarm(). And I found on my Linux PC that
        I need a timeout of at least 3 seconds for this to work reliably.

        Rating: 8/10

    experimental
        Author: LEONT <https://metacpan.org/author/LEONT>

        Vote +1 to add this to core. Please make coding in Perl 5 relatively
        painless.

    MIME::Lite::HTML
        Author: ALIAN <https://metacpan.org/author/ALIAN>

        Very straightforward to use (I needed to send a URL/webpage as HTML
        email with embedded images/objects). With this module I can finish
        my job with only a few lines of Perl in 3-5 minutes (searching for
        this module in CPAN takes more than that! searching using &quot;mail
        web&quot; or &quot;email url&quot; at first didn't get results).
        <br><br>Blackberry is having trouble displaying the resulting email
        though. No problem with Gmail or Thunderbird/Icedove.

    Term::Size
        Author: FERREIRA <https://metacpan.org/author/FERREIRA>

        5-year old bug like RT#38594 still present. Use one of the alternate
        implementations like Term::Size::{Unix,Win32,ReadKey}. <br>

        Rating: 2/10

    DateTime::Format::Flexible
        Author: THINC <https://metacpan.org/author/THINC>

        While it doesn't cover as much phrases as DateTime::Format::Natural,
        at least it's simpler to translate (and the dist already includes a
        couple of translations). BTW, I think like in the POD of
        DateTime::Format::Natural, it needs to list which phrases it
        supports. And probably add more :-) <br><br>

        Rating: 8/10

    DateTime::Format::Natural
        Author: SCHUBIGER <https://metacpan.org/author/SCHUBIGER>

        I'm giving DateTime::Format::Natural 3 stars because while it's
        great for English (it covers more phrases than
        DateTime::Format::Flexible), it's also hard to translate. Look at
        the source code for DateTime::Format::Natural::Lang::EN: lots of
        Englishisms and weird structures (%grammars). Wonder why so far
        there has not been any translations to another language? <br>

        Rating: 6/10

    App::sourcepan
        Author: PEVANS <https://metacpan.org/author/PEVANS>

        Thanks, just what I needed. (I was hoping cpanm would accept my
        --download patch, but this is just as well). <br><br>It still uses
        CPAN.pm and thus downloads the relatively big 01mailrc.txt.gz and
        02packages.details.txt.gz file, thus slowing the first use. If you
        use cpanm exclusively, this is rather annoying especially if you're
        on a slow link.

        Rating: 8/10

    Text::ASCIITable::TW
        The method of determining visual width of Chinese characters is
        rather hackish. Text::ASCIITable should perhaps use Text::CharWidth
        (which can be used to determine visual width of text in other
        languages e.g. Japanese, etc) thus rendering this module
        unnecessary. <br>

    Text::VisualWidth
        Author: NANZOU <https://metacpan.org/author/NANZOU>

        Also look at Text::CharWidth for an alternative that can be used
        with text in other languages (Chinese, etc). <br>

    Text::VisualWidth::PP
        Author: TOKUHIROM <https://metacpan.org/author/TOKUHIROM>

        Also look at Text::CharWidth for an alternative that can be used
        with text in other languages (Chinese, etc). <br>

    Taint::Runtime
        Author: RHANDOM <https://metacpan.org/author/RHANDOM>

        Nice idea. Perl should really have included something like this
        (analogous to warnings.pm for -w). <br><br>However, for something as
        security-related as tainting, I personally think the interface is a
        bit too complex and not robust enough. There are too many pitfalls
        where one can fail to turn on tainting properly. <br><br>* First,
        user must remember to import $TAINT, or doing '$TAINT = 1' has no
        effect. There's no error/warning for this mistake. <br><br>* Then,
        if one also forgets to import taint_start or taint_start, then doing
        'taint_start' or 'taint_env' (without parentheses) will do nothing.
        Also does not produce an error/warning except under strict mode.
        <br><br>* One must remember to 'taint_env' *after* 'taint_start'.
        There's no warning/error if one does the opposite. <br><br>I'd
        rather have something like this: <br><br>{ <br><br>use tainting;
        <br><br>... code is running in taint mode ... <br> } <br><br>use
        tainting; <br> { <br><br>no tainting; <br><br>... code is running
        without taint mode ... <br> } <br><br>No functions, no variables to
        set, no exports. Tainting of %ENV etc should be done automatically
        just like -T. <br><br>EDIT: I wrote tainting and uploaded it to CPAN
        as proof of concept.

        Rating: 8/10

    L   Author: SONGMU <https://metacpan.org/author/SONGMU>

        Reinvents Class::Autouse (written 12 years ago). But at least L is
        much simpler and shorter to type (the equivalent of -ML is
        -MClass::Autouse=:superloader). <br><br>BTW, there's also
        Module::AutoLoad, Module::AutoINC, and lib::xi which can
        automatically install modules from CPAN and load them upon first
        use.

    UNIVERSAL::moniker
        Author: KASEI <https://metacpan.org/author/KASEI>

        Perl is not Ruby != everything Ruby does is horrible. This module
        has its uses.

    Time::Out
        Author: PATL <https://metacpan.org/author/PATL>

        A wrapper around Perl's alarm()/$SIG{ALRM}, so it has the same
        limitations, e.g. you cannot use this to properly timeout external
        programs started by system()/backtick. For the latter, you might
        want to try IPC::Cmd (run() or run_forked()), or some simpler
        interface for it like System::Timeout. <br><br>

    Util::Timeout
        Author: NOTBENH <https://metacpan.org/author/NOTBENH>

        A wrapper around Perl's alarm()/$SIG{ALRM}, so it has the same
        limitations, e.g. you cannot use this to properly timeout external
        programs started by system()/backtick. For the latter, you might
        want to try IPC::Cmd (run() or run_forked()), or some simpler
        interface for it like System::Timeout. <br><br>

    System::Timeout
        Author: CHENGANG <https://metacpan.org/author/CHENGANG>

        This is a thin wrapper over IPC::Cmd's run(). I'd personally use
        run() directly, it's not much harder or longer to type. Plus,
        IPC::Cmd is a core module. <br><br>

    Module::Quote
        Author: TOBYINK <https://metacpan.org/author/TOBYINK>

        Wouldn't a function like
        load_module(&quot;Math::Module&quot;)-&gt;new(42) be more obvious?
        Is there a specific goal for using custom quote operator (which
        requires Devel::Declare, and thus a C compiler to build)? <br>

    Module::Hash
        Author: TOBYINK <https://metacpan.org/author/TOBYINK>

        Wouldn't a function like
        load_module(&quot;Math::Module&quot;)-&gt;new(42) be more obvious?
        Is there a specific goal for using a tied hash (since there is
        already %INC)?

    Promises
        Author: YANICK <https://metacpan.org/author/YANICK>

        5-star for its documentation. <br>

    Lingua::ITA::Numbers
        Author: PETAMEM <https://metacpan.org/author/PETAMEM>

        Does the author care to explain the sudden influx of
        Lingua::&lt;3-letter-code&gt;:: modules (which look like mostly just
        repackaging of their corresponding Lingua::&lt;2-letter-code&gt;::
        modules with no mention of purpose in the PODs)? The original
        modules are not orphaned either (for example, I still maintain
        Lingua::ID::*). <br><br>No Changes file. Versioning synchronized for
        all 3-letter modules with no indication of what version of the
        2-letter-code module is used. For example, Lingua::ITA::Numbers' doc
        still says &quot;decimals don't work properly&quot;, while
        Lingua::IT::Numbers' doesn't (however, needless use of
        Regexp::Common does gets removed).

    HTTP::Headers::Patch::DontUseStorable
        Author: PERLANCAR <https://metacpan.org/author/PERLANCAR>

        @zaxon: I'm not sure if it's a bug with HTTP::Headers, more like a
        workaround for Storable. See the FAQ in the updated v0.03 for more
        details. <br>

    Storable
        Author: NWCLARK <https://metacpan.org/author/NWCLARK>

        Balancing previous glowing reviews. Storable has it faults, for
        example historically its track record for file format backwards
        compatibility is poor, making programs fail when loading Storable
        files after the module is upgraded. <br><br>Also, more importantly,

README  view on Meta::CPAN

        chdir()ed; 2) because $^X originates in C's argv[0] (in the main()
        function) it is possible for the calling program to exec() in such a
        way that argv[0] isn't the path to the interpreter; 3) HP/UX can do
        weird stuff in scripts that use #!; 4) VMS. (Not clear about #4
        though :) ).

    Taint::Util
        Author: AVAR <https://metacpan.org/author/AVAR>

        IMO this is the best module to deal with tainting. BTW there are
        several other modules like Taint (only provides taint + tainted, no
        untaint), Untaint (only provides untaint with awkward interface,
        like $v = untaint(qr/.../, $v)), Scalar::Util (only provides
        tainted), Test::Taint (does not provide untaint but provides
        taint_deeply and test predicates), and several others.

    Markdown::Pod
        Author: KEEDI <https://metacpan.org/author/KEEDI>

        I use Markdown::Pod for my module Perinci::To::POD. <br><br>This
        module does not output proper POD for many (not so) edge cases,
        like: <br><br>"&gt;" and the likes are not yet escaped, producing
        C&lt;&gt;&gt; when it should have been C&lt;&lt; &gt; &gt;&gt; or
        C&lt;E&lt;gt&gt;&gt;. <br><br>Ordered list numbering does not yet
        work, e.g. &quot;2. ...\n3. ...\n&quot; produces &quot;=item 1. ...
        =item 1. ...&quot; <br><br>Ordered list with item numbered other
        than 1 does not work (see above). This should be supported in POD
        because POD allows us to write the bullets/numbers for each item.
        <br><br>Inline markup is not smart enough to differentiate
        word_with_underscore. So &quot;foo_bar and foo_baz&quot; becomes
        &quot;fooI&lt;bar and foo&gt;baz&quot;. <br><br>Plus it segfaults
        sometimes (might be my perl though).

        Rating: 4/10

    Lingua::Metadata
        Author: MAJLIS <https://metacpan.org/author/MAJLIS>

        As previous reviewer noted, this module is actually just a front-end
        to the author's web service. Plus license is specifically BSD (which
        allows this module to be included in closed source projects), this
        is rather ironic to me. <br>

    Finance::Currency::Convert::WebserviceX
        Author: CLACO <https://metacpan.org/author/CLACO>

        Simple, no-fuss interface, recommended. As mentioned in the doc, the
        alternatives have some downsides: Finance::Currency::Convert::Yahoo
        is based on web scraping while ::XE has usage limits. <br>

    Carp::Always::Color
        Author: DOY <https://metacpan.org/author/DOY>

        Like Carp::Always? Want something better? Here it is. <br>

    CHI Author: ASB <https://metacpan.org/author/ASB>

        The DBI of caching. Stop reinventing your caching framework and just
        use this. <br><br>UPDATE 2013-01-16: unfortunately, the use of Moose
        reduces the usefulness of CHI for command-line scripts (0.2s/146
        files/53k lines startup overhead just to initialize a File cache).
        So 4 stars instead of 5. Let's hope the author migrates to Moo
        someday. <br>

        Rating: 8/10

    Monkey::Patch
        Author: FRODWITH <https://metacpan.org/author/FRODWITH>

        Compared to several other monkey-patching modules (like Sub::Monkey
        or Class::Monkey) I prefer this one because the interface is
        simplest and the documentation is the most straightforward. Plus it
        can do stacked patching and unordered restore, which is cool.
        <br><br>

    Log::AutoDump
        Author: CAGAO <https://metacpan.org/author/CAGAO>

        This module is simple and to the point. Unfortunately, if you're a
        user of Log4perl or other logging framework, you'll have to switch
        just for a single feature (autodumping). <br><br>An alternative is
        to use Log::Any, which also features autodumping (via
        $log-&gt;debugf(&quot;%s&quot;, $complex), $log-&gt;warnf(), and
        friends), while still allowing you to use Log4perl and other
        frameworks supported by Log::Any. <br><br>

    List::Pairwise
        Author: TDRUGEON <https://metacpan.org/author/TDRUGEON>

        Two nice and possibly very useful functions. But IMO the names
        'mapp' and 'grepp' are two similar to 'map' and 'grep', making it
        prone to typos and misreading. Perhaps consider 'map2' and 'grep2'?

    Log::Log4perl::Appender::File::FixedSize
        Author: HOREA <https://metacpan.org/author/HOREA>

        Module name should perhaps be
        Log::Log4perl::Appender::File::RoundRobin to make it clearer that
        the backend is File::RoundRobin. <br>

    Any::Mo
        Why exclude Moo? <br><br>Also the issue with any Any::* (or Any::*)
        modules is that there should be a mechanism (preferably a common
        one) to adjust the ordering. Sometimes I prefer Moose first, for
        full capability or compatibility or whatever. Sometimes I prefer
        Mouse or Moo, for quick startup (but don't mind Moose if those are
        not available). This also happens to me for YAML::Any: in some cases
        I prefer YAML::Syck, in others YAML::XS, this depends on the data
        that I'm handling. <br>

    PerlX::Perform
        Author: TOBYINK <https://metacpan.org/author/TOBYINK>

        I personally don't see much value of this syntactic sugar since Perl
        already allows us to express clearly. Pick one: <br><br>for ($foo) {
        say $_ if defined } <br><br>for (grep {defined} $foo) { say $_ }
        <br><br>do { say $_ if defined } for $foo <br><br>say $_ for grep
        {defined} $foo <br><br>And save yourself from having to remember
        whether we should add a comma or not before &quot;wherever&quot;.
        <br>

    TOBYINK::PerlX::A
        I have nothing against bundles like this, but beware that adding
        'use TOBYINK::PerlX::A' will cause Perl to load 460 files and
        compile +- 160k lines (takes 1s on my Core i5 machine and 8s on my
        Atom netbook).

    WWW::Google::Images
        Just adding a note that this module is unmaintained (as expressed by
        the author) and has stopped working for some time. If you are
        looking for alternatives, try REST::Google (which includes
        REST::Google::Search::Images). The latter has been working OK for
        me.

    Acme::Damn
        Author: IBB <https://metacpan.org/author/IBB>

        5 stars for cute metaphor (there's also Acme::Holy by the same
        author, but that is just another implementation of Scalar::Util's
        blessed()) and for prompt support from the author. <br><br>I'm sure
        there exists a real use case to move this out of Acme::, however
        obscure that might be. Can't come up with any right now, all I can
        think of is reblessing, which can be handled with bless() from the
        start. <br><br>UPDATE 2013-09-11: I found a real use-case for it!
        Cleaning up data to be sent to JSON. BTW, Data::Structure::Util also
        has an unbless() function, but Acme::Damn is smaller and faster.
        Data::Structure::Util also currently doesn't build on Windows. <br>

    WWW::Parallels::Agent
        @Justin Case: The name is unfortunate, but it's already proper
        (WWW:: followed by website or company name). HTTP client libraries
        are in LWP::. But VM:: is also an apt choice. <br>

    Underscore
        I don't know why Sawyer X's review is marked as unhelpful (2 out of
        8), but I agree with him. This is *not* an Acme module, it's a port
        of a JavaScript library of the same name. <br>

    Locale::Geocode
        Author: DIZ <https://metacpan.org/author/DIZ>

        Sorry to have to rate with 1 star. I don't have problem with the
        interface/documentation. The 1-star rating is just to warn people
        that the data used by this module is not up to date. And that
        YEARS-old bugs are not being fixed. <br><br>At the time of this
        writing, this module still uses ISO 3166-2:1998 (first edition) +
        the newsletters (minor updates) up to 2006. When it should be
        updated to ISO 3166-2:2007 (second edition) + all the newsletters.
        For example, this module does not report 3 newer provinces in
        Indonesia. <br><br>Sadly we live in a world where countries and
        subcountries change all the time.

        Rating: 2/10

    Locale::SubCountry
        Author: KIMRYAN <https://metacpan.org/author/KIMRYAN>

        UPDATE 2012-08-30: I am not sure if the module is now fully
        compliant to the new ISO 2007, but bug reports are certainly being
        responded and resolved now. Updating rating from 1-star to 4-star.
        Thanks, Kim. <br><br>2012-02-17: Review to version 1.47:
        <br><br>Sorry to have to rate with 1 star. I don't have problem with
        the interface/documentation. The 1-star rating is just to warn
        people that the data used by this module is not up to date. And that
        months-old bugs are not being fixed. <br><br>At the time of this
        writing, this module still uses ISO 3166-2:1998 (first edition) when
        it should be updated to ISO 3166-2:2007 (second edition) + all the
        newsletters (minor updates). For example, this module does not
        report 3 newer provinces in Indonesia. <br><br>Sadly we live in a
        world where countries and subcountries change all the time.
        <br><br>EDIT: Ok, so I was not being clear that I was not talking
        about my own bug report (posted at about the same time of this
        review). And bugs were certainly being resolved up to about 7 months
        ago. <br>

        Rating: 8/10

    Data::Rmap
        Author: BOWMANBS <https://metacpan.org/author/BOWMANBS>

        A very handy utility, sort of like s/// on your nested data
        structure instead of just strings. One nitpick: no coderef support.
        I needed to replace all coderefs inside a data structure into a
        string, since I want to pass it to JSON encoder. None of the

README  view on Meta::CPAN


    Thread::IID
        Author: WROG <https://metacpan.org/author/WROG>

        When I saw the perlmonks thread yesterday, I thought &quot;well,
        someone should package it and put it on CPAN&quot;. And then someone
        did :) Thanks. <br>

    Test::Lite
        Author: BRADH <https://metacpan.org/author/BRADH>

        This is just a reimplementation of Test::More. But I thank the
        author for writing a short description of why this module is
        written, how it is different from others, and suggestion of what
        modules users should use. There are a lot of wheels being reinvented
        on CPAN, and that's okay, I just wish more people would document the
        reason.

    Sub::Mage
        Author: BRADH <https://metacpan.org/author/BRADH>

        Since the first release, there are 13 subsequent releases in total.
        What are the changes between releases? No idea, the author doesn't
        bother to update Changes (and no public repo is listed). Apparently
        all his other modules are also like this. Not very user-friendly.
        <br><br>UPDATE 2011-11-22: I see that this has been rectified by the
        author, there is now Changes entry for each new release. Cool,
        thanks. <br>

    relative_lib
        Documentation is placed in README.md, so it's inaccessible from
        perldoc et al. Why? This is not a Python library.

    CPAN::Mini::Webserver
        Author: MITHALDU <https://metacpan.org/author/MITHALDU>

        Just found out about it, despite having used CPAN::Mini for over a
        year. Helps *a lot*. More people should know this (e.g. mention from
        CPAN::Mini POD).

    Win32::App::which
        Author: DOLMEN <https://metacpan.org/author/DOLMEN>

        I don't use this module since I'm not on Windows. But why another
        module? File::Which also handles Win32 (probably not the &quot;the
        current directory is explored before PATH&quot; thing, but you
        should consider submitting a patch). <br><br>At least the
        documentation should state why this module is necessary. It
        complicates scripts by having to select between two 'which'
        implementations.

    Devel::Platform::Info
        Author: BARBIE <https://metacpan.org/author/BARBIE>

        I knew CPAN wouldn't let me down. Now I can discard my own
        OS/platform detecting code (which probably is buggier and not nearly
        as extensive) and rely on Devel::Platform::Info instead.
        <br><br>Devel::Platform::Info gives information not only about the
        OS but also architecture, kernel type &amp; version, etc. In my case
        I need to detect distro name, its version, and its codename. All of
        those are provided. <br><br>This module is so new though (started in
        2010) so I wonder whether this need has never come up before. <br>

    Package::Builder
        Author: DRAUONER <https://metacpan.org/author/DRAUONER>

        Less boilerplate please!

        Rating: 2/10

    File::LibMagic
        Author: DROLSKY <https://metacpan.org/author/DROLSKY>

        After comparing against File::MMagic, File::MMagic::XS, File::Type,
        I ended up choosing File::LibMagic because it has the least problems
        and looks like being the most maintained (although it would be nice
        if the author cleans up the RT queue). <br><br>For those stuck
        without a C compiler, File::Type or File::Magic can be an
        alternative.

        Rating: 8/10

    File::MMagic::XS
        Author: DMAKI <https://metacpan.org/author/DMAKI>

        Last time I checked, still can't parse system magic database, e.g.
        /usr/share/file/magic (bug first filed in RT 4 years ago).
        <br><br>The currently recommended module in this area seems to be
        File::LibMagic. Other alternatives include File::MMagic (slow and
        buggy, no longer maintained), Media::Type::Simple (only maps MIME
        type from/to file extension).

        Rating: 4/10

    File::MMagic
        Author: KNOK <https://metacpan.org/author/KNOK>

        Works for basic usage, but has quite a few problems. Plus it is not
        very performant. Doesn't seem to be maintained anymore. <br><br>The
        currently recommended module in this area seems to be
        File::LibMagic. Other alternatives include File::Type (gives less
        useful results), File::MMagic::XS (also not actively maintained?
        long standing bugs like failure to parse system magic file still
        persists), Media::Type::Simple (only maps MIME type from/to file
        extension). <br>

        Rating: 4/10

    File::Type
        Author: PMISON <https://metacpan.org/author/PMISON>

        As another reviewer has said, this module tends to conclude
        &quot;application/octet-stream&quot; for many kinds of files, making
        it not very useful. <br><br>The currently recommended module in this
        area seems to be File::LibMagic. Other alternatives include
        File::MMagic (slow, has quite a few bugs, no longer maintained),
        File::MMagic::XS (also not actively maintained? long standing bug
        like failure to parse system magic file still persists),
        Media::Type::Simple (only maps MIME type from/to file extension).
        <br>

README  view on Meta::CPAN

    Bundle::Dpchrist
        Every once in a while everyone of us encounters a programmer that
        disregards existing reusable code and creates his/her own
        &quot;standard library&quot; for everything, from trimming string to
        creating random number to cleaning the kitchen sink. We all might
        have been one too, at one time or another. I'm not saying that this
        bundle is a case of the above, but it's giving me a similar feeling.
        :-) <br><br>A commendable effort, David. But there really are a lot
        of wheels being reinvented here.

    Net::BitTorrent::File
        Author: ORCLEV <https://metacpan.org/author/ORCLEV>

        I mass download stuffs by putting a bunch of torrent files in a
        directory on the server and let rtorrent takes care of them. With
        this module I can quickly whip up a short script to calculate the
        total size of the downloadable files so I can be pretty sure that
        when I leave my server for days/weeks, I don't run out of disk space
        because I put in too many torrent files. <br>

    Module::CoreList
        Author: BINGOS <https://metacpan.org/author/BINGOS>

        Wow, I was thinking the same exact &quot;godsend&quot; too and turns
        out some other reviewer already said so. Very very helpful to assist
        deployment and pick modules to use. I personally made a couple of
        command-line scripts like pm-in-core or core-since-when to save some
        typing. <br>

    WWW::Mechanize
        Author: SIMBABQUE <https://metacpan.org/author/SIMBABQUE>

        WWW::Mechanize is of course one of the indispensable tools for any
        web programmer or admin. The current problem is the proliferation of
        3rd party subclasses, the functionalities of which cannot be used
        together. So you want a polite Mechanize which does
        self-rate-limiting and uses the Firefox or IE engine? A subclass
        exists for each feature, but how do you use them together?
        WWW::Mechanize needs to be more role/plugin-oriented instead of
        inheritance-oriented. <br>

    Mail::Sendmail
        Author: NEILB <https://metacpan.org/author/NEILB>

        I used Mail::Sendmail and a few others &quot;older&quot; modules
        back from the days when it didn't support setting envelope sender
        different from RFC From, and when the test hung on some dead host.
        <br><br>If it's still working for you, great. I personally have
        moved on to other modules like Email::Sender::Simple, which
        abstracts sending mechanism (transport) and support SMTP auth, for
        two. Also, many of the guide/documentation for Mail::Sendmail are
        not quite up to date in style (though they still might work), for
        example the low level way of building HTML email. Also, the
        Changelog file doesn't seem to be maintained?

        Rating: 6/10

    autodie
        Author: TODDR <https://metacpan.org/author/TODDR>

        I started using autodie in almost all of my applications a few
        months ago. It's somewhat of a mixed blessing. For existing
        applications, it can break things and making things less robust,
        solely because old code are not built with autodie in mind.
        <br><br>But the best thing about it is that it's lexically scoped,
        so for sections of code that you're not sure about, just sprinkle
        'no autodie' to get the old behaviour. <br><br>It should be used on
        probably 95% of code out there. For the rest of the cases, where you
        need to report the status of each I/O operation, it's obviously more
        convenient to check $? instead of trapping exception everytime.
        <br><br>+1 for getting it into core. <br>

    App::FileTools::BulkRename
        Disclaimer: I maintain a &quot;competitor&quot; module, App::perlmv.
        Apparently a lot of people, like me, likes to rename files using
        Perl. And the examples in the documentation are about renaming movie
        files too, something which I do a lot :) <br><br>I applaud Stirling
        Westrup for taking a legacy script and improving it. May we have a
        lot of ideas to borrow from each other. <br><br>This is an early
        release, there are quite a few things I find lacking. Most
        importantly, I suggest adding a test suite as soon as possible. The
        filesystem differences can be tricky, and CPAN Testers can help
        providing feedback. <br><br>Keep up the good work.

        Rating: 8/10

    Script::State
        Author: MOTEMEN <https://metacpan.org/author/MOTEMEN>

        Nice idea, straight and simple interface. A better name could
        perhaps be chosen? Documentation should be expanded, e.g. to warn
        users about security, since Data::Dumper a.k.a. eval() is used to
        load variable content. Also, the implementation does not yet
        consider file locking.

    PathTools
        I guess File::Spec's API is sane enough, but I suspect not a lot of
        people are using it because there's not enough incentive for it.
        When 99% population of the world use Unix/Linux/Windows (even Macs
        been technically Unix for a number of years), &quot;/&quot; works
        everywhere and using File::Spec does not gain you anything except
        lots of typing exercise. <br><br>That's why I think Path::Class
        might have a better chance of succeeding. It gives niceties like a
        few more convenience methods, a shortcut of getting dir &amp; file
        object from each other, etc. It gives users more incentive of using
        a proper path manipulation library because it gives extra stuff
        along with that. It should also be in core to accompany File::Spec.

        Rating: 8/10

    File::Slurp
        Author: CAPOEIRAB <https://metacpan.org/author/CAPOEIRAB>

        I've been using File::Slurp for years and is generally satisfied
        with it. However reading the negative reviews today and looking at
        its RT queue, I realize that this module is broken for many and is
        effectively abandoned by the maintainer (no new releases for almost
        3 years now despite several RT items labeled as critical). So I
        suggest others checking out the alternatives.

        Rating: 2/10

    Log::Log4perl
        Author: ETJ <https://metacpan.org/author/ETJ>

        It's a very mature and an excellent logging framework. However, some
        of the common minor complaints are: 1) It's too complex. I agree: it
        should not be this hard to get started. 2) Configuration is too
        verbose. Agreed: but well, what can you do, most things from Java is
        a bit overengineered and verbose anyway. At least you can do almost
        anything with the configuration. 3) It's not very Perlish. Also
        agreed. 4) Performance. My note: speed is not an issue in majority
        of the cases and Log4perl's performance is adequate for most of the
        rest of the cases. For faster/leaner alternatives you might want to
        take a look at Log::Fast, but a lot of Log4perl's features are
        missing. <br><br>One of the main strengths of Log4perl is its
        sublogger/subcategory feature, which few other frameworks seem to
        have. <br><br>For other alternatives, also take a look at:
        Log::Handler, Log::Any. And of course Log::Message too. <br>

    Log::Handler
        Author: BLOONIX <https://metacpan.org/author/BLOONIX>

        This review mostly compares Log::Handler with Log4perl, which is a
        mature and one of the most popular logging frameworks. <br><br>I
        think Log::Handler's interface is much simpler, nicer, more Perlish
        than Log4perl. It's a bit similar to Log::Any::App, which I created
        just because I hate Log4perl configuration. <br><br>There is a
        unique concept of maxlevel not normally found in other frameworks,
        though it can be emulated in other frameworks using filters.
        <br><br>At a quick glance, the speed is around twice that of
        Log::Log4perl, so I'll say it's on the low-end side (there are other
        much faster logging modules, but anyway speed is not an issue to
        most people). <br><br>It currently lacks sublogger (hierarchical
        categorization and adjustable/automatic appending of subcategory to
        its parent), so it cannot be used to replace Log4perl in most cases
        as that's one of the main feature of Log4perl. Which is a pity
        because I would otherwise switch.

        Rating: 8/10

    Log::Fast
        Author: POWERMAN <https://metacpan.org/author/POWERMAN>

        This logging framework is also minimalistic: no
        categories/hierarchiecal loggers, no custom levels, no config file,
        or other whistles and bells. And the interface &amp; default levels
        are rather syslog-oriented. But it's fast alright. The POD doesn't
        mention a comparison to Log::Log4perl, but a casual benchmark shows
        that it's at least 10x faster. <br><br>So this module will certainly
        come handy if you have a performance critical application.
        <br><br>Btw, note that the benchmarks are done for actual logging to
        output. For log statements that do not actually get logged (e.g.
        because the level is below the desired output level), I don't find
        that extreme differences in overhead between logging frameworks. For
        example, on my Athlon64 X2 5600+ PC, Log::Fast's overhead is roughly
        around 3mils/sec, while Log::Log4perl is around 1,5mils/sec.

    Log::Minimal
        Author: KAZEBURO <https://metacpan.org/author/KAZEBURO>

        Log::Minimal's slogan is &quot;minimal but customizable&quot;. It's
        minimal alright, probably only suitable for simple scripts as the
        moment you organize your application/library into separate modules,
        you'll want/need categories instead of just level, which is not
        provided by Log::Minimal. <br><br>Also, only formats is
        customizable, there is currently no way to customize level. And the
        levels are &quot;not standard&quot; (not that there is an official

README  view on Meta::CPAN


        Log::Fine is touted as a framework for those who &quot;need a
        fine-grained logging mechanism in their program(s)&quot;. But apart
        from the emphasis on custom levels, to me there is nothing extra
        fine-grained about it. The other thing it provides is
        categories/namespace, which is also supported by a lot of other
        frameworks. So I fail to see the benefit/uniqueness of Log::Fine.
        <br><br>Btw regarding custom levels, this practice is long
        deprecated by log4j (and thus also by Log4perl, although Log4perl
        can do custom levels). I can understand this decision as I sometimes
        already have trouble managing the popular convention of 6 levels
        (FATAL/ERROR/WARN/INFO/DEBUG/TRACE) as it is, much less with custom
        levels!

        Rating: 6/10

    Config::IniFiles
        Author: SHLOMIF <https://metacpan.org/author/SHLOMIF>

        This module has been developed for more than a decade and seen
        different maintainers over the years. The codebase is indeed showing
        these, with different capitalization and indentation styles, among
        other things. <br><br>However, among more than a dozen or so of INI
        modules in CPAN, ironically there seems to be few other choices if
        you go beyond the most basic feature set. Some INI modules can only
        simplistically rewrite/dump the whole INI structure and thus lose
        comments/orders, while others can't even write INI files.
        <br><br>Config::IniFiles by far offers the most options and
        features, like dealing with line continuation, case sensitivity,
        default section, multiline/array, deltas, etc. So for now, despite
        all of its quirks, this module is still hard to beat.
        <br><br>There's another nice little INI module that can do
        read/set/delete/unset (instead of just read/dump): Prima::IniFile,
        but it is included in a totally unrelated distribution.

        Rating: 8/10

    DateTime
        Author: DROLSKY <https://metacpan.org/author/DROLSKY>

        Amidst all the glowing reviews may I add a reminder that, as with
        everything, there's a catch: runtime performance. On my PC, the
        speed of creating a DateTime object is just around 6000/sec. If you
        use DateTime intensively, it can quickly add up. <br><br>Imagine
        serving a web page that fetches 50 rows from database, where for
        convenience you convert each date column to a DateTime object, and
        you have 120 requests/sec coming in... That's already 6000 objects
        (an extra second!). <br><br>Which is unfortunate because DateTime is
        so wonderful, convenient, correct, complete and all that. So one
        approach you can use might be to delay converting to DateTime object
        until necessary.

    Date::Manip
        Author: SBECK <https://metacpan.org/author/SBECK>

        Wow, there are surely a lot of negative reviews ... <br><br>First of
        all, Date::Manip has a long history. I used this module back in
        2001-2002, IIRC. Back then it was *the* swiss army of date/time
        manipulation, something you use when you want the most
        flexible/complete thing in Perl. True, it's slow, but it works.
        <br><br>But then things change. DateTime project was started, and
        now it is somewhat the de facto standard. It's more modern and far
        more modular than the monolithic Date::Manip (every timezone and
        language support and parsing/formatting modules shipped in one
        single distribution). <br><br>And then there's the 5.x -&gt; 6.x
        debacle. As someone who also sprinkle Perl 5.10 requirements to his
        CPAN modules, I can feel for the author. But the difference is, most
        of my modules are not that widely used/known, and also many start
        its life already requiring 5.10 right from its first released
        version. While in Date::Manip's case, this happens to a very widely
        used module. Surely backwards compatibility should be considered
        more. <br><br>All in all, you are free to use or not use
        Date::Manip. There are other alternatives. Pick wisely. <br>

        Rating: 6/10

    App::pmuninstall
        Author: XAICRON <https://metacpan.org/author/XAICRON>

        One would wonder why CPAN clients still don't have this crucial
        feature Though you see Miyagawa listed in the Credits so maybe
        cpanminus or its sister will end up having this functionality? One
        can only hope. At 0.06, some things are not working flawlessly
        (submitted in RT). Keep up the good work! <br><br>

    App::lntree
        Author: ROKR <https://metacpan.org/author/ROKR>

        I guess this app is still useful, since &quot;cp -sR&quot; still
        doesn't work as many would expect, and there are Windows users out
        there (yes, newer NTFS does support symlinks; though I don't know
        whether this module supports creating symlinks on NTFS). <br><br>A
        minor comment would be on the name, maybe lnstree can be considered
        instead (since &quot;ln&quot; indicates hardlink, at least for me).
        Btw, there's also a free software called &quot;lns&quot; to do the
        exact same thing. <br><br>

    Data::Clone
        Author: GFUJI <https://metacpan.org/author/GFUJI>

        I've never encountered difficulty in cloning data structures in
        Perl, usually I just use Clone or sometimes Storable's freeze + thaw
        (the later does not yet support cloning Regexp objects out of the
        box). <br><br>However, I like Data::Clone for its speed! It's
        several times faster than Clone or freeze+thaw. So hats up. Planning
        to use Data::Clone in future projects. <br><br>Now if we can
        convince Goro to write a fast serializer/deserializer with compact
        output (essentially, a faster version of Storable), that would be
        even nicer :-) <br><br>

    Data::Pond
        Author: ZEFRAM <https://metacpan.org/author/ZEFRAM>

        With due respect to the author, I fail to see the practical point of
        Pond. Pond (Perl-based open notation for data) is the Perl
        counterpart of JSON, except that implementation is currently only
        available in Perl (CMIIW), and &quot;Pond represents fewer data
        types directly&quot;. <br><br>Pond is pitched against Data::Dumper +
        eval, which is dangerous, but Data::Dumper + eval is by far not the
        only method available for serialization. Perl can do Storable, JSON,
        YAML, even PHP serialization format. <br><br>The documentation does
        not show what Pond looks like. <br><br>One cute thing about Pond is
        that you can check Pond syntax using a single regex. But apart from
        that, there's nothing compelling in using Pond to serialize data.

        Rating: 4/10

    File::Which
        Author: PLICEASE <https://metacpan.org/author/PLICEASE>

        You can always count on CPAN to have prewritten modules for various
        things, including this one. I've never bothered before about
        portability and just rely on the &quot;which&quot; command, but for
        one reason there's a time when I just couldn't do that. <br><br>Btw,
        there's also File::Which::Cached.

    String::ShellQuote
        Author: ROSCH <https://metacpan.org/author/ROSCH>

        I admit it. Ever since I know about escapeshellarg() and
        escapeshellcmd() in PHP, I've been reimplementing this function in
        Perl literally a million of times (mostly because of laziness and
        because it only takes a couple of lines in Perl). Only a few months
        ago after the millionth time I said enough is enough and started to
        look around in CPAN, and found this module. <br><br>The only problem
        for this module is lack of visibility. Before I've never read
        articles or blog posts mentioning this module, ever. Yes, we have
        system() that can bypass the shell, but qx() can't. So yes, this
        module needs to be marketed more! <br>

    Capture::Tiny
        Author: DAGOLDEN <https://metacpan.org/author/DAGOLDEN>

        Another very handy little module that takes the hassle out of
        figuring the various mechanisms of capturing output. <br><br>Nice
        interface, great documentation, very easy to use. But....
        <br><br>Currently it cannot just capture stdout *ONLY* or stderr
        *ONLY* (while leaving the other alone). I believe this is one of the
        most commonly requested feature (already in RT). If that feature is
        implemented, this module deservers a 7-star rating.

        Rating: 8/10

    File::chdir
        Author: DAGOLDEN <https://metacpan.org/author/DAGOLDEN>

        This is a handy little module, with a simple and nice interface. One
        of the more common bugs encountered in my scripts is forgetting to
        track the current working directory after doing chdir() in
        subroutines. By localizing $CWD, I don't have to worry that
        subroutines mess up current working directory anymore.

FAQ
  What is an Acme::CPANModules::* module?
    An Acme::CPANModules::* module, like this module, contains just a list
    of module names that share a common characteristics. It is a way to
    categorize modules and document CPAN. See Acme::CPANModules for more
    details.

  What are ways to use this Acme::CPANModules module?
    Aside from reading this Acme::CPANModules module's POD documentation,
    you can install all the listed modules (entries) using cpanm-cpanmodules
    script (from App::cpanm::cpanmodules distribution):

     % cpanm-cpanmodules -n Import::CPANRatings::User::stevenharyanto

    Alternatively you can use the cpanmodules CLI (from App::cpanmodules
    distribution):

        % cpanmodules ls-entries Import::CPANRatings::User::stevenharyanto | cpanm -n

    or Acme::CM::Get:

        % perl -MAcme::CM::Get=Import::CPANRatings::User::stevenharyanto -E'say $_->{module} for @{ $LIST->{entries} }' | cpanm -n

    or directly:

        % perl -MAcme::CPANModules::Import::CPANRatings::User::stevenharyanto -E'say $_->{module} for @{ $Acme::CPANModules::Import::CPANRatings::User::stevenharyanto::LIST->{entries} }' | cpanm -n

    This Acme::CPANModules module also helps lcpan produce a more meaningful
    result for "lcpan related-mods" command when it comes to finding related
    modules for the modules listed in this Acme::CPANModules module. See
    App::lcpan::Cmd::related_mods for more details on how "related modules"
    are found.



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