How to Install and Uninstall perl-MouseX-Getopt Package on openSuSE Tumbleweed
Last updated: December 27,2024
1. Install "perl-MouseX-Getopt" package
This guide covers the steps necessary to install perl-MouseX-Getopt on openSuSE Tumbleweed
$
sudo zypper refresh
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$
sudo zypper install
perl-MouseX-Getopt
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2. Uninstall "perl-MouseX-Getopt" package
Please follow the step by step instructions below to uninstall perl-MouseX-Getopt on openSuSE Tumbleweed:
$
sudo zypper remove
perl-MouseX-Getopt
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3. Information about the perl-MouseX-Getopt package on openSuSE Tumbleweed
Information for package perl-MouseX-Getopt:
-------------------------------------------
Repository : openSUSE-Tumbleweed-Oss
Name : perl-MouseX-Getopt
Version : 0.38-1.14
Arch : noarch
Vendor : openSUSE
Installed Size : 59.6 KiB
Installed : No
Status : not installed
Source package : perl-MouseX-Getopt-0.38-1.14.src
Upstream URL : https://metacpan.org/release/MouseX-Getopt
Summary : Mouse role for processing command line options
Description :
This is a role which provides an alternate constructor for creating objects
using parameters passed in from the command line.
This module attempts to DWIM as much as possible with the command line
params by introspecting your class's attributes. It will use the name of
your attribute as the command line option, and if there is a type
constraint defined, it will configure Getopt::Long to handle the option
accordingly.
You can use the trait MouseX::Getopt::Meta::Attribute::Trait or the
attribute metaclass MouseX::Getopt::Meta::Attribute to get non-default
commandline option names and aliases.
You can use the trait MouseX::Getopt::Meta::Attribute::Trait::NoGetopt or
the attribute metaclass MouseX::Getopt::Meta::Attribute::NoGetopt to have
'MouseX::Getopt' ignore your attribute in the commandline options.
By default, attributes which start with an underscore are not given
commandline argument support, unless the attribute's metaclass is set to
MouseX::Getopt::Meta::Attribute. If you don't want your accessors to have
the leading underscore in their name, you can do this:
has '_foo' => (accessor => 'foo', ...);
has '_bar' => (reader => 'bar', ...);
This will mean that Getopt will not handle a --foo param, but your code can
still call the 'foo' method.
If your class also uses a configfile-loading role based on
MouseX::ConfigFromFile, such as MouseX::SimpleConfig, MouseX::Getopt's
'new_with_options' will load the configfile specified by the '--configfile'
option (or the default you've given for the configfile attribute) for you.
Options specified in multiple places follow the following precedence order:
commandline overrides configfile, which overrides explicit new_with_options
parameters.
-------------------------------------------
Repository : openSUSE-Tumbleweed-Oss
Name : perl-MouseX-Getopt
Version : 0.38-1.14
Arch : noarch
Vendor : openSUSE
Installed Size : 59.6 KiB
Installed : No
Status : not installed
Source package : perl-MouseX-Getopt-0.38-1.14.src
Upstream URL : https://metacpan.org/release/MouseX-Getopt
Summary : Mouse role for processing command line options
Description :
This is a role which provides an alternate constructor for creating objects
using parameters passed in from the command line.
This module attempts to DWIM as much as possible with the command line
params by introspecting your class's attributes. It will use the name of
your attribute as the command line option, and if there is a type
constraint defined, it will configure Getopt::Long to handle the option
accordingly.
You can use the trait MouseX::Getopt::Meta::Attribute::Trait or the
attribute metaclass MouseX::Getopt::Meta::Attribute to get non-default
commandline option names and aliases.
You can use the trait MouseX::Getopt::Meta::Attribute::Trait::NoGetopt or
the attribute metaclass MouseX::Getopt::Meta::Attribute::NoGetopt to have
'MouseX::Getopt' ignore your attribute in the commandline options.
By default, attributes which start with an underscore are not given
commandline argument support, unless the attribute's metaclass is set to
MouseX::Getopt::Meta::Attribute. If you don't want your accessors to have
the leading underscore in their name, you can do this:
has '_foo' => (accessor => 'foo', ...);
has '_bar' => (reader => 'bar', ...);
This will mean that Getopt will not handle a --foo param, but your code can
still call the 'foo' method.
If your class also uses a configfile-loading role based on
MouseX::ConfigFromFile, such as MouseX::SimpleConfig, MouseX::Getopt's
'new_with_options' will load the configfile specified by the '--configfile'
option (or the default you've given for the configfile attribute) for you.
Options specified in multiple places follow the following precedence order:
commandline overrides configfile, which overrides explicit new_with_options
parameters.