Provided by: libnumber-tolerant-perl_1.702-1_all bug

NAME

       Number::Tolerant::Union - unions of tolerance ranges

VERSION

       version 1.702

SYNOPSIS

        use Number::Tolerant;

        my $range1 = tolerance(10 => to => 12);
        my $range2 = tolerance(14 => to => 16);

        my $union = $range1 | $range2;

        if ($11 == $union) { ... } # this will happen
        if ($12 == $union) { ... } # so will this

        if ($13 == $union) { ... } # nothing will happen here

        if ($14 == $union) { ... } # this will happen
        if ($15 == $union) { ... } # so will this

DESCRIPTION

       Number::Tolerant::Union is used by Number::Tolerant to represent the union of multiple
       tolerances.  A subset of the same operators that function on a tolerance will function on
       a union of tolerances, as listed below.

METHODS

   new
         my $union = Number::Tolerant::Union->new(@list_of_tolerances);

       There is a "new" method on the Number::Tolerant::Union class, but unions are meant to be
       created with the "|" operator on a Number::Tolerant tolerance.

       The arguments to "new" are a list of numbers or tolerances to be unioned.

       Intersecting ranges are not converted into a single range, but this may change in the
       future.  (For example, the union of "5 to 10" and "7 to 12" is not "5 to 12.")

   options
       This method will return a list of all the acceptable options for the union.

   Overloading
       Tolerance unions overload a few operations, mostly comparisons.

       numification
           Unions numify to undef.  If there's a better idea, I'd love to hear it.

       stringification
           A tolerance stringifies to a short description of itself.  This is a set of the
           union's options, parentheses-enclosed and joined by the word "or"

       equality
           A number is equal to a union if it is equal to any of its options.

       comparison
           A number is greater than a union if it is greater than all its options.

           A number is less than a union if it is less than all its options.

       union intersection
           An intersection ("&") with a union is commutted across all options.  In other words:

            (a | b | c) & d  ==yields==> ((a & d) | (b & d) | (c & d))

           Options that have no intersection with the new element are dropped.  The intersection
           of a constant number and a union yields that number, if the number was in the union's
           ranges and otherwise yields nothing.

TODO

       Who knows.  Collapsing overlapping options, probably.

AUTHOR

       Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2004 by Ricardo Signes.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
       the Perl 5 programming language system itself.