Neither does either proposed solution solve the problem.

I have a class. The class uses a bundle module. The bundle imports List::Util::any into the calling package.

I like to test my classes. I like to use Test::Most. If I use Test::Most with default imports I get an exception (under strictures).

Instructing Test::Most to not import Test::Deep in order to avoid this collision means that I cannot use the other methods in Test::Deep that I require.

Test::Most does not allow granular control over the exports of the modules it imports.

That's a design assumption: the user will either want all of Test::Deep or none of it. It limits the value of Test::Most.

I don't want to see similar design assumptions baked into Perl. No one set of assumptions can possibly meet everyones's needs.

It would be a mistake to put Cor or any other OOP framework into the Perl language.

Q.E.D.


The way forward always starts with a minimal test.

In reply to Re^3: Cor—An object system for the Perl core by 1nickt
in thread Cor—An object system for the Perl core by Ovid

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