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Path::FindDev(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Path::FindDev(3pm)
 

NAME

Path::FindDev - Find a development path somewhere in an upper hierarchy.

VERSION

version 0.5.2

DESCRIPTION

This package is mostly a glue layer around "Path::IsDev" with a few directory walking tricks.
    use Path::FindDev qw( find_dev );
    if ( my $root = find_dev('/some/path/to/something/somewhere')) {
        print "development root = $root";
    } else {
        print "No development root :(";
    }

FUNCTIONS

find_dev

    my $result = find_dev('/some/path');
If a "dev" directory is found at, or above, "/some/path", it will be returned as a "Path::Tiny"
If you pass configurations to import:
    use Path::FindDev find_dev => { set => $someset };
Then the exported "find_dev" will pass that set name to "Path::IsDev".
Though you should only do this if
the default set is inadequate for your usage
you don't want the set to be overridden by %ENV
Additionally, you can call find_dev directly:
    require Path::FindDev;
    my $result = Path::FindDev::find_dev('/some/path');
Which by design inhibits your capacity to specify an alternative set in code.

EXAMPLE USE-CASES

Have you ever found yourself doing
    use FindBin;
    use lib "$FindBin::Bin/../../../tlib"
In a test?
Have you found yourself paranoid of file-system semantics and tried
    use FindBin;
    use Path::Tiny qw(path)
    use lib path($FindBin::Bin)->parent->parent->parent->child('tlib')->stringify;
Have you ever done either of the above in a test, only to find you've needed to move the test to a deeper hierarchy, and thus, need to re-write all your path resolution?
Have you ever had this problem for multiple files?
No more!
    use FindBin;
    use Path::FindDev qw(find_dev);
    use lib find_dev($FindBin::Bin)->child('t','tlib')->stringify;
^ Should work, regardless of which test you put it in, and regardless of what $CWD happens to be when you call it.

AUTHOR

Kent Fredric <kentfredric@gmail.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2014 by Kent Fredric <kentfredric@gmail.com>.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
2014-08-16 perl v5.20.0