Acme-Bitfield
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{
"X_No_Archive" : "Yes",
"abstract" : "Bitmask for Tracking Boolean Sets",
"author" : [
"Sanko Robinson <sanko@cpan.org>"
],
"description" : "Provides a compact way to track a large set of boolean flags.",
"dynamic_config" : 0,
"generated_by" : "App::mii v1.0.0",
"keywords" : [
"bitfield",
"bittorrent",
"interplanetary"
],
"license" : [
"artistic_2"
],
# Statistics
printf "Progress: %.2f%%\r", ($bf->count / $bf->size * 100);
# Export raw binary for network transfer
my $raw = $bf->data;
```
# DESCRIPTION
`Acme::Bitfield` provides a compact way to track a large set of big endian boolean flags. It is specifically designed
to follow the BitTorrent (BEP 03) bit-ordering convention, where the most significant bit of the first byte represents
index 0.
## Bit Ordering
\* Byte 0, Bit 0 (0x80) -> Index 0 \* Byte 0, Bit 7 (0x01) -> Index 7 \* Byte 1, Bit 0 (0x80) -> Index 8
This is the inverse of Perl's internal `vec` bit-ordering, and this module handles the necessary bit-swizzling
transparently.
lib/Acme/Bitfield.pod view on Meta::CPAN
say 'Found it!' if $bf->get(42);
# Statistics
printf "Progress: %.2f%%\r", ($bf->count / $bf->size * 100);
# Export raw binary for network transfer
my $raw = $bf->data;
=head1 DESCRIPTION
C<Acme::Bitfield> provides a compact way to track a large set of big endian boolean flags. It is specifically designed
to follow the BitTorrent (BEP 03) bit-ordering convention, where the most significant bit of the first byte represents
index 0.
=head2 Bit Ordering
* Byte 0, Bit 0 (0x80) -> Index 0 * Byte 0, Bit 7 (0x01) -> Index 7 * Byte 1, Bit 0 (0x80) -> Index 8
This is the inverse of Perl's internal C<vec> bit-ordering, and this module handles the necessary bit-swizzling
transparently.
( run in 1.703 second using v1.01-cache-2.11-cpan-140bd7fdf52 )