How to Install and Uninstall perl-Eval-Closure.noarch Package on Fedora 36

Last updated: October 07,2024

1. Install "perl-Eval-Closure.noarch" package

Please follow the instructions below to install perl-Eval-Closure.noarch on Fedora 36

$ sudo dnf update $ sudo dnf install perl-Eval-Closure.noarch

2. Uninstall "perl-Eval-Closure.noarch" package

This guide let you learn how to uninstall perl-Eval-Closure.noarch on Fedora 36:

$ sudo dnf remove perl-Eval-Closure.noarch $ sudo dnf autoremove

3. Information about the perl-Eval-Closure.noarch package on Fedora 36

Last metadata expiration check: 5:22:59 ago on Thu Sep 8 08:04:50 2022.
Available Packages
Name : perl-Eval-Closure
Version : 0.14
Release : 17.fc36
Architecture : noarch
Size : 24 k
Source : perl-Eval-Closure-0.14-17.fc36.src.rpm
Repository : fedora
Summary : Safely and cleanly create closures via string eval
URL : https://metacpan.org/release/Eval-Closure
License : GPL+ or Artistic
Description : String eval is often used for dynamic code generation. For instance, Moose uses
: it heavily, to generate inlined versions of accessors and constructors, which
: speeds code up at runtime by a significant amount. String eval is not without
: its issues however - it's difficult to control the scope it's used in (which
: determines which variables are in scope inside the eval), and it can be quite
: slow, especially if doing a large number of evals.
:
: This module attempts to solve both of those problems. It provides an
: eval_closure function, which evals a string in a clean environment, other than
: a fixed list of specified variables. It also caches the result of the eval, so
: that doing repeated evals of the same source, even with a different
: environment, will be much faster (but note that the description is part of the
: string to be evaled, so it must also be the same (or non-existent) if caching
: is to work properly).