NAME

Acme::Don't - The opposite of do

VERSION

This document describes version 1.01 of Acme::Don::t, released May 3, 2002.

SYNOPSIS

use Acme::Don't; don't { print "This won't be printed

" }; # NO-OP

DESCRIPTION

The Acme::Don't module provides a don't command, which is the opposite of Perl's built-in do .

It is used exactly like the do BLOCK function except that, instead of executing the block it controls, it...well...doesn't.

Regardless of the contents of the block, don't returns undef .

You can even write:

don't { # code here } while condition();

And, yes, in strict analogy to the semantics of Perl's magical do...while , the don't...while block is unconditionally not done once before the test. ;-)

Note that the code in the don't block must be syntactically valid Perl. This is an important feature: you get the accelerated performance of not actually executing the code, without sacrificing the security of compile-time syntax checking.

LIMITATIONS

Doesn't (yet) implement the opposite of do STRING . The current workaround is to use: don't {"filename"};

The construct: don't { don't { ... } } isn't (yet) equivalent to: do { ... } because the outer don't prevents the inner don't from being executed, before the inner don't gets the chance to discover that it actually should execute. This is an issue of semantics. don't... doesn't mean do the opposite of... ; it means do nothing with... . In other words, doin nothing about doing nothing does...nothing.

You can't (yet) use a: don't { ... } unless condition(); as a substitute for: do { ... } if condition(); Again, it's an issue of semantics. don't...unless... doesn't mean do the opposite of...if... ; it means do nothing with...if not... .

AUTHOR

Damian Conway (damian@conway.org)

BLAME

Luke Palmer really should be far more careful what he idly wishes for.

BUGS

Unlikely, since it doesn't actually do anything. However, bug reports and other feedback are most welcome.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2002, Damian Conway. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed and/or modified under the terms of the Perl Artistic License (see http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html)