stable(3p) Perl Programmers Reference Guide stable(3p)
NAME
stable - Experimental features made easy, once we know they're stable
VERSION
version 0.032
SYNOPSIS
use stable 'lexical_subs', 'bitwise';
my sub is_odd($value) { $value & 1 }
DESCRIPTION
The experimental pragma makes it easy to turn on experiments while
turning off associated warnings. You should read about it, if you
don't already know what it does.
Seeing "use experimental" in code might be scary. In fact, it probably
should be! Code that uses experimental features might break in the
future if the perl development team decides that the experiment needs
to be altered. When experiments become stable, because the developers
decide they're a success, the warnings associated with them go away.
When that happens, they can generally be turned on with "use feature".
This is great, if you are using a version of perl where the feature you
want is already stable. If you're using an older perl, though, it
might be the case that you want to use an experimental feature that
still warns, even though there's no risk in using it, because
subsequent versions of perl have that feature unchanged and now stable.
Here's an example: The "postderef" feature was added in perl 5.20.0.
In perl 5.24.0, it was marked stable. Using it would no longer trigger
a warning. The behavior of the feature didn't change between 5.20.0
and 5.24.0. That means that it's perfectly safe to use the feature on
5.20 or 5.22, even though there's a warning.
In that case, you could very justifiably add "use experimental
'postderef'" but the casual reader may still be worried at seeing that.
The "stable" pragma exists to turn on experimental features only when
it's known that their behavior in the running perl is their stable
behavior.
If you try to use an experimental feature that isn't stable or
available on the running version of perl, an exception will be thrown.
You should also take care that you've required the version of "stable"
that you need!
If it's not immediately obvious why, here's a bit of explanation:
o "stable" comes with perl, starting with perl v5.38.
o Imagine that v5.38 adds a feature called "florps". It will stop
being experimental in v5.42.
o The version of "stable" that comes with perl v5.38 can't know that
the florps experiment will succeed, so you can't "use stable
'florps'" on the version of stable ships with v5.38, because it
can't see the future!
o You'll need to write "use stable 1.234 'florps'" to say that you
need version 1.234 of stable, which is when florps became known to
stable.
Sure, it's a little weird, but it's worth it! The documentation of
this pragma will tell you what version of "stable" you need to require
in order to use various features. See below.
At present there are only a few "stable" features:
o "bitwise" - stable as of perl 5.22, available via stable 0.031
o "isa" - stable as of perl 5.32, available via stable 0.031
o "lexical_subs" - stable as of perl 5.22, available via stable 0.031
Lexical subroutines were actually added in 5.18, and their design
did not change, but significant bugs makes them unsafe to use
before 5.22.
o "postderef" - stable as of perl 5.20, available via stable 0.031
o "const_attr" - stable as of perl 5.22, available via stable 0.032
o "for_list" - stable as of perl 5.36, available via stable 0.032
SEE ALSO
perlexperiment contains more information about experimental features.
AUTHOR
Leon Timmermans <
[email protected]>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Leon Timmermans.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
perl v5.40.1 2025-01-28 stable(3p)