/usr/local/perl/lib/site_perl/5.8.5/Perl/Critic/Policy/BuiltinFunctions/ProhibitStringySplit.pm



NAME

Perl::Critic::Policy::BuiltinFunctions::ProhibitStringySplit


DESCRIPTION

The split function always interprets the PATTERN argument as a regular expression, even if you specify it as a string. This causes much confusion if the string contains regex metacharacters. So for clarity, always express the PATTERN argument as a regex.

  $string = 'Fred|Barney';
  @names = split '|', $string; #not ok, is ('F', 'r', 'e', 'd', '|', 'B', 'a' ...)
  @names = split m/[|]/, $string; #ok, is ('Fred', Barney')

When the PATTERN is a single space the split function has special behavior, so Perl::Critic forgives that usage. See "perldoc -f split" for more information.


SEE ALSO

the Perl::Critic::Policy::ControlStrucutres::RequireBlockGrep manpage

the Perl::Critic::Policy::ControlStrucutres::RequireBlockMap manpage


AUTHOR

Jeffrey Ryan Thalhammer <thaljef@cpan.org>


COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2005-2007 Jeffrey Ryan Thalhammer. All rights reserved.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of this license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.

 /usr/local/perl/lib/site_perl/5.8.5/Perl/Critic/Policy/BuiltinFunctions/ProhibitStringySplit.pm