NAME
    Acme::CPANModules::VersionNumber::Perl - Working with Perl version
    numbers (or version strings)

VERSION
    This document describes version 0.001 of
    Acme::CPANModules::VersionNumber::Perl (from Perl distribution
    Acme-CPANModules-VersionNumber-Perl), released on 2019-04-28.

DESCRIPTION
    Working with Perl version numbers (or version strings).

    The core module version (a.k.a. version.pm) should be your first go-to
    module when dealing with Perl version numbers. Other modules can also
    help in some aspects. Modules mentioned here include: Perl::Version,
    Versioning::Scheme::Perl.

  Version numbers in Perl
    There are two styles of version numbers used in the Perl world (i.e. for
    the versioning of perl interpreter itself and for versioning Perl
    modules): decimal (x.y) or dotted decimals (x.y.z or even more parts;
    the "v" prefix forces dotted decimal to avoid ambiguity when there is
    only a single dot, e.g. v1.2).

    The former variant offers simplicity since version number can mostly be
    represented by a floating point number (quoting as string is still
    recommended to retain all precision and trailing zeros) and comparing
    versions can be done numerically. However they are often very limited so
    in those cases a dotted decimal variant can be used. For example the
    perl interpreter itself uses x.y.z convention.

    Dotted decimal can be converted to decimal ("numified") form using this
    convention: minor and lesser parts are given (at least) three decimal
    digits each. For example, 1.2.3 becomes 1.002003. 1.20.3 becomes
    1.020003. This can give some surprise which has bitten Perl programmers,
    novice and expert alike. In fact, it is the major gotcha when dealing
    with version numbers in Perl. For example '0.02' (a decimal form)
    numifies to 0.02, but 'v0.02' (a dotted decimal form) numifies to 0.002.
    Hence, v0.02 is less than 0.02 or even 0.01 when compared using
    version->parse(). Another gotcha is when a module author decides to go
    from 0.02 to 0.2.1 or 0.02.1. 0.02 (a decimal form) numifies to 0.02
    while 0.2.1 or 0.02.1 (dotted decimal) numifies to 0.002001. Hence,
    going from 0.02 to 0.02.1 will actually *decrease* your version number.
    I recommend using x.yyy if you use decimal form, i.e. start from 0.001
    and not 0.01. It will support you going smoothly to dotted decimal if
    you decide to do it one day.

    The numification is also problematic when a number part is > 999, e.g.
    1.2.1234. This breaks version comparison when comparison is done with
    version->parse().

    Aside from the abovementioned two styles, there is another: CPAN
    distributions/modules can add an underscore in the last part of the
    version number to signify alpha/dev/trial release, e.g. 1.2.3_01. PAUSE
    will not index such releases, so testers will need to specify an
    explicit version number to install, e.g. "cpanm Foo@1.2.3_01". In some
    cases you need to pay attention when comparing this kind of version
    numbers.

  Checking if a string is a valid version number
    To check if a string is a valid Perl version number, you can do:

     version->parse($str)

    which will die if $str contains an invalid version string. version.pm
    can handle the "v" prefix, (e.g. "v1.2"), dotted-decimal (e.g. "1.2.3"
    but also "1.2.3.4.5"), as well as alpha/dev/trial part (e.g.
    "v1.1.1_001").

  Parsing a version number
    version->parse, obviously enough, is used to parse a version number
    string into a structure:

     use Data::Dump;
     dd( version->parse("1.2.3") );

    which prints:

     bless({ original => "1.2.3", qv => 1, version => [1, 2, 3] }, "version")

    However:

     dd( version->parse("1.2.3_01") );

    prints:

     bless({ alpha => 1, original => "1.2.3_01", qv => 1, version => [1, 2, 301] }, "version")

  Comparing version numbers
    You can compare two version numbers again using version->parse():

     version->parse($str1) <=> version->parse($str2)

    For example:

     version->parse("1.2.3") <=> version->parse("v1.3.0");  # => -1

    Be careful when dealing with alpha/dev/trial version:

     version->parse("1.2.3_01") <=> version->parse("v1.2.4")  ;  # => 1
     version->parse("1.2.3_01") <=> version->parse("v1.2.301");  # => 0
     version->parse("1.2.3_01") <=> version->parse("v1.2.400");  # => -1

  Normalizing a version number
    To normalize a version number:

     version->parse($str)->normal

    This will add a "v" prefix, force a dotted decimal form, and remove
    insignifcant zeros. Examples:

     version->parse(1.2)      ->normal; # => "v1.200.0"
     version->parse("1.2.3")  ->normal; # => "v1.2.3"
     version->parse("1.2.30") ->normal; # => "v1.2.30"
     version->parse("1.2.030")->normal; # => "v1.2.30"

  Incrementing a version number
    Some modules like Perl::Version and Versioning::Scheme::Perl can help
    increase version numbers (or whichever part of the number). The last one
    can also decrement parts.

INCLUDED MODULES
    *   version

    *   Perl::Version

    *   Versioning::Scheme::Perl

HOMEPAGE
    Please visit the project's homepage at
    <https://metacpan.org/release/Acme-CPANModules-VersionNumber-Perl>.

SOURCE
    Source repository is at
    <https://github.com/perlancar/perl-Acme-CPANModules-VersionNumber-Perl>.

BUGS
    Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website
    <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Acme-CPANModules-Vers
    ionNumber-Perl>

    When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch
    to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.

SEE ALSO
    Acme::CPANModules - about the Acme::CPANModules namespace

    cpanmodules - CLI tool to let you browse/view the lists

AUTHOR
    perlancar <perlancar@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
    This software is copyright (c) 2019 by perlancar@cpan.org.

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