A module is a package defined in a file whose name is the
same as the package.
Perl locates modules by searching the
@INC array, which contains a list of library directories.
Perl's use of @INC is roughly comparable to the Unix shell's
use of the PATH environment variable to locate executable programs.
@INC is defined when Perl is built, and can be supplemented
with the -I command-line option to Perl or with use lib
within a program.
When you refer to ModuleName in your program, Perl
searches
in the directories listed in @INC for the module file
ModuleName.pm, and uses the first
one it finds. When you
refer to a module embedded in another package, such as
ParentPackage::ModuleName, Perl looks for a
ParentPackage/ subdirectory in the @INC
path, and for a ModuleName.pm file in that subdirectory.
Every Perl installation includes a central lib directory. The actual pathname of this directory varies from system to system, but it's commonly /usr/lib/perl or /usr/local/lib/perl. Looking at the central lib directory for your Perl distribution, you'll see something like this:
When you request the% ls -aF /usr/local/lib/perl ./ I18N/ bigfloat.pl less.pm ../ IO/ bigint.pl lib.pm AnyDBM_File.pm IPC/ bigrat.pl locale.pm AutoLoader.pm Math/ blib.pm look.pl AutoSplit.pm Net/ cacheout.pl man/ Benchmark.pm Pod/ chat2.pl newgetopt.pl Bundle/ Search/ complete.pl open2.pl CGI/ SelectSaver.pm constant.pm open3.pl CGI.pm SelfLoader.pm ctime.pl perl5db.pl CPAN/ Shell.pm diagnostics.pm pod/ CPAN.pm Symbol.pm dotsh.pl pwd.pl Carp.pm Sys/ dumpvar.pl shellwords.pl ...
AnyDBM_File module, it uses
AnyDBM_File.pm. When you request the Math::Complex
module, it looks for Math/Complex.pm.A module can be included in your program with use or
require. Both use and require read in a module file
for use with your program.
or:require Module;
use Module;
use can also take a list of strings
naming entities that you want to import from the module. The list only
has to include entities that are not automatically exported by the
module. You don't have to provide this list at all if the module
automatically exports all the entities you need.
The difference betweenuse Module qw(const1 const2 func1 func2 func3);
use and require is that
use pulls in the module at compile time.
This means that functions
like func1 or func2 can be used as predeclared list operators
throughout the file. The require call does not necessarily load the
module during compilation, so you must explicitly qualify its routines with
the package name.