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NAME
    common::sense - save a tree AND a kitten, use common::sense!

SYNOPSIS
     use common::sense;

     # supposed to be the same, with much lower memory usage, as:
     #
     # use utf8;
     # use strict qw(vars subs);
     # use feature qw(say state switch);
     # no warnings;
     # use warnings qw(FATAL closed threads internal debugging pack
     #                 portable prototype inplace io pipe unpack malloc
     #                 deprecated glob digit printf layer
     #                 reserved taint closure semicolon);
     # no warnings qw(exec newline unopened);

DESCRIPTION
       “Nothing is more fairly distributed than common sense: no one thinks
       he needs more of it than he already has.”

       – René Descartes

    This module implements some sane defaults for Perl programs, as defined
    by two typical (or not so typical - use your common sense) specimens of
    Perl coders. In fact, after working out details on which warnings and
    strict modes to enable and make fatal, we found that we (and our code
    written so far, and others) fully agree on every option, even though we
    never used warnings before, so it seems this module indeed reflects a
    "common" sense among some long-time Perl coders.

    The basic philosophy behind the choices made in common::sense can be
    summarised as: "enforcing strict policies to catch as many bugs as
    possible, while at the same time, not limiting the expressive power
    available to the programmer".

    Two typical examples of how this philosophy is applied in practise is
    the handling of uninitialised and malloc warnings:

    *uninitialised*
        "undef" is a well-defined feature of perl, and enabling warnings for
        using it rarely catches any bugs, but considerably limits you in
        what you can do, so uninitialised warnings are disabled.

    *malloc*
        Freeing something twice on the C level is a serious bug, usually
        causing memory corruption. It often leads to side effects much later
        in the program and there are no advantages to not reporting this, so
        malloc warnings are fatal by default.

    Unfortunately, there is no fine-grained warning control in perl, so
    often whole groups of useful warnings had to be excluded because of a
    single useless warning (for example, perl puts an arbitrary limit on the
    length of text you can match with some regexes before emitting a
    warning, making the whole "regexp" category useless).

    What follows is a more thorough discussion of what this module does, and
    why it does it, and what the advantages (and disadvantages) of this
    approach are.

RATIONALE
    use utf8
        While it's not common sense to write your programs in UTF-8, it's
        quickly becoming the most common encoding, is the designated future
        default encoding for perl sources, and the most convenient encoding
        available (you can do really nice quoting tricks...). Experience has
        shown that our programs were either all pure ascii or utf-8, both of
        which will stay the same.

        There are few drawbacks to enabling UTF-8 source code by default
        (mainly some speed hits due to bugs in older versions of perl), so
        this module enables UTF-8 source code encoding by default.

    use strict qw(subs vars)
        Using "use strict" is definitely common sense, but "use strict
        'refs'" definitely overshoots its usefulness. After almost two
        decades of Perl hacking, we decided that it does more harm than
        being useful. Specifically, constructs like these:

           @{ $var->[0] }

        Must be written like this (or similarly), when "use strict 'refs'"
        is in scope, and $var can legally be "undef":

           @{ $var->[0] || [] }

        This is annoying, and doesn't shield against obvious mistakes such
        as using "", so one would even have to write (at least for the time
        being):

           @{ defined $var->[0] ? $var->[0] : [] }

        ... which nobody with a bit of common sense would consider writing:
        clear code is clearly something else.

        Curiously enough, sometimes perl is not so strict, as this works
        even with "use strict" in scope:

           for (@{ $var->[0] }) { ...

        If that isn't hypocrisy! And all that from a mere program!

    use feature qw(say state given)
        We found it annoying that we always have to enable extra features.
        If something breaks because it didn't anticipate future changes, so
        be it. 5.10 broke almost all our XS modules and nobody cared either
        (or at least I know of nobody who really complained about gratuitous
        changes - as opposed to bugs).

        Few modules that are not actively maintained work with newer
        versions of Perl, regardless of use feature or not, so a new major
        perl release means changes to many modules - new keywords are just
        the tip of the iceberg.

        If your code isn't alive, it's dead, Jim - be an active maintainer.

        But nobody forces you to use those extra features in modules meant
        for older versions of perl - common::sense of course works there as
        well. There is also an important other mode where having additional
        features by default is useful: commandline hacks and internal use
        scripts: See "much reduced typing", below.

    no warnings, but a lot of new errors
        Ah, the dreaded warnings. Even worse, the horribly dreaded "-w"
        switch: Even though we don't care if other people use warnings (and
        certainly there are useful ones), a lot of warnings simply go
        against the spirit of Perl.

        Most prominently, the warnings related to "undef". There is nothing
        wrong with "undef": it has well-defined semantics, it is useful, and
        spitting out warnings you never asked for is just evil.

        The result was that every one of our modules did "no warnings" in
        the past, to avoid somebody accidentally using and forcing his bad
        standards on our code. Of course, this switched off all warnings,
        even the useful ones. Not a good situation. Really, the "-w" switch
        should only enable warnings for the main program only.

        Funnily enough, perllexwarn explicitly mentions "-w" (and not in a
        favourable way, calling it outright "wrong"), but standard
        utilities, such as prove, or MakeMaker when running "make test",
        still enable them blindly.

        For version 2 of common::sense, we finally sat down a few hours and
        went through *every single warning message*, identifiying -
        according to common sense - all the useful ones.

        This resulted in the rather impressive list in the SYNOPSIS. When we
        weren't sure, we didn't include the warning, so the list might grow
        in the future (we might have made a mistake, too, so the list might
        shrink as well).

        Note the presence of "FATAL" in the list: we do not think that the
        conditions caught by these warnings are worthy of a warning, we
        *insist* that they are worthy of *stopping* your program,
        *instantly*. They are *bugs*!

        Therefore we consider "common::sense" to be much stricter than "use
        warnings", which is good if you are into strict things (we are not,
        actually, but these things tend to be subjective).

        After deciding on the list, we ran the module against all of our
        code that uses "common::sense" (that is almost all of our code), and
        found only one occurence where one of them caused a problem: one of
        elmex's (unreleased) modules contained:

           $fmt =~ s/([^\s\[]*)\[( [^\]]* )\]/\x0$1\x1$2\x0/xgo;

        We quickly agreed that indeed the code should be changed, even
        though it happened to do the right thing when the warning was
        switched off.

    much reduced typing
        Especially with version 2.0 of common::sense, the amount of
        boilerplate code you need to add to gte *this* policy is daunting.
        Nobody would write this out in throwaway scripts, commandline hacks
        or in quick internal-use scripts.

        By using common::sense you get a defined set of policies (ours, but
        maybe yours, too, if you accept them), and they are easy to apply to
        your scripts: typing "use common::sense;" is even shorter than "use
        warnings; use strict; use feature ...".

        And you can immediately use the features of your installed perl,
        which is more difficult in code you release, but not usually an
        issue for internal-use code (downgrades of your production perl
        should be rare, right?).

    mucho reduced memory usage
        Just using all those pragmas mentioned in the SYNOPSIS together
        wastes <blink>*776 kilobytes*</blink> of precious memory in my perl,
        for *every single perl process using our code*, which on our
        machines, is a lot. In comparison, this module only uses *four*
        kilobytes (I even had to write it out so it looks like more) of
        memory on the same platform.

        The money/time/effort/electricity invested in these gigabytes
        (probably petabytes globally!) of wasted memory could easily save 42
        trees, and a kitten!

        Unfortunately, until everybods applies more common sense, there will
        still often be modules that pull in the monster pragmas. But one can
        hope...

THERE IS NO 'no common::sense'!!!! !!!! !!
    This module doesn't offer an unimport. First of all, it wastes even more
    memory, second, and more importantly, who with even a bit of common
    sense would want no common sense?

STABILITY AND FUTURE VERSIONS
    Future versions might change just about everything in this module. We
    might test our modules and upload new ones working with newer versions
    of this module, and leave you standing in the rain because we didn't
    tell you. In fact, we did so when switching from 1.0 to 2.0, which
    enabled gobs of warnings, and made them FATAL on top.

    Maybe we will load some nifty modules that try to emulate "say" or so
    with perls older than 5.10 (this module, of course, should work with
    older perl versions - supporting 5.8 for example is just common sense at
    this time. Maybe not in the future, but of course you can trust our
    common sense to be consistent with, uhm, our opinion).

WHAT OTHER PEOPLE HAD TO SAY ABOUT THIS MODULE
    apeiron

       "... wow"
       "I hope common::sense is a joke."

    crab

       "i wonder how it would be if joerg schilling wrote perl modules."

    Adam Kennedy

       "Very interesting, efficient, and potentially something I'd use all the time."
       [...]
       "So no common::sense for me, alas."

    H.Merijn Brand

       "Just one more reason to drop JSON::XS from my distribution list"

    Pista Palo

       "Something in short supply these days..."

    Steffen Schwigon

       "This module is quite for sure *not* just a repetition of all the other
       'use strict, use warnings'-approaches, and it's also not the opposite.
       [...] And for its chosen middle-way it's also not the worst name ever.
       And everything is documented."

    BKB

       "[Deleted - thanks to Steffen Schwigon for pointing out this review was
       in error.]"

    Somni

       "the arrogance of the guy"
       "I swear he tacked somenoe else's name onto the module
       just so he could use the royal 'we' in the documentation"

    Anonymous Monk

       "You just gotta love this thing, its got META.json!!!"

    dngor

       "Heh.  '"<elmex at ta-sa.org>"'  The quotes are semantic
       distancing from that e-mail address."

    Jerad Pierce

       "Awful name (not a proper pragma), and the SYNOPSIS doesn't tell you
       anything either. Nor is it clear what features have to do with "common
       sense" or discipline."

    acme

       "THERE IS NO 'no common::sense'!!!! !!!! !!"

    apeiron (meta-comment about us commenting^Wquoting his comment)

       "How about quoting this: get a clue, you fucktarded amoeba."

    quanth

       "common sense is beautiful, json::xs is fast, Anyevent, EV are fast and
       furious. I love mlehmannware ;)"

    apeiron

       "... it's mlehmann's view of what common sense is. His view of common
       sense is certainly uncommon, insofar as anyone with a clue disagrees
       with him."

    apeiron (another meta-comment)

       "apeiron wonders if his little informant is here to steal more quotes"

    ew73

       "... I never got past the SYNOPSIS before calling it shit."
       [...]
       How come no one ever quotes me. :("

    chip (not willing to explain his cryptic questions about links in
    Changes files)

       "I'm willing to ask the question I've asked. I'm not willing to go
       through the whole dance you apparently have choreographed. Either
       answer the completely obvious question, or tell me to fuck off again."

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
    Or frequently-come-up confusions.

    Is this module meant to be serious?
        Yes, we would have put it under the "Acme::" namespace otherwise.

    But the manpage is written in a funny/stupid/... way?
        This was meant to make it clear that our common sense is a
        subjective thing and other people can use their own notions, taking
        the steam out of anybody who might be offended (as some people are
        always offended no matter what you do).

        This was a failure.

        But we hope the manpage still is somewhat entertaining even though
        it explains boring rationale.

    Why do you impose your conventions on my code?
        For some reason people keep thinking that "common::sense" imposes
        process-wide limits, even though the SYNOPSIS makes it clear that it
        works like other similar modules - i.e. only within the scope that
        "use"s them.

        So, no, we don't - nobody is forced to use this module, and using a
        module that relies on common::sense does not impose anything on you.

    Why do you think only your notion of common::sense is valid?
        Well, we don't, and have clearly written this in the documentation
        to every single release. We were just faster than anybody else
        w.r.t. to grabbing the namespace.

    But everybody knows that you have to use strict and use warnings, why do
    you disable them?
        Well, we don't do this either - we selectively disagree with the
        usefulness of some warnings over others. This module is aimed at
        experienced Perl programmers, not people migrating from other
        languages who might be surprised about stuff such as "undef". On the
        other hand, this does not exclude the usefulness of this module for
        total newbies, due to its strictness in enforcing policy, while at
        the same time not limiting the expressive power of perl.

        This module is considerably *more* strict than the canonical "use
        strict; use warnings", as it makes all its warnings fatal in nature,
        so you can not get away with as many things as with the canonical
        approach.

        This was not implemented in version 1.0 because of the daunting
        number of warning categories and the difficulty in getting exactly
        the set of warnings you wish (i.e. look at the SYNOPSIS in how
        complicated it is to get a specific set of warnings - it is not
        reasonable to put this into every module, the maintenance effort
        would be enourmous).

    But many modules "use strict" or "use warnings", so the memory savings
    do not apply?
        I suddenly feel sad...

        But yes, that's true. Fortunately "common::sense" still uses only a
        miniscule amount of RAM.

    But it adds another dependency to your modules!
        It's a fact, yeah. But it's trivial to install, most popular modules
        have many more dependencies and we consider dependencies a good
        thing - it leads to better APIs, more thought about interworking of
        modules and so on.

    Why do you use JSON and not YAML for your META.yml?
        This is not true - YAML supports a large subset of JSON, and this
        subset is what META.yml is written in, so it would be correct to say
        "the META.yml is written in a common subset of YAML and JSON".

        The META.yml follows the YAML, JSON and META.yml specifications, and
        is correctly parsed by CPAN, so if you have trouble with it, the
        problem is likely on your side.

    But! But!
        Yeah, we know.

AUTHOR
     Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
     http://home.schmorp.de/

     Robin Redeker, "<elmex at ta-sa.org>".


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