MooseX::Types::Common::String(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | MooseX::Types::Common::String(3pm) |
MooseX::Types::Common::String - Commonly used string types
version 0.001014
use MooseX::Types::Common::String qw/SimpleStr/; has short_str => (is => 'rw', isa => SimpleStr); ... #this will fail $object->short_str("string\nwith\nbreaks");
A set of commonly-used string type constraints that do not ship with Moose by default.
A "Str" with no new-line characters and length <= 255.
A "SimpleStr" with length > 0.
A "NonEmptySimpleStr" with no uppercase characters. A coercion exists via "lc" from "NonEmptySimpleStr".
A "NonEmptySimpleStr" with no lowercase characters. A coercion exists via "uc" from "NonEmptySimpleStr".
A "NonEmptySimpleStr" with length > 3.
A "NonEmptySimpleStr" with length > 7 containing at least one non-alpha character.
A "Str" with length > 0.
A "Str" with length > 0 and no uppercase characters. A coercion exists via "lc" from "NonEmptyStr".
A "Str" with length > 0 and no lowercase characters. A coercion exists via "uc" from "NonEmptyStr".
A "Str" with no new-line characters that consists of only Numeric characters. Examples include, Social Security Numbers, Personal Identification Numbers, Postal Codes, HTTP Status Codes, etc. Supports attempting to coerce from a string that has punctuation or whitespaces in it ( e.g credit card number 4111-1111-1111-1111 ).
Bugs may be submitted through the RT bug tracker <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=MooseX-Types-Common> (or bug-MooseX-Types-Common@rt.cpan.org <mailto:bug-MooseX-Types-Common@rt.cpan.org>).
There is also a mailing list available for users of this distribution, at <http://lists.perl.org/list/moose.html>.
There is also an irc channel available for users of this distribution, at "#moose" on "irc.perl.org" <irc://irc.perl.org/#moose>.
This software is copyright (c) 2009 by Matt S Trout - mst (at) shadowcatsystems.co.uk (<http://www.shadowcatsystems.co.uk/>).
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
2022-06-15 | perl v5.34.0 |