SYNOPSIS
Number::Compare->new(">1Ki")->test(1025); # is 1025 > 1024
my $c = Number::Compare->new(">1M");
$c->(1_200_000); # slightly terser invocation
DESCRIPTION
Number::Compare compiles a simple comparison to an anonymous subroutine, which you can call with a value to be tested again.Now this would be very pointless, if Number::Compare didn't understand magnitudes.
The target value may use magnitudes of kilobytes ("k", "ki"), megabytes ("m", "mi"), or gigabytes ("g", "gi"). Those suffixed with an "i" use the appropriate 2**n version in accordance with the IEC standard: http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/binary.html
METHODS
->new( $test )
Returns a new object that compares the specified test.->test( $value )
A longhanded version of $compare->( $value ). Predates blessed subroutine reference implementation.->parse_to_perl( $test )
Returns a perl code fragment equivalent to the test.AUTHOR
Richard Clamp <[email protected]>COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2002,2011 Richard Clamp. All Rights Reserved.This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.