The Unicode standard is huge and there are many .pl files in perl's core dealing with every aspect of Unicode. It's just an optimization that most things are loaded on demand (e.g. if you're using regexps with special Unicode properties (\P, \p) or case insensitive matches or something like lc/uc).

Of course, if you know your data and you're in a mod_perl environment, then preload as much as you can.


In reply to Re: mod_perl and dtrace (or why certain unicode files don't load at startup time) by eserte
in thread mod_perl and dtrace (or why certain unicode files don't load at startup time) by redhotpenguin

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