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Directory (0755) :  /usr/share/perl/5.30.0/Getopt/../Time/../Attribute/../version/

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Current File : //usr/share/perl/5.30.0/Getopt/../Time/../Attribute/../version/regex.pm
package version::regex;

use strict;

our $VERSION = 0.9924;

#--------------------------------------------------------------------------#
# Version regexp components
#--------------------------------------------------------------------------#

# Fraction part of a decimal version number.  This is a common part of
# both strict and lax decimal versions

my $FRACTION_PART = qr/\.[0-9]+/;

# First part of either decimal or dotted-decimal strict version number.
# Unsigned integer with no leading zeroes (except for zero itself) to
# avoid confusion with octal.

my $STRICT_INTEGER_PART = qr/0|[1-9][0-9]*/;

# First part of either decimal or dotted-decimal lax version number.
# Unsigned integer, but allowing leading zeros.  Always interpreted
# as decimal.  However, some forms of the resulting syntax give odd
# results if used as ordinary Perl expressions, due to how perl treats
# octals.  E.g.
#   version->new("010" ) == 10
#   version->new( 010  ) == 8
#   version->new( 010.2) == 82  # "8" . "2"

my $LAX_INTEGER_PART = qr/[0-9]+/;

# Second and subsequent part of a strict dotted-decimal version number.
# Leading zeroes are permitted, and the number is always decimal.
# Limited to three digits to avoid overflow when converting to decimal
# form and also avoid problematic style with excessive leading zeroes.

my $STRICT_DOTTED_DECIMAL_PART = qr/\.[0-9]{1,3}/;

# Second and subsequent part of a lax dotted-decimal version number.
# Leading zeroes are permitted, and the number is always decimal.  No
# limit on the numerical value or number of digits, so there is the
# possibility of overflow when converting to decimal form.

my $LAX_DOTTED_DECIMAL_PART = qr/\.[0-9]+/;

# Alpha suffix part of lax version number syntax.  Acts like a
# dotted-decimal part.

my $LAX_ALPHA_PART = qr/_[0-9]+/;

#--------------------------------------------------------------------------#
# Strict version regexp definitions
#--------------------------------------------------------------------------#

# Strict decimal version number.

our $STRICT_DECIMAL_VERSION =
    qr/ $STRICT_INTEGER_PART $FRACTION_PART? /x;

# Strict dotted-decimal version number.  Must have both leading "v" and
# at least three parts, to avoid confusion with decimal syntax.

our $STRICT_DOTTED_DECIMAL_VERSION =
    qr/ v $STRICT_INTEGER_PART $STRICT_DOTTED_DECIMAL_PART{2,} /x;

# Complete strict version number syntax -- should generally be used
# anchored: qr/ \A $STRICT \z /x

our $STRICT =
    qr/ $STRICT_DECIMAL_VERSION | $STRICT_DOTTED_DECIMAL_VERSION /x;

#--------------------------------------------------------------------------#
# Lax version regexp definitions
#--------------------------------------------------------------------------#

# Lax decimal version number.  Just like the strict one except for
# allowing an alpha suffix or allowing a leading or trailing
# decimal-point

our $LAX_DECIMAL_VERSION =
    qr/ $LAX_INTEGER_PART (?: $FRACTION_PART | \. )? $LAX_ALPHA_PART?
	|
	$FRACTION_PART $LAX_ALPHA_PART?
    /x;

# Lax dotted-decimal version number.  Distinguished by having either
# leading "v" or at least three non-alpha parts.  Alpha part is only
# permitted if there are at least two non-alpha parts. Strangely
# enough, without the leading "v", Perl takes .1.2 to mean v0.1.2,
# so when there is no "v", the leading part is optional

our $LAX_DOTTED_DECIMAL_VERSION =
    qr/
	v $LAX_INTEGER_PART (?: $LAX_DOTTED_DECIMAL_PART+ $LAX_ALPHA_PART? )?
	|
	$LAX_INTEGER_PART? $LAX_DOTTED_DECIMAL_PART{2,} $LAX_ALPHA_PART?
    /x;

# Complete lax version number syntax -- should generally be used
# anchored: qr/ \A $LAX \z /x
#
# The string 'undef' is a special case to make for easier handling
# of return values from ExtUtils::MM->parse_version

our $LAX =
    qr/ undef | $LAX_DOTTED_DECIMAL_VERSION | $LAX_DECIMAL_VERSION /x;

#--------------------------------------------------------------------------#

# Preloaded methods go here.
sub is_strict	{ defined $_[0] && $_[0] =~ qr/ \A $STRICT \z /x }
sub is_lax	{ defined $_[0] && $_[0] =~ qr/ \A $LAX \z /x }

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