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-rw-r--r--contrib/perl5/lib/integer.pm17
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/contrib/perl5/lib/integer.pm b/contrib/perl5/lib/integer.pm
index 8949318..86afcaf 100644
--- a/contrib/perl5/lib/integer.pm
+++ b/contrib/perl5/lib/integer.pm
@@ -28,16 +28,29 @@ code
you'll be left with C<$x == 1.5>, C<$y == 2> and C<$z == -1>. The $z
case happens because unary C<-> counts as an operation.
+Native integer arithmetic (as provided by your C compiler) is used.
+This means that Perl's own semantics for arithmetic operations may
+not be preserved. One common source of trouble is the modulus of
+negative numbers, which Perl does one way, but your hardware may do
+another.
+
+ % perl -le 'print (4 % -3)'
+ -2
+ % perl -Minteger -le 'print (4 % -3)'
+ 1
+
See L<perlmod/Pragmatic Modules>.
=cut
+$integer::hint_bits = 0x1;
+
sub import {
- $^H |= 1;
+ $^H |= $integer::hint_bits;
}
sub unimport {
- $^H &= ~1;
+ $^H &= ~$integer::hint_bits;
}
1;
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