NAME

Perl::Critic::Policy::ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitInterpolationOfLiterals

DESCRIPTION

Don't use double-quotes or qq// if your string doesn't require interpolation. This saves the interpreter a bit of work and it lets the reader know that you really did intend the string to be literal.

print "foobar";     #not ok
print 'foobar';     #ok
print qq/foobar/;   #not ok
print q/foobar/;    #ok

print "$foobar";    #ok
print "foobar\n";   #ok
print qq/$foobar/;  #ok
print qq/foobar\n/; #ok

print qq{$foobar};  #preferred
print qq{foobar\n}; #preferred

CONFIGURATION

The types of quoting styles to exempt from this policy can be configured via the allow option. This must be a whitespace-delimited combination of some or all of the following styles: qq{}, qq(), qq[], and qq//.

This is useful because some folks have configured their editor to apply special syntax highlighting within certain styles of quotes. For example, you can tweak vim to use SQL highlighting for everything that appears within qq{} or qq[] quotes. But if those strings are literal, Perl::Critic will complain. To prevent this, put the following in your .perlcriticrc file:

[ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitInterpolationOfLiterals]
allow = qq{} qq[]

SEE ALSO

Perl::Critic::Policy::ValuesAndExpressions::RequireInterpolationOfMetachars

AUTHOR

Jeffrey Ryan Thalhammer <thaljef@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2005-2007 Jeffrey Ryan Thalhammer. All rights reserved.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of this license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.