Imports some semantics into the current package from the named module, generally by aliasing certain subroutine or variable names into your package. It is exactly equivalent to
BEGIN { require Module; import Module LIST; }
except that Module must be a bareword.
VERSION may be either a numeric argument such as 5.006, which will be compared to $]
, or a literal of the form v5.6.1, which will be compared to $^V
(aka $PERL_VERSION. A fatal error is produced if VERSION is greater than the version of the current Perl interpreter; Perl will not attempt to parse the rest of the file. Compare with "require", which can do a similar check at run time.
Specifying VERSION as a literal of the form v5.6.1 should generally be avoided, because it leads to misleading error messages under earlier versions of Perl that do not support this syntax. The equivalent numeric version should be used instead.
use v5.6.1; # compile time version check
use 5.6.1; # ditto
use 5.006_001; # ditto; preferred for backwards compatibility
This is often useful if you need to check the current Perl version before use
ing library modules that have changed in incompatible ways from older versions of Perl. (We try not to do this more than we have to.)
The BEGIN
forces the require
and import
to happen at compile time. The require
makes sure the module is loaded into memory if it hasn't been yet. The import
is not a builtin--it's just an ordinary static method call into the Module
package to tell the module to import the list of features back into the current package. The module can implement its import
method any way it likes, though most modules just choose to derive their import
method via inheritance from the Exporter
class that is defined in the Exporter
module. See Exporter. If no import
method can be found then the call is skipped.
If you do not want to call the package's import
method (for instance, to stop your namespace from being altered), explicitly supply the empty list:
use Module ();
That is exactly equivalent to
BEGIN { require Module }
If the VERSION argument is present between Module and LIST, then the use
will call the VERSION method in class Module with the given version as an argument. The default VERSION method, inherited from the UNIVERSAL class, croaks if the given version is larger than the value of the variable $Module::VERSION
.
Again, there is a distinction between omitting LIST (import
called with no arguments) and an explicit empty LIST ()
(import
not called). Note that there is no comma after VERSION!
Because this is a wide-open interface, pragmas (compiler directives) are also implemented this way. Currently implemented pragmas are:
use constant;
use diagnostics;
use integer;
use sigtrap qw(SEGV BUS);
use strict qw(subs vars refs);
use subs qw(afunc blurfl);
use warnings qw(all);
use sort qw(stable _quicksort _mergesort);
Some of these pseudo-modules import semantics into the current block scope (like strict
or integer
, unlike ordinary modules, which import symbols into the current package (which are effective through the end of the file).
There's a corresponding no
command that unimports meanings imported by use
, i.e., it calls unimport Module LIST
instead of import
.
no integer;
no strict 'refs';
no warnings;
See perlmodlib for a list of standard modules and pragmas. See perlrun for the -M
and -m
command-line options to perl that give use
functionality from the command-line.