GSP
Quick Navigator

Search Site

Unix VPS
A - Starter
B - Basic
C - Preferred
D - Commercial
MPS - Dedicated
Previous VPSs
* Sign Up! *

Support
Contact Us
Online Help
Handbooks
Domain Status
Man Pages

FAQ
Virtual Servers
Pricing
Billing
Technical

Network
Facilities
Connectivity
Topology Map

Miscellaneous
Server Agreement
Year 2038
Credits
 

USA Flag

 

 

Man Pages
Version::Next(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Version::Next(3)

Version::Next - increment module version numbers simply and correctly

version 1.000

  use Version::Next qw/next_version/;

  my $new_version = next_version( $old_version );

This module provides a simple, correct way to increment a Perl module version number. It does not attempt to guess what the original version number author intended, it simply increments in the smallest possible fashion. Decimals are incremented like an odometer. Dotted decimals are incremented piecewise and presented in a standardized way.

If more complex version manipulation is necessary, you may wish to consider Perl::Version.

This module uses Sub::Exporter for optional exporting. Nothing is exported by default.

  my $new_version = next_version( $old_version );

Given a string, this function make the smallest logical increment and returns it. The input string must be a "lax" version numbers as defined by the version module. The string "undef" is treated as 0 and incremented to 1. Leading or trailing periods have a 0 (or "v0") prepended or appended as appropriate. For legacy reasons, given no argument or a literal "undef" (not the string "undef"), the function returns 0.

Decimal versions are incremented like an odometer, preserving the original number of decimal places. If an underscore is present (indicating an "alpha" version), its relative position is preserved. Examples:

  0.001    ->   0.002
  0.999    ->   1.000
  0.1229   ->   0.1230
  0.12_34  ->   0.12_35
  0.12_99  ->   0.13_00

Dotted-decimal versions have the least significant element incremented by one. If the result exceeds 999, the element resets to 0 and the next most significant element is incremented, and so on. Any leading zero padding is removed. Examples:

 v1.2.3     ->  v1.2.4
 v1.2.999   ->  v1.3.0
 v1.999.999 ->  v2.0.0

NOTE: Due to changes in the interpretation of dotted-decimal version numbers with alpha elements in version 0.9913 and later, the notion of the 'next' dotted-decimal alpha is ill-defined. Version::Next no longer supports dotted-decimals with alpha elements and a fatal exception will be thrown if one is provided to "next_version".

  • version
  • Perl::Version

Please report any bugs or feature requests through the issue tracker at <https://github.com/dagolden/Version-Next/issues>. You will be notified automatically of any progress on your issue.

This is open source software. The code repository is available for public review and contribution under the terms of the license.

<https://github.com/dagolden/Version-Next>

  git clone https://github.com/dagolden/Version-Next.git

David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>

Grzegorz Rożniecki <xaerxess@gmail.com>

This software is Copyright (c) 2016 by David Golden.

This is free software, licensed under:

  The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004
2016-02-25 perl v5.32.1

Search for    or go to Top of page |  Section 3 |  Main Index

Powered by GSP Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface.
Output converted with ManDoc.