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Module::Util(3)	      User Contributed Perl Documentation      Module::Util(3)

NAME
       Module::Util - Module name tools and transformations

SYNOPSIS
	   use Module::Util qw( :all );

	   $valid = is_valid_module_name $potential_module;

	   $relative_path = module_path $module_name;

	   $file_system_path = module_fs_path $module_name;

	   # load module at runtime
	   require module_path $module_name;

	   # (see perldoc -f require for limitations of this approach.)

DESCRIPTION
       This module provides a few useful functions for manipulating module
       names. Its main aim is to centralise some of the functions commonly
       used by modules that manipulate other modules in some way, like
       converting module names to relative paths.

EXPORTS
       Nothing by default.

       Use the tag :all to import all functions.

FUNCTIONS
   is_valid_module_name
	   $bool = is_valid_module_name($module)

       Returns true if $module looks like a module name, false otherwise.

   module_is_loaded
	   $abs_path_or_hook = module_is_loaded($module)

       Returns the %INC entry for the given module. This is usually the
       absolute path of the module, but sometimes it is the hook object that
       loaded it.

       See perldoc -f require

       Equivalent to:

	   $INC{module_path($module)};

       Except that invalid module names simply return false without generating
       warnings.

   find_installed
	   $path = find_installed($module, [@inc])

       Returns the first found installed location of the given module. This is
       always an absolute filesystem path, even if it is derived from a
       relative path in the include list.

       By default, @INC is searched, but this can be overridden by providing
       extra arguments.

	   # look in @INC
	   $path = find_installed("Module::Util")

	   # look only in lib and blib/lib, not in @INC
	   $path = find_installed("Module::Util", 'lib', 'blib/lib')

       Note that this will ignore any references in the search path, so it
       doesn't necessarily follow that the module cannot be successfully
       "require"d if this returns nothing.

   all_installed
	   @paths = all_installed($module, [@inc])

       Like find_installed, but will return multiple results if the module is
       installed in multiple locations.

   find_in_namespace
	   @modules = find_in_namespace($namespace, [ @inc ])

       Searches for modules under a given namespace in the search path (@INC
       by default).

	   find_in_namespace("My::Namespace");

       Returns unique installed module names under the namespace. Note that
       this does not include the passed-in name, even if it is the name of an
       installed module.

       Use of an empty string as the namespace returns all modules in @inc.

   module_path
	   $path = module_path($module)

       Returns a relative path in the form used in %INC. Which I am led to
       believe is always a unix file path, regardless of the platform.

       If the argument is not a valid module name, nothing is returned.

   module_fs_path
	   $path = module_fs_path($module)

       Like module_path, but returns the path in the native filesystem format.

       On unix systems, this should be identical to module_path.

   path_to_module
	   $module = path_to_module($path)

       Transforms a relative unix file path into a module name.

	   # Print loaded modules as module names instead of paths:
	   print join("\n", map { path_to_module($_) } keys %INC

       Returns undef if the resulting module name is not valid.

   fs_path_to_module
	   $module = fs_path_to_module($fs_path)

       Transforms relative filesystem paths into module names.

	   # on windows:
	   fs_path_to_module("Module\\Util.pm")
	   # returns Module::Util

       Returns undef if the resulting module is not valid.

   module_path_parts
	   @parts = module_path_parts($module_name)

       Returns the module name split into parts suitable for feeding to
       File::Spec->catfile.

	   module_path_parts('Module::Util')
	   # returns ('Module', 'Util.pm')

       If the module name is invalid, nothing is returned.

   canonical_module_name
	   $module = canonical_module_name($module);

       Returns the canonical module name for the given module. This basically
       consists of eliminating any apostrophe symbols and replacing them with
       '::'.

	   canonical_module_name("Acme::Don't"); # Acme::Don::t

       Returns undef if the name is not valid.

BUGS
       None known. Please report any found.

SEE ALSO
       pm_which, a command-line utility for finding installed perl modules
       that is bundled with this module.

       Other, similar CPAN modules:

       Class::Inspector, Module::Info,

       Module::Require, UNIVERSAL::require, Module::Runtime

       perldoc -f require

AUTHOR
       Matt Lawrence <mattlaw@cpan.org>

THANKS
       Alexander KA~Xhne and Adrian Lai for submitting patches.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright 2005 Matt Lawrence, All Rights Reserved.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the same terms as Perl itself.

perl v5.14.0			  2011-06-16		       Module::Util(3)
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