| YAML::Any(3) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | YAML::Any(3) | 
NAME¶
YAML::Any - Pick a YAML implementation and use it.
STATUS¶
WARNING: This module will soon be deprecated. The plan is that YAML.pm itself will act like an Any module.
SYNOPSIS¶
    use YAML::Any;
    $YAML::Indent = 3;
    my $yaml = Dump(@objects);
DESCRIPTION¶
There are several YAML implementations that support the Dump/Load API. This module selects the best one available and uses it.
ORDER¶
Currently, YAML::Any will choose the first one of these YAML implementations that is installed on your system:
- YAML::XS
 - YAML::Syck
 - YAML::Old
 - YAML
 - YAML::Tiny
 
OPTIONS¶
If you specify an option like:
$YAML::Indent = 4;
And YAML::Any is using YAML::XS, it will use the proper variable: $YAML::XS::Indent.
SUBROUTINES¶
Like all the YAML modules that YAML::Any uses, the following subroutines are exported by default:
- Dump
 - Load
 
and the following subroutines are exportable by request:
- DumpFile
 - LoadFile
 
METHODS¶
YAML::Any provides the following class methods.
- "YAML::Any->order"
 - This method returns a list of the current possible implementations that YAML::Any will search for.
 - "YAML::Any->implementation"
 - This method returns the implementation the YAML::Any will use. This result is obtained by finding the first member of YAML::Any->order that is either already loaded in %INC or that can be loaded using "require". If no implementation is found, an error will be thrown.
 
EXAMPLES¶
DumpFile and LoadFile¶
Here is an example for "DumpFile":
    #!/usr/bin/perl
    use strict;
    use warnings;
    use YAML::Any qw(DumpFile);
    my $ds =
    {
        array => [5,6,100],
        string => "Hello",
    };
    DumpFile("hello.yml", $ds);
When run, this creates a file called "hello.yml" in the current working directory, with the following contents.
    ---
    array:
    - 5
    - 6
    - 100
    string: Hello
In turn, the following "LoadFile" example, loads the contents from there and accesses them:
    #!/usr/bin/perl
    use strict;
    use warnings;
    use YAML::Any qw(LoadFile);
    my ($ds) = LoadFile("hello.yml");
    print "String == '", $ds->{string}, "'\n";
Assuming "hello.yml" exists, and is as created by the "DumpFile" example, it prints:
    $ perl load.pl
    String == 'Hello'
    $
AUTHOR¶
Ingy döt Net <ingy@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright 2001-2014. Ingy döt Net
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
| 2017-10-31 | perl v5.26.1 |