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package Number::Compare; use strict; use Carp qw(croak); use vars qw/$VERSION/; $VERSION = '0.03'; sub new { my $referent = shift; my $class = ref $referent || $referent; my $expr = $class->parse_to_perl( shift ); bless eval "sub { \$_[0] $expr }", $class; } sub parse_to_perl { shift; my $test = shift; $test =~ m{^ ([<>]=?)? # comparison (.*?) # value ([kmg]i?)? # magnitude $}ix or croak "don't understand '$test' as a test"; my $comparison = $1 || '=='; my $target = $2; my $magnitude = $3 || ''; $target *= 1000 if lc $magnitude eq 'k'; $target *= 1024 if lc $magnitude eq 'ki'; $target *= 1000000 if lc $magnitude eq 'm'; $target *= 1024*1024 if lc $magnitude eq 'mi'; $target *= 1000000000 if lc $magnitude eq 'g'; $target *= 1024*1024*1024 if lc $magnitude eq 'gi'; return "$comparison $target"; } sub test { $_[0]->( $_[1] ) } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME Number::Compare - numeric comparisons =head1 SYNOPSIS Number::Compare->new(">1Ki")->test(1025); # is 1025 > 1024 my $c = Number::Compare->new(">1M"); $c->(1_200_000); # slightly terser invocation =head1 DESCRIPTION Number::Compare compiles a simple comparison to an anonymous subroutine, which you can call with a value to be tested again. Now this would be very pointless, if Number::Compare didn't understand magnitudes. The target value may use magnitudes of kilobytes (C<k>, C<ki>), megabytes (C<m>, C<mi>), or gigabytes (C<g>, C<gi>). Those suffixed with an C<i> use the appropriate 2**n version in accordance with the IEC standard: http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html =head1 METHODS =head2 ->new( $test ) Returns a new object that compares the specified test. =head2 ->test( $value ) A longhanded version of $compare->( $value ). Predates blessed subroutine reference implementation. =head2 ->parse_to_perl( $test ) Returns a perl code fragment equivalent to the test. =head1 AUTHOR Richard Clamp <richardc@unixbeard.net> =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (C) 2002,2011 Richard Clamp. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 SEE ALSO http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html =cut