Everything-claude-code perl-patterns
Modern Perl 5.36+ idioms, best practices, and conventions for building robust, maintainable Perl applications.
git clone https://github.com/affaan-m/everything-claude-code
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/affaan-m/everything-claude-code "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/perl-patterns" ~/.claude/skills/affaan-m-everything-claude-code-perl-patterns-7051a5 && rm -rf "$T"
skills/perl-patterns/SKILL.mdModern Perl Development Patterns
Idiomatic Perl 5.36+ patterns and best practices for building robust, maintainable applications.
When to Activate
- Writing new Perl code or modules
- Reviewing Perl code for idiom compliance
- Refactoring legacy Perl to modern standards
- Designing Perl module architecture
- Migrating pre-5.36 code to modern Perl
How It Works
Apply these patterns as a bias toward modern Perl 5.36+ defaults: signatures, explicit modules, focused error handling, and testable boundaries. The examples below are meant to be copied as starting points, then tightened for the actual app, dependency stack, and deployment model in front of you.
Core Principles
1. Use v5.36
Pragma
v5.36A single
use v5.36 replaces the old boilerplate and enables strict, warnings, and subroutine signatures.
# Good: Modern preamble use v5.36; sub greet($name) { say "Hello, $name!"; } # Bad: Legacy boilerplate use strict; use warnings; use feature 'say', 'signatures'; no warnings 'experimental::signatures'; sub greet { my ($name) = @_; say "Hello, $name!"; }
2. Subroutine Signatures
Use signatures for clarity and automatic arity checking.
use v5.36; # Good: Signatures with defaults sub connect_db($host, $port = 5432, $timeout = 30) { # $host is required, others have defaults return DBI->connect("dbi:Pg:host=$host;port=$port", undef, undef, { RaiseError => 1, PrintError => 0, }); } # Good: Slurpy parameter for variable args sub log_message($level, @details) { say "[$level] " . join(' ', @details); } # Bad: Manual argument unpacking sub connect_db { my ($host, $port, $timeout) = @_; $port //= 5432; $timeout //= 30; # ... }
3. Context Sensitivity
Understand scalar vs list context — a core Perl concept.
use v5.36; my @items = (1, 2, 3, 4, 5); my @copy = @items; # List context: all elements my $count = @items; # Scalar context: count (5) say "Items: " . scalar @items; # Force scalar context
4. Postfix Dereferencing
Use postfix dereference syntax for readability with nested structures.
use v5.36; my $data = { users => [ { name => 'Alice', roles => ['admin', 'user'] }, { name => 'Bob', roles => ['user'] }, ], }; # Good: Postfix dereferencing my @users = $data->{users}->@*; my @roles = $data->{users}[0]{roles}->@*; my %first = $data->{users}[0]->%*; # Bad: Circumfix dereferencing (harder to read in chains) my @users = @{ $data->{users} }; my @roles = @{ $data->{users}[0]{roles} };
5. The isa
Operator (5.32+)
isaInfix type-check — replaces
blessed($o) && $o->isa('X').
use v5.36; if ($obj isa 'My::Class') { $obj->do_something }
Error Handling
eval/die Pattern
use v5.36; sub parse_config($path) { my $content = eval { path($path)->slurp_utf8 }; die "Config error: $@" if $@; return decode_json($content); }
Try::Tiny (Reliable Exception Handling)
use v5.36; use Try::Tiny; sub fetch_user($id) { my $user = try { $db->resultset('User')->find($id) // die "User $id not found\n"; } catch { warn "Failed to fetch user $id: $_"; undef; }; return $user; }
Native try/catch (5.40+)
use v5.40; sub divide($x, $y) { try { die "Division by zero" if $y == 0; return $x / $y; } catch ($e) { warn "Error: $e"; return; } }
Modern OO with Moo
Prefer Moo for lightweight, modern OO. Use Moose only when its metaprotocol is needed.
# Good: Moo class package User; use Moo; use Types::Standard qw(Str Int ArrayRef); use namespace::autoclean; has name => (is => 'ro', isa => Str, required => 1); has email => (is => 'ro', isa => Str, required => 1); has age => (is => 'ro', isa => Int, default => sub { 0 }); has roles => (is => 'ro', isa => ArrayRef[Str], default => sub { [] }); sub is_admin($self) { return grep { $_ eq 'admin' } $self->roles->@*; } sub greet($self) { return "Hello, I'm " . $self->name; } 1; # Usage my $user = User->new( name => 'Alice', email => 'alice@example.com', roles => ['admin', 'user'], ); # Bad: Blessed hashref (no validation, no accessors) package User; sub new { my ($class, %args) = @_; return bless \%args, $class; } sub name { return $_[0]->{name} } 1;
Moo Roles
package Role::Serializable; use Moo::Role; use JSON::MaybeXS qw(encode_json); requires 'TO_HASH'; sub to_json($self) { encode_json($self->TO_HASH) } 1; package User; use Moo; with 'Role::Serializable'; has name => (is => 'ro', required => 1); has email => (is => 'ro', required => 1); sub TO_HASH($self) { { name => $self->name, email => $self->email } } 1;
Native class
Keyword (5.38+, Corinna)
classuse v5.38; use feature 'class'; no warnings 'experimental::class'; class Point { field $x :param; field $y :param; method magnitude() { sqrt($x**2 + $y**2) } } my $p = Point->new(x => 3, y => 4); say $p->magnitude; # 5
Regular Expressions
Named Captures and /x
Flag
/xuse v5.36; # Good: Named captures with /x for readability my $log_re = qr{ ^ (?<timestamp> \d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2} \s \d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2} ) \s+ \[ (?<level> \w+ ) \] \s+ (?<message> .+ ) $ }x; if ($line =~ $log_re) { say "Time: $+{timestamp}, Level: $+{level}"; say "Message: $+{message}"; } # Bad: Positional captures (hard to maintain) if ($line =~ /^(\d{4}-\d{2}-\d{2} \d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2})\s+\[(\w+)\]\s+(.+)$/) { say "Time: $1, Level: $2"; }
Precompiled Patterns
use v5.36; # Good: Compile once, use many my $email_re = qr/^[A-Za-z0-9._%+-]+\@[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\.[A-Za-z]{2,}$/; sub validate_emails(@emails) { return grep { $_ =~ $email_re } @emails; }
Data Structures
References and Safe Deep Access
use v5.36; # Hash and array references my $config = { database => { host => 'localhost', port => 5432, options => ['utf8', 'sslmode=require'], }, }; # Safe deep access (returns undef if any level missing) my $port = $config->{database}{port}; # 5432 my $missing = $config->{cache}{host}; # undef, no error # Hash slices my %subset; @subset{qw(host port)} = @{$config->{database}}{qw(host port)}; # Array slices my @first_two = $config->{database}{options}->@[0, 1]; # Multi-variable for loop (experimental in 5.36, stable in 5.40) use feature 'for_list'; no warnings 'experimental::for_list'; for my ($key, $val) (%$config) { say "$key => $val"; }
File I/O
Three-Argument Open
use v5.36; # Good: Three-arg open with autodie (core module, eliminates 'or die') use autodie; sub read_file($path) { open my $fh, '<:encoding(UTF-8)', $path; local $/; my $content = <$fh>; close $fh; return $content; } # Bad: Two-arg open (shell injection risk, see perl-security) open FH, $path; # NEVER do this open FH, "< $path"; # Still bad — user data in mode string
Path::Tiny for File Operations
use v5.36; use Path::Tiny; my $file = path('config', 'app.json'); my $content = $file->slurp_utf8; $file->spew_utf8($new_content); # Iterate directory for my $child (path('src')->children(qr/\.pl$/)) { say $child->basename; }
Module Organization
Standard Project Layout
MyApp/ ├── lib/ │ └── MyApp/ │ ├── App.pm # Main module │ ├── Config.pm # Configuration │ ├── DB.pm # Database layer │ └── Util.pm # Utilities ├── bin/ │ └── myapp # Entry-point script ├── t/ │ ├── 00-load.t # Compilation tests │ ├── unit/ # Unit tests │ └── integration/ # Integration tests ├── cpanfile # Dependencies ├── Makefile.PL # Build system └── .perlcriticrc # Linting config
Exporter Patterns
package MyApp::Util; use v5.36; use Exporter 'import'; our @EXPORT_OK = qw(trim); our %EXPORT_TAGS = (all => \@EXPORT_OK); sub trim($str) { $str =~ s/^\s+|\s+$//gr } 1;
Tooling
perltidy Configuration (.perltidyrc)
-i=4 # 4-space indent -l=100 # 100-char line length -ci=4 # continuation indent -ce # cuddled else -bar # opening brace on same line -nolq # don't outdent long quoted strings
perlcritic Configuration (.perlcriticrc)
severity = 3 theme = core + pbp + security [InputOutput::RequireCheckedSyscalls] functions = :builtins exclude_functions = say print [Subroutines::ProhibitExplicitReturnUndef] severity = 4 [ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitMagicNumbers] allowed_values = 0 1 2 -1
Dependency Management (cpanfile + carton)
cpanm App::cpanminus Carton # Install tools carton install # Install deps from cpanfile carton exec -- perl bin/myapp # Run with local deps
# cpanfile requires 'Moo', '>= 2.005'; requires 'Path::Tiny'; requires 'JSON::MaybeXS'; requires 'Try::Tiny'; on test => sub { requires 'Test2::V0'; requires 'Test::MockModule'; };
Quick Reference: Modern Perl Idioms
| Legacy Pattern | Modern Replacement |
|---|---|
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| class with types |
| (named captures) |
| or native (5.40+) |
| |
| Manual file ops | |
| (5.32+) |
| (5.36+, experimental) |
Anti-Patterns
# 1. Two-arg open (security risk) open FH, $filename; # NEVER # 2. Indirect object syntax (ambiguous parsing) my $obj = new Foo(bar => 1); # Bad my $obj = Foo->new(bar => 1); # Good # 3. Excessive reliance on $_ map { process($_) } grep { validate($_) } @items; # Hard to follow my @valid = grep { validate($_) } @items; # Better: break it up my @results = map { process($_) } @valid; # 4. Disabling strict refs no strict 'refs'; # Almost always wrong ${"My::Package::$var"} = $value; # Use a hash instead # 5. Global variables as configuration our $TIMEOUT = 30; # Bad: mutable global use constant TIMEOUT => 30; # Better: constant # Best: Moo attribute with default # 6. String eval for module loading eval "require $module"; # Bad: code injection risk eval "use $module"; # Bad use Module::Runtime 'require_module'; # Good: safe module loading require_module($module);
Remember: Modern Perl is clean, readable, and safe. Let
use v5.36 handle the boilerplate, use Moo for objects, and prefer CPAN's battle-tested modules over hand-rolled solutions.