Perl::Critic::Policy::ProhibitImplicitImport - Prefer symbol imports to be explicit
version 0.000001
Some Perl modules can implicitly import many symbols if no imports are
specified. To avoid this, and to assist in finding where symbols have been
imported from, specify the symbols you want to import explicitly in the use
statement. Alternatively, specify an empty import list with use Foo ()
to
avoid importing any symbols at all, and fully qualify the functions or
constants, such as Foo::strftime
.
use POSIX; # not ok
use POSIX (); # ok
use POSIX qw(fcntl); # ok
use POSIX qw(O_APPEND O_CREAT O_EXCL O_RDONLY O_RDWR O_WRONLY); # ok
For modules which inherit from Test::Builder::Module, you may need to use a different import syntax.
use Test::JSON; # not ok
use Test::JSON import => ['is_json']; # ok
By default, this policy ignores many modules (like Moo and Moose) for which implicit imports provide the expected behaviour. See the source of this module for a complete list. If you would like to ignore additional modules, this can be done via configuration:
[ProhibitImplicitImport]
ignored_modules = Git::Sub Regexp::Common
Much of this code and even some documentation has been inspired by and borrowed directly from Perl::Critic::Policy::Freenode::POSIXImports and Perl::Critic::Policy::TooMuchCode.
Olaf Alders [email protected]
This software is copyright (c) 2020 by Olaf Alders.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.