class Version { }

Version objects identify version of software components (and potentially other entities). Raku uses them internally for versioning modules.

A version consists of several parts, which are visually represented by joining them with a dot. A version part is usually an integer, a string like alpha, or a Whatever-star *. The latter is used to indicate that any version part is acceptable in another version that is compared to the current one.

say v1.0.~~ v1.*;     # OUTPUT: «True␤» 
say v1.0.~~ v1.*.1;   # OUTPUT: «True␤»

The first part of version literals contains v and a number; this might be followed by alphanumeric and Whatever parts and trailed by +. Multiple parts are separate with a dot .. A trailing + indicates that higher versions are OK in comparisons:

say v1.~~ v1.0;                 # OUTPUT: «False␤» 
say v1.~~ v1.0+;                # OUTPUT: «True␤» 
say v0.and.anything.else ~~ v0+;  # OUTPUT: «True␤»

In comparisons, order matters, and every part is compared in turn.

say v1.cmp v2.1;      # OUTPUT: «Less␤»

The + suffix is always taken into account in comparisons:

say v1.0.1+ <=> v1.0.1; # OUTPUT: «More␤»

And * (Whatever) is too, and considered always Less than whatever digit is in the corresponding part, even if * is trailed by +:

say v1.* <=> v1.0;      # OUTPUT: «Less␤» 
say v1.* <= v1.0;       # OUTPUT: «True␤» 
say v1.*+ <= v1.0;      # OUTPUT: «True␤»

Please note that method calls, including pseudo methods like WHAT, require version literals either to be enclosed with parentheses or use some other method to separate them from the dot that denotes a method call, like in these examples:

say (v0.and.some.*.stuff).parts;  # OUTPUT: «(0 and some * stuff)␤» 
say v0.and.some.*.stuff .parts;   # OUTPUT: «(0 and some * stuff)␤»

Methods§

method new§

method new(Str:D $s)

Creates a Version from a string $s. The string is combed for the numeric, alphabetic, and wildcard components of the version object. Any characters other than alphanumerics and asterisks are assumed to be equivalent to a dot. A dot is also assumed between any adjacent numeric and alphabetic characters.

method parts§

method parts(Version:D: --> List:D)

Returns the list of parts that make up this Version object

my $v1 = v1.0.1;
my $v2 = v1.0.1+;
say $v1.parts;                                    # OUTPUT: «(1 0 1)␤» 
say $v2.parts;                                    # OUTPUT: «(1 0 1)␤»

The + suffix is not considered a part of the Version object, and thus not returned by this method, as shown above in the $v2 variable.

method plus§

method plus(Version:D: --> Bool:D)

Returns True if comparisons against this version allow larger versions too.

my $v1 = v1.0.1;
my $v2 = v1.0.1+;
say $v1.plus;                                     # OUTPUT: «False␤» 
say $v2.plus;                                     # OUTPUT: «True␤»

method Str§

method Str(Version:D: --> Str:D)

Returns a string representation of the invocant.

my $v1 = v1.0.1;
my $v2 = Version.new('1.0.1');
say $v1.Str;                                      # OUTPUT: «1.0.1␤» 
say $v2.Str;                                      # OUTPUT: «1.0.1␤»

method gist§

method gist(Version:D: --> Str:D)

Returns a string representation of the invocant, just like Str, prepended with a lower-case v.

my $v1 = v1.0.1;
my $v2 = Version.new('1.0.1');
say $v1.gist;                                      # OUTPUT: «v1.0.1␤» 
say $v2.gist;                                      # OUTPUT: «v1.0.1␤»

method Capture§

method Capture()

Throws X::Cannot::Capture.

Typegraph§

Type relations for Version
raku-type-graph Version Version Any Any Version->Any Mu Mu Any->Mu

Expand chart above