Also, ActiveState's IDE Komodo has some syntax checking abilities built in. This might be what you're looking for.

Other than that, perl -c and frequent incremental testing is standard practice. Also, while we're close to the territory, investigate things like Test::More and building up a suite of unit tests that you can run to actually exercise the code and find errors - there are a lot of things that are perfectly valid syntactically, but will blow up horribly when actually being run.

-- Kirby, WhitePages.com


In reply to Re: Tool that detects perl syntax errors by kirbyk
in thread Tool that detects perl syntax errors by mosh

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