#acl PaulHowarth:read,write,admin,revert,delete All:read === Sunday 29th January 2017 === ==== Local Packages ==== * Updated `perl-Moose: update to 2.2000: . Enhancements: * Most delegations are inlined now, which improve stack traces when the delegated-to method throws an exception or when the delegated-to method simply does not exist in the delegatee; previously, this stack trace and associated error were less helpful than they could have been ([[CPAN:46614|CPAN RT#46614]], [[CPAN:98402|CPAN RT#98402]], [[CPAN:109631|CPAN RT#109631]]) * The stack trace for an inlined delegation now tells you where the delegating attribute was declared (file and line number) * When an attribute defines two methods (say a reader and writer) with the same name, this now generates a warning * The warning when attribute methods overwrite one another is now much more informative; it includes the type of accessors involve (reader, writer, predicate, etc.) as well as the file and line where each accessor was defined ([[CPAN:118325|CPAN RT#118325]]) * Added support for `__no_BUILD__` as a constructor argument to skip calling any `BUILD` subs (used internally by modules like `Moo` that have their own implementation of calling `BUILD`) ([[https://github.com/moose/Moose/pull/142|PR#142]]) . Bug Fixes: * Brought back the `Moose::Meta::Method::Delegation->_get_delegate_accessor` method for the benefit of `MooseX::CurriedDelegation` . Tests: * Warnings are only checked for in tests under `AUTHOR_TESTING`, so as to not prevent installation when warnings occur in prerequisites . Other: * Increased minimum required version of `Sub::Name` * Updated `perl-PPIx-Regexp` to 0.051: * Support whitespace inside `[]` if `/xx` in effect; starting with Perl 5.25.9, a space or tab appearing inside a bracketed character class is not significant if `/xx` is asserted * Further deprecate tokenizer method `prior()` * Add '`provides`' data to `ExtUtils::MakeMaker` output * '''Some''' unescaped literal '`{`' removed in 5.025001; after '`.`', Unicode classes, and bracketed classes (including extended), they are still legal * Make `/\b{/` an error; Perl fails to parse the above, because once it sees the '`\b{`' it wants to find one of the extended boundary assertions (like `\b{wb}`), and declares an error when it does not ----