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NAME

Sub::StrictDecl - detect undeclared subroutines in compilation

DESCRIPTION

This module provides optional checking of subroutine existence at
compile time.  This checking detects mistyped subroutine names and
subroutines that the programmer forgot to import.  Traditionally Perl
does not detect these errors until runtime, so it is easy for errors to
lurk in rarely-executed or untested code.

Specifically, where checking is enabled, any reference to a specific
(compile-time-constant) package-based subroutine name is examined.  If the
named subroutine has never been declared then an error is signalled at
compile time.  This does not require that the subroutine be fully defined:
a forward declaration such as "sub foo;" suffices to suppress the error.
Imported subroutines qualify as declared.  References that are checked
include not only subroutine calls but also pure referencing such as
"\&foo".

This checking is controlled by a lexically-scoped pragma.  It is
therefore applied only to code that explicitly wants the checking, and
it is possible to locally disable checking if necessary.  Checking might
need to be turned off for code that makes special arrangements to put
a subroutine in place at runtime, for example.

INSTALLATION

	perl Build.PL
	./Build
	./Build test
	./Build install

AUTHOR

Andrew Main (Zefram) <zefram@fysh.org>

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) 2011 PhotoBox Ltd

Copyright (C) 2011, 2015 Andrew Main (Zefram) <zefram@fysh.org>

LICENSE

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