Provided by: libperl-critic-perl_1.121-1_all bug

NAME

       Perl::Critic - Critique Perl source code for best-practices.

SYNOPSIS

           use Perl::Critic;
           my $file = shift;
           my $critic = Perl::Critic->new();
           my @violations = $critic->critique($file);
           print @violations;

DESCRIPTION

       Perl::Critic is an extensible framework for creating and applying coding standards to Perl source code.
       Essentially, it is a static source code analysis engine.  Perl::Critic is distributed with a number of
       Perl::Critic::Policy modules that attempt to enforce various coding guidelines.  Most Policy modules are
       based on Damian Conway's book Perl Best Practices.  However, Perl::Critic is not limited to PBP and will
       even support Policies that contradict Conway.  You can enable, disable, and customize those Polices
       through the Perl::Critic interface.  You can also create new Policy modules that suit your own tastes.

       For a command-line interface to Perl::Critic, see the documentation for perlcritic.  If you want to
       integrate Perl::Critic with your build process, Test::Perl::Critic provides an interface that is suitable
       for test programs.  Also, Test::Perl::Critic::Progressive is useful for gradually applying coding
       standards to legacy code.  For the ultimate convenience (at the expense of some flexibility) see the
       criticism pragma.

       Win32 and ActivePerl users can find PPM distributions of Perl::Critic at
       <http://theoryx5.uwinnipeg.ca/ppms/> and Alexandr Ciornii's downloadable executable at
       <http://chorny.net/perl/perlcritic.html>.

       If you'd like to try Perl::Critic without installing anything, there is a web-service available at
       <http://perlcritic.com>.  The web-service does not yet support all the configuration features that are
       available in the native Perl::Critic API, but it should give you a good idea of what it does.  You can
       also invoke the perlcritic web-service from the command-line by doing an HTTP-post, such as one of these:

           $> lwp-request -m POST http://perlcritic.com/perl/critic.pl < MyModule.pm
           $> wget -q -O - --post-file=MyModule.pm http://perlcritic.com/perl/critic.pl
           $> curl --data @MyModule.pm http://perlcritic.com/perl/critic.pl

       Please note that the perlcritic web-service is still alpha code.  The URL and interface to the service
       are subject to change.

       Also, ActivePerl includes a very slick graphical interface to Perl-Critic called "perlcritic-gui".  You
       can get a free community edition of ActivePerl from <http://www.activestate.com>.

INTERFACE SUPPORT

       This is considered to be a public class.  Any changes to its interface will go through a deprecation
       cycle.

CONSTRUCTOR

       "new( [ -profile => $FILE, -severity => $N, -theme => $string, -include => \@PATTERNS, -exclude =>
       \@PATTERNS, -top => $N, -only => $B, -profile-strictness => $PROFILE_STRICTNESS_{WARN|FATAL|QUIET},
       -force => $B, -verbose => $N ], -color => $B, -pager => $string, -allow-unsafe => $B, -criticism-fatal =>
       $B)"
       "new()"
           Returns  a  reference  to  a  new  Perl::Critic object.  Most arguments are just passed directly into
           Perl::Critic::Config, but I have described them here as well.  The default value  for  all  arguments
           can  be  defined  in  your  .perlcriticrc file.  See the "CONFIGURATION" section for more information
           about that.  All arguments are optional key-value pairs as follows:

           -profile is a path to a configuration file. If $FILE is not defined, Perl::Critic::Config attempts to
           find a .perlcriticrc configuration file in the current directory, and then in  your  home  directory.
           Alternatively,  you  can  set  the  "PERLCRITIC"  environment  variable to point to a file in another
           location.  If a configuration file can't be found, or if $FILE is an empty string, then all  Policies
           will be loaded with their default configuration.  See "CONFIGURATION" for more information.

           -severity  is  the  minimum severity level.  Only Policy modules that have a severity greater than $N
           will be applied.  Severity values are integers ranging from 1 (least severe violations)  to  5  (most
           severe  violations).   The  default  is  5.   For a given "-profile", decreasing the "-severity" will
           usually reveal more Policy violations.  You can set  the  default  value  for  this  option  in  your
           .perlcriticrc  file.   Users  can  redefine  the severity level for any Policy in their .perlcriticrc
           file.  See "CONFIGURATION" for more information.

           If it is difficult for you to remember whether severity "5" is the most or least  restrictive  level,
           then you can use one of these named values:

               SEVERITY NAME   ...is equivalent to...   SEVERITY NUMBER
               --------------------------------------------------------
               -severity => 'gentle'                     -severity => 5
               -severity => 'stern'                      -severity => 4
               -severity => 'harsh'                      -severity => 3
               -severity => 'cruel'                      -severity => 2
               -severity => 'brutal'                     -severity => 1

           The  names  reflect  how  severely the code is criticized: a "gentle" criticism reports only the most
           severe violations, and so on down  to  a  "brutal"  criticism  which  reports  even  the  most  minor
           violations.

           -theme  is  special  expression  that  determines  which  Policies to apply based on their respective
           themes.  For example, the following would load only Policies that have a 'bugs' AND 'pbp' theme:

             my $critic = Perl::Critic->new( -theme => 'bugs && pbp' );

           Unless the "-severity" option is explicitly given, setting "-theme" silently causes  the  "-severity"
           to  be  set to 1.  You can set the default value for this option in your .perlcriticrc file.  See the
           "POLICY THEMES" section for more information about themes.

           -include is a reference to a list of string @PATTERNS.   Policy  modules  that  match  at  least  one
           "m/$PATTERN/ixms" will always be loaded, irrespective of all other settings.  For example:

               my $critic = Perl::Critic->new(-include => ['layout'] -severity => 4);

           This would cause Perl::Critic to apply all the "CodeLayout::*" Policy modules even though they have a
           severity  level  that  is  less  than  4.   You  can  set  the  default value for this option in your
           .perlcriticrc file.  You can also use "-include" in conjunction with  the  "-exclude"  option.   Note
           that "-exclude" takes precedence over "-include" when a Policy matches both patterns.

           -exclude  is  a  reference  to  a  list  of string @PATTERNS.  Policy modules that match at least one
           "m/$PATTERN/ixms" will not be loaded, irrespective of all other settings.  For example:

               my $critic = Perl::Critic->new(-exclude => ['strict'] -severity => 1);

           This would cause Perl::Critic to not  apply  the  "RequireUseStrict"  and  "ProhibitNoStrict"  Policy
           modules even though they have a severity level that is greater than 1.  You can set the default value
           for  this  option  in  your  .perlcriticrc file.  You can also use "-exclude" in conjunction with the
           "-include" option.  Note that "-exclude" takes precedence over "-include" when a Policy matches  both
           patterns.

           -single-policy  is  a string "PATTERN".  Only one policy that matches "m/$PATTERN/ixms" will be used.
           Policies that do not match will be excluded.   This  option  has  precedence  over  the  "-severity",
           "-theme", "-include", "-exclude", and "-only" options.  You can set the default value for this option
           in your .perlcriticrc file.

           -top  is  the maximum number of Violations to return when ranked by their severity levels.  This must
           be a positive integer.  Violations are still returned in the order that they occur within  the  file.
           Unless  the "-severity" option is explicitly given, setting "-top" silently causes the "-severity" to
           be set to 1.  You can set the default value for this option in your .perlcriticrc file.

           -only is a boolean value.  If set to a true value, Perl::Critic will only choose from  Policies  that
           are  mentioned  in  the  user's  profile.   If  set  to  a  false  value (which is the default), then
           Perl::Critic chooses from all the Policies that it finds at your site.  You can set the default value
           for this option in your .perlcriticrc file.

           -profile-strictness   is   an   enumerated    value,    one    of    "$PROFILE_STRICTNESS_WARN"    in
           Perl::Critic::Utils::Constants        (the       default),       "$PROFILE_STRICTNESS_FATAL"       in
           Perl::Critic::Utils::Constants, and  "$PROFILE_STRICTNESS_QUIET"  in  Perl::Critic::Utils::Constants.
           If  set  to  "$PROFILE_STRICTNESS_FATAL"  in  Perl::Critic::Utils::Constants,  Perl::Critic will make
           certain warnings about problems found in a .perlcriticrc or file specified via  the  -profile  option
           fatal.   For  example,  Perl::Critic  normally  only "warn"s about profiles referring to non-existent
           Policies, but this value makes this situation fatal.  Correspondingly, "$PROFILE_STRICTNESS_QUIET" in
           Perl::Critic::Utils::Constants makes Perl::Critic shut up about these things.

           -force is a boolean value that controls whether Perl::Critic observes  the  magical  "##  no  critic"
           annotations  in  your code.  If set to a true value, Perl::Critic will analyze all code.  If set to a
           false value (which is  the  default)  Perl::Critic  will  ignore  code  that  is  tagged  with  these
           annotations.   See  "BENDING THE RULES" for more information.  You can set the default value for this
           option in your .perlcriticrc file.

           -verbose can be a positive  integer  (from  1  to  11),  or  a  literal  format  specification.   See
           Perl::Critic::Violation  for  an explanation of format specifications.  You can set the default value
           for this option in your .perlcriticrc file.

           -unsafe directs Perl::Critic to allow the use of Policies that are marked as "unsafe" by the  author.
           Such policies may compile untrusted code or do other nefarious things.

           -color and -pager are not used by Perl::Critic but is provided for the benefit of perlcritic.

           -criticism-fatal is not used by Perl::Critic but is provided for the benefit of criticism.

           -color-severity-highest,   -color-severity-high,   -color-severity-medium,  -color-severity-low,  and
           -color-severity-lowest are not used by Perl::Critic, but are provided for the benefit of  perlcritic.
           Each  is  set  to  the  Term::ANSIColor  color  specification to be used to display violations of the
           corresponding severity.

           -files-with-violations and -files-without-violations are not used by Perl::Critic, but  are  provided
           for the benefit of perlcritic, to cause only the relevant filenames to be displayed.

METHODS

       "critique( $source_code )"
           Runs  the  $source_code  through the Perl::Critic engine using all the Policies that have been loaded
           into this engine.  If $source_code is a scalar reference, then it is treated as a  string  of  actual
           Perl  code.   If  $source_code  is a reference to an instance of PPI::Document, then that instance is
           used directly.  Otherwise, it is treated as a path to a local file containing Perl code.  This method
           returns a list of Perl::Critic::Violation objects for each violation of  the  loaded  Policies.   The
           list is sorted in the order that the Violations appear in the code.  If there are no violations, this
           method returns an empty list.

       "add_policy( -policy => $policy_name, -params => \%param_hash )"
           Creates a Policy object and loads it into this Critic.  If the object cannot be instantiated, it will
           throw a fatal exception.  Otherwise, it returns a reference to this Critic.

           -policy is the name of a Perl::Critic::Policy subclass module.  The 'Perl::Critic::Policy' portion of
           the name can be omitted for brevity.  This argument is required.

           -params is an optional reference to a hash of Policy parameters.  The contents of this hash reference
           will  be  passed into to the constructor of the Policy module.  See the documentation in the relevant
           Policy module for a description of the arguments it supports.

       " policies() "
           Returns a list containing references to all the Policy  objects  that  have  been  loaded  into  this
           engine.  Objects will be in the order that they were loaded.

       " config() "
           Returns the Perl::Critic::Config object that was created for or given to this Critic.

       " statistics() "
           Returns  the Perl::Critic::Statistics object that was created for this Critic.  The Statistics object
           accumulates data for all files that are analyzed by this Critic.

FUNCTIONAL INTERFACE

       For those folks who prefer to have a functional interface, The  "critique"  method  can  be  exported  on
       request  and  called  as a static function.  If the first argument is a hashref, its contents are used to
       construct a new Perl::Critic object internally.  The keys of that  hash  should  be  the  same  as  those
       supported by the "Perl::Critic::new" method.  Here are some examples:

           use Perl::Critic qw(critique);

           # Use default parameters...
           @violations = critique( $some_file );

           # Use custom parameters...
           @violations = critique( {-severity => 2}, $some_file );

           # As a one-liner
           %> perl -MPerl::Critic=critique -e 'print critique(shift)' some_file.pm

       None of the other object-methods are currently supported as static functions.  Sorry.

CONFIGURATION

       Most of the settings for Perl::Critic and each of the Policy modules can be controlled by a configuration
       file.   The  default configuration file is called .perlcriticrc.  Perl::Critic will look for this file in
       the current directory  first,  and  then  in  your  home  directory.   Alternatively,  you  can  set  the
       "PERLCRITIC"  environment  variable to explicitly point to a different file in another location.  If none
       of these files exist, and the "-profile" option is not given to the constructor,  then  all  the  modules
       that are found in the Perl::Critic::Policy namespace will be loaded with their default configuration.

       The  format  of  the  configuration  file  is  a  series of INI-style blocks that contain key-value pairs
       separated by '='. Comments should start with '#' and can be placed on a separate line or after the  name-
       value pairs if you desire.

       Default  settings  for  Perl::Critic itself can be set before the first named block. For example, putting
       any or all of these at  the  top  of  your  configuration  file  will  set  the  default  value  for  the
       corresponding constructor argument.

           severity  = 3                                     #Integer or named level
           only      = 1                                     #Zero or One
           force     = 0                                     #Zero or One
           verbose   = 4                                     #Integer or format spec
           top       = 50                                    #A positive integer
           theme     = (pbp || security) && bugs             #A theme expression
           include   = NamingConventions ClassHierarchies    #Space-delimited list
           exclude   = Variables  Modules::RequirePackage    #Space-delimited list
           criticism-fatal = 1                               #Zero or One
           color     = 1                                     #Zero or One
           allow-unsafe = 1                                  #Zero or One
           pager     = less                                  #pager to pipe output to

       The remainder of the configuration file is a series of blocks like this:

           [Perl::Critic::Policy::Category::PolicyName]
           severity = 1
           set_themes = foo bar
           add_themes = baz
           maximum_violations_per_document = 57
           arg1 = value1
           arg2 = value2

       "Perl::Critic::Policy::Category::PolicyName"  is  the  full  name of a module that implements the policy.
       The Policy modules distributed with Perl::Critic have been grouped into categories according to the table
       of  contents  in  Damian  Conway's  book  Perl  Best  Practices.  For   brevity,   you   can   omit   the
       'Perl::Critic::Policy' part of the module name.

       "severity"  is  the level of importance you wish to assign to the Policy.  All Policy modules are defined
       with a default severity value ranging from 1 (least  severe)  to  5  (most  severe).   However,  you  may
       disagree  with  the  default severity and choose to give it a higher or lower severity, based on your own
       coding philosophy.  You can set the "severity" to an integer from 1 to 5, or use one  of  the  equivalent
       names:

           SEVERITY NAME ...is equivalent to... SEVERITY NUMBER
           ----------------------------------------------------
           gentle                                             5
           stern                                              4
           harsh                                              3
           cruel                                              2
           brutal                                             1

       The  names reflect how severely the code is criticized: a "gentle" criticism reports only the most severe
       violations, and so on down to a "brutal" criticism which reports even the most minor violations.

       "set_themes" sets the theme for the Policy and overrides its default theme.  The argument is a string  of
       one  or  more whitespace-delimited alphanumeric words.  Themes are case-insensitive.  See "POLICY THEMES"
       for more information.

       "add_themes" appends to the default themes for this Policy.  The argument is a  string  of  one  or  more
       whitespace-delimited words.  Themes are case-insensitive.  See "POLICY THEMES" for more information.

       "maximum_violations_per_document"  limits  the  number  of  Violations the Policy will return for a given
       document.  Some Policies have a default limit; see the documentation for the individual Policies  to  see
       whether  there is one.  To force a Policy to not have a limit, specify "no_limit" or the empty string for
       the value of this parameter.

       The remaining key-value pairs are configuration parameters that will be passed into the  constructor  for
       that Policy.  The constructors for most Policy objects do not support arguments, and those that do should
       have reasonable defaults.  See the documentation on the appropriate Policy module for more details.

       Instead  of redefining the severity for a given Policy, you can completely disable a Policy by prepending
       a '-' to the name of the module in your configuration file.  In this manner, the  Policy  will  never  be
       loaded, regardless of the "-severity" given to the Perl::Critic constructor.

       A simple configuration might look like this:

           #--------------------------------------------------------------
           # I think these are really important, so always load them

           [TestingAndDebugging::RequireUseStrict]
           severity = 5

           [TestingAndDebugging::RequireUseWarnings]
           severity = 5

           #--------------------------------------------------------------
           # I think these are less important, so only load when asked

           [Variables::ProhibitPackageVars]
           severity = 2

           [ControlStructures::ProhibitPostfixControls]
           allow = if unless  # My custom configuration
           severity = cruel   # Same as "severity = 2"

           #--------------------------------------------------------------
           # Give these policies a custom theme.  I can activate just
           # these policies by saying `perlcritic -theme larry`

           [Modules::RequireFilenameMatchesPackage]
           add_themes = larry

           [TestingAndDebugging::RequireTestLables]
           add_themes = larry curly moe

           #--------------------------------------------------------------
           # I do not agree with these at all, so never load them

           [-NamingConventions::Capitalization]
           [-ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitMagicNumbers]

           #--------------------------------------------------------------
           # For all other Policies, I accept the default severity,
           # so no additional configuration is required for them.

       For  additional  configuration  examples,  see  the  perlcriticrc  file that is included in this examples
       directory of this distribution.

       Damian  Conway's  own  Perl::Critic  configuration   is   also   included   in   this   distribution   as
       examples/perlcriticrc-conway.

THE POLICIES

       A  large  number  of Policy modules are distributed with Perl::Critic.  They are described briefly in the
       companion document Perl::Critic::PolicySummary and in more detail in the individual  modules  themselves.
       Say  "perlcritic  -doc  PATTERN"  to  see  the  perldoc  for  all  Policy  modules  that  match the regex
       "m/PATTERN/ixms"

       There are a number of distributions of additional policies on CPAN.  If Perl::Critic  doesn't  contain  a
       policy  that you want, some one may have already written it.  See the "SEE ALSO" section below for a list
       of some of these distributions.

POLICY THEMES

       Each Policy is defined with one or more "themes".  Themes can be  used  to  create  arbitrary  groups  of
       Policies.   They  are  intended  to  provide an alternative mechanism for selecting your preferred set of
       Policies.  For example, you may wish disable a certain subset of Policies when analyzing  test  programs.
       Conversely, you may wish to enable only a specific subset of Policies when analyzing modules.

       The  Policies  that  ship with Perl::Critic have been broken into the following themes.  This is just our
       attempt to provide some basic logical groupings.  You are free to invent new themes that suit your needs.

           THEME             DESCRIPTION
           --------------------------------------------------------------------------
           core              All policies that ship with Perl::Critic
           pbp               Policies that come directly from "Perl Best Practices"
           bugs              Policies that that prevent or reveal bugs
           certrec           Policies that CERT recommends
           certrule          Policies that CERT considers rules
           maintenance       Policies that affect the long-term health of the code
           cosmetic          Policies that only have a superficial effect
           complexity        Policies that specificaly relate to code complexity
           security          Policies that relate to security issues
           tests             Policies that are specific to test programs

       Any Policy may fit into multiple themes.  Say "perlcritic -list"  to  get  a  listing  of  all  available
       Policies  and the themes that are associated with each one.  You can also change the theme for any Policy
       in your .perlcriticrc file.  See the "CONFIGURATION" section for more information about that.

       Using the "-theme" option, you can create an arbitrarily complex rule that determines which Policies will
       be loaded.  Precedence is the same as  regular  Perl  code,  and  you  can  use  parentheses  to  enforce
       precedence as well.  Supported operators are:

           Operator    Altertative    Example
           -----------------------------------------------------------------
           &&          and            'pbp && core'
           ||          or             'pbp || (bugs && security)'
           !           not            'pbp && ! (portability || complexity)'

       Theme  names  are case-insensitive.  If the "-theme" is set to an empty string, then it evaluates as true
       all Policies.

BENDING THE RULES

       Perl::Critic takes a hard-line approach to your code: either you comply or you don't.  In the real world,
       it is not always practical (nor even possible) to fully comply with coding standards.  In such cases,  it
       is wise to show that you are knowingly violating the standards and that you have a Damn Good Reason (DGR)
       for doing so.

       To  help  with those situations, you can direct Perl::Critic to ignore certain lines or blocks of code by
       using annotations:

           require 'LegacyLibaray1.pl';  ## no critic
           require 'LegacyLibrary2.pl';  ## no critic

           for my $element (@list) {

               ## no critic

               $foo = "";               #Violates 'ProhibitEmptyQuotes'
               $barf = bar() if $foo;   #Violates 'ProhibitPostfixControls'
               #Some more evil code...

               ## use critic

               #Some good code...
               do_something($_);
           }

       The "## no critic" annotations direct Perl::Critic to ignore the remaining lines of code until a "##  use
       critic"  annotation  is  found. If the "## no critic" annotation is on the same line as a code statement,
       then only that line of  code  is  overlooked.   To  direct  perlcritic  to  ignore  the  "##  no  critic"
       annotations, use the "--force" option.

       A  bare "## no critic" annotation disables all the active Policies.  If you wish to disable only specific
       Policies, add a list of Policy names as arguments, just as you would for the "no strict" or "no warnings"
       pragmas.  For  example,  this  would  disable  the  "ProhibitEmptyQuotes"  and  "ProhibitPostfixControls"
       policies until the end of the block or until the next "## use critic" annotation (whichever comes first):

           ## no critic (EmptyQuotes, PostfixControls)

           # Now exempt from ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitEmptyQuotes
           $foo = "";

           # Now exempt ControlStructures::ProhibitPostfixControls
           $barf = bar() if $foo;

           # Still subjected to ValuesAndExpression::RequireNumberSeparators
           $long_int = 10000000000;

       Since  the  Policy names are matched against the "## no critic" arguments as regular expressions, you can
       abbreviate the Policy names or disable an entire family of Policies in one shot like this:

           ## no critic (NamingConventions)

           # Now exempt from NamingConventions::Capitalization
           my $camelHumpVar = 'foo';

           # Now exempt from NamingConventions::Capitalization
           sub camelHumpSub {}

       The argument list must be enclosed in parentheses and must contain one or more comma-separated  barewords
       (e.g.  don't  use  quotes).  The "## no critic" annotations can be nested, and Policies named by an inner
       annotation will be disabled along with those already disabled an outer annotation.

       Some Policies like "Subroutines::ProhibitExcessComplexity" apply to an entire block of  code.   In  those
       cases, "## no critic" must appear on the line where the violation is reported.  For example:

           sub complicated_function {  ## no critic (ProhibitExcessComplexity)
               # Your code here...
           }

       Policies  such  as  "Documentation::RequirePodSections"  apply  to  the  entire  document,  in which case
       violations are reported at line 1.

       Use this feature wisely.  "## no critic" annotations should be used in the smallest  possible  scope,  or
       only  on  individual lines of code. And you should always be as specific as possible about which Policies
       you want to disable (i.e. never use a bare "## no critic").  If Perl::Critic complains about  your  code,
       try and find a compliant solution before resorting to this feature.

THE Perl::Critic PHILOSOPHY

       Coding  standards  are  deeply  personal  and highly subjective.  The goal of Perl::Critic is to help you
       write code that conforms with a set of best practices.  Our primary goal is not  to  dictate  what  those
       practices  are,  but  rather,  to implement the practices discovered by others.  Ultimately, you make the
       rules -- Perl::Critic is merely a tool for encouraging consistency.  If there is a policy that you  think
       is  important  or that we have overlooked, we would be very grateful for contributions, or you can simply
       load your own private set of policies into Perl::Critic.

EXTENDING THE CRITIC

       The modular design of Perl::Critic is intended to facilitate the addition of new Policies.   You'll  need
       to  have  some  understanding of PPI, but most Policy modules are pretty straightforward and only require
       about 20 lines of code.  Please see the Perl::Critic::DEVELOPER file included in this distribution for  a
       step-by-step demonstration of how to create new Policy modules.

       If  you  develop  any new Policy modules, feel free to send them to "<jeff@imaginative-software.com>" and
       I'll be happy to put them into the Perl::Critic distribution.  Or if  you  would  like  to  work  on  the
       Perl::Critic  project directly, check out our repository at <http://perlcritic.tigris.org>.  To subscribe
       to our mailing list, send a message to <mailto:dev-subscribe@perlcritic.tigris.org>.

       The Perl::Critic team is also available for hire.  If your organization has its own coding standards,  we
       can  create  custom  Policies  to  enforce  your  local  guidelines.   Or if your code base is prone to a
       particular defect pattern, we can design Policies that will help you catch those  costly  defects  before
       they   go   into   production.    To  discuss  your  needs  with  the  Perl::Critic  team,  just  contact
       "<jeff@imaginative-software.com>".

PREREQUISITES

       Perl::Critic requires the following modules:

       B::Keywords

       Config::Tiny

       Email::Address

       Exception::Class

       File::Spec

       File::Spec::Unix

       IO::String

       List::MoreUtils

       List::Util

       Module::Pluggable

       Perl::Tidy

       Pod::Spell

       PPI

       Pod::PlainText

       Pod::Select

       Pod::Usage

       Readonly

       Scalar::Util

       String::Format

       Task::Weaken

       Text::ParseWords

       version

       The following modules are optional, but recommended for complete functionality:

       File::HomeDir

       File::Which

CONTACTING THE DEVELOPMENT TEAM

       You   are    encouraged    to    subscribe    to    the    mailing    list;    send    a    message    to
       <mailto:users-subscribe@perlcritic.tigris.org>.         See        also       the       archives       at
       <http://perlcritic.tigris.org/servlets/SummarizeList?listName=users>.  You can also contact the author at
       "<jeff@imaginative-software.com>".

       At   least   one   member   of    the    development    team    has    started    hanging    around    in
       <irc://irc.perl.org/#perlcritic>.

       You can also follow Perl::Critic on Twitter, at <https://twitter.com/perlcritic>.

SEE ALSO

       There are a number of distributions of additional Policies available.  A few are listed here:

       Perl::Critic::More

       Perl::Critic::Bangs

       Perl::Critic::Lax

       Perl::Critic::StricterSubs

       Perl::Critic::Swift

       Perl::Critic::Tics

       These distributions enable you to use Perl::Critic in your unit tests:

       Test::Perl::Critic

       Test::Perl::Critic::Progressive

       There  is  also  a  distribution  that  will  install  all  the Perl::Critic related modules known to the
       development team:

       Task::Perl::Critic

       If you want to make sure you have absolutely everything, you can use this:

       Task::Perl::Critic::IncludingOptionalDependencies

BUGS

       Scrutinizing Perl code is hard for humans, let alone machines.  If you find any bugs, particularly false-
       positives   or    false-negatives    from    a    Perl::Critic::Policy,    please    submit    them    to
       <https://github.com/Perl-Critic/Perl-Critic/issues>.  Thanks.

       Most policies will produce false-negatives if they cannot understand a particular block of code.

CREDITS

       Adam Kennedy - For creating PPI, the heart and soul of Perl::Critic.

       Damian Conway - For writing Perl Best Practices, finally :)

       Chris Dolan - For contributing the best features and Policy modules.

       Andy Lester - Wise sage and master of all-things-testing.

       Elliot Shank - The self-proclaimed quality freak.

       Giuseppe Maxia - For all the great ideas and positive encouragement.

       and Sharon, my wife - For putting up with my all-night code sessions.

       Thanks  also  to  the Perl Foundation for providing a grant to support Chris Dolan's project to implement
       twenty PBP policies.  <http://www.perlfoundation.org/april_1_2007_new_grant_awards>

AUTHOR

       Jeffrey Ryan Thalhammer <jeff@imaginative-software.com>

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2005-2011 Imaginative Software Systems.  All rights reserved.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under  the  same  terms  as  Perl
       itself.  The full text of this license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.

perl v5.18.1                                       2013-11-03                                  Perl::Critic(3pm)