Fatal(l) Perl Programmers Reference Guide Fatal(l) NAME Fatal - replace functions with equivalents which succeed or die SYNOPSIS use Fatal qw(open close); sub juggle { . . . } import Fatal 'juggle'; DESCRIPTION "Fatal" provides a way to conveniently replace functions which normally return a false value when they fail with equivalents which raise exceptions if they are not suc- cessful. This lets you use these functions without having to test their return values explicitly on each call. Exceptions can be caught using "eval{}". See perlfunc and perlvar for details. The do-or-die equivalents are set up simply by calling Fatal's "import" routine, passing it the names of the functions to be replaced. You may wrap both user-defined functions and overridable CORE operators (except "exec", "system" which cannot be expressed via prototypes) in this way. If the symbol ":void" appears in the import list, then functions named later in that import list raise an excep- tion only when these are called in void context--that is, when their return values are ignored. For example use Fatal qw/:void open close/; # properly checked, so no exception raised on error if(open(FH, "< /bogotic") { warn "bogo file, dude: $!"; } # not checked, so error raises an exception close FH; AUTHOR Lionel.Cons@cern.ch prototype updates by Ilya Zakharevich ilya@math.ohio-state.edu perl v5.6.1 2001-02-23 Fatal(l)