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author | Damian Conway <damian@cs.monash.edu.au> | 2002-07-31 09:03:14 +1000 |
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committer | hv <hv@crypt.org> | 2002-08-08 14:49:00 +0000 |
commit | feb6f007033805f50279da3c0c8a2b3dc41cec48 (patch) | |
tree | 9887adf8dd67a964fdb62a3b56d82b4615e6fb3a | |
parent | 89900bd3f9798cf0a5e524a809c7f1bb1b066fa2 (diff) | |
download | perl-feb6f007033805f50279da3c0c8a2b3dc41cec48.tar.gz |
Doc patch for Class::Struct under 5.8.0
Message-id: <3D471FCF.1C7C6E6B@conway.org>
p4raw-id: //depot/perl@17697
-rw-r--r-- | lib/Class/Struct.pm | 18 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/lib/Class/Struct.pm b/lib/Class/Struct.pm index bad4f78165..c46ebcd26d 100644 --- a/lib/Class/Struct.pm +++ b/lib/Class/Struct.pm @@ -456,26 +456,26 @@ See Example 3 below for an example of initialization. =item Example 1 Giving a struct element a class type that is also a struct is how -structs are nested. Here, C<timeval> represents a time (seconds and -microseconds), and C<rusage> has two elements, each of which is of -type C<timeval>. +structs are nested. Here, C<Timeval> represents a time (seconds and +microseconds), and C<Rusage> has two elements, each of which is of +type C<Timeval>. use Class::Struct; - struct( rusage => { - ru_utime => timeval, # seconds - ru_stime => timeval, # microseconds + struct( Rusage => { + ru_utime => 'Timeval', # seconds + ru_stime => 'Timeval', # microseconds }); - struct( timeval => [ + struct( Timeval => [ tv_secs => '$', tv_usecs => '$', ]); # create an object: - my $t = new rusage; + my $t = Rusage->new(ru_utime=>Timeval->new(), ru_stime=>Timeval->new()); - # $t->ru_utime and $t->ru_stime are objects of type timeval. + # $t->ru_utime and $t->ru_stime are objects of type Timeval. # set $t->ru_utime to 100.0 sec and $t->ru_stime to 5.0 sec. $t->ru_utime->tv_secs(100); $t->ru_utime->tv_usecs(0); |