Date: Sunday May 26, 2019 @ 15:52 Author: argrath Update of /cvsroot/perldocjp/docs/perl/5.22.1 In directory sf-cvs:/tmp/cvs-serv54302/perl/5.22.1 Modified Files: perldiag.pod Log Message: in progress =================================================================== File: perldiag.pod Status: Up-to-date Working revision: 1.3 Sun May 26 06:52:32 2019 Repository revision: 1.3 /cvsroot/perldocjp/docs/perl/5.22.1/perldiag.pod,v Existing Tags: No Tags Exist -------------- next part -------------- Index: docs/perl/5.22.1/perldiag.pod diff -u docs/perl/5.22.1/perldiag.pod:1.2 docs/perl/5.22.1/perldiag.pod:1.3 --- docs/perl/5.22.1/perldiag.pod:1.2 Thu Jul 19 20:57:37 2018 +++ docs/perl/5.22.1/perldiag.pod Sun May 26 15:52:32 2019 @@ -152,13 +152,11 @@ =end original -(S experimental::refaliasing) This warning is emitted if you use -a reference constructor on the left-hand side of an assignment to -alias one variable to another. +(S experimental::refaliasing) ¤³¤Î·Ù¹ð¤Ï¡¢¤¢¤ëÊÑ¿ô¤òÊ̤ÎÊÑ¿ô¤ÎÊÌ̾¤È¤¹¤ëÂåÆþ¤Î +º¸Â¦¤Ç¥ê¥Õ¥¡¥ì¥ó¥¹¥³¥ó¥¹¥È¥é¥¯¥¿¤ò»È¤¦¤È½ÐÎϤµ¤ì¤Þ¤¹¡£ ¤³¤Îµ¡Ç½¤ò»È¤¤¤¿¤¤¤±¤ì¤É¤â¡¢¤½¤¦¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤Ç¾Íè¤Î Perl ¥Ð¡¼¥¸¥ç¥ó¤Ç Êѹ¹¤µ¤ì¤ë¤«¤â¤·¤ì¤Ê¤¤¼Â¸³Åªµ¡Ç½¤ò»È¤¦¥ê¥¹¥¯¤ò¼è¤ë¤³¤È¤òʬ¤«¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ë¾ì¹ç¤Ï¡¢ ñ¤Ë·Ù¹ð¤òÍÞÀ©¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤: -(TBT) no warnings "experimental::refaliasing"; use feature "refaliasing"; @@ -500,11 +498,9 @@ =end original -(W numeric) The indicated string was fed as an argument to the C<++> -operator which expects either a number or a string matching -C</^[a-zA-Z]*[0-9]*\z/>. +(W numeric) ¿ôÃͤޤ¿¤Ï C</^[a-zA-Z]*[0-9]*\z/> ¤Ë¥Þ¥Ã¥Á¥ó¥°¤¹¤ëʸ»úÎó¤ò +ÁÛÄꤷ¤Æ¤¤¤ëC<++> ±é»»»Ò¤Ë¡¢¼¨¤µ¤ì¤¿Ê¸»úÎ󤬻ØÄꤵ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ ¾Ü¤·¤¯¤Ï L<perlop/Auto-increment and Auto-decrement> ¤ò»²¾È¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤¡£ -(TBT) =item assertion botched: %s @@ -1334,17 +1330,15 @@ =end original -In a bracketed character class in a regular expression pattern, you -had a range which has exactly one end of it specified using C<\N{}>, and -the other end is specified using a non-portable mechanism. Perl treats -the range as a Unicode range, that is, all the characters in it are -considered to be the Unicode characters, and which may be different code -points on some platforms Perl runs on. For example, C<[\N{U+06}-\x08]> -is treated as if you had instead said C<[\N{U+06}-\N{U+08}]>, that is it -matches the characters whose code points in Unicode are 6, 7, and 8. -But that C<\x08> might indicate that you meant something different, so -the warning gets raised. -(TBT) +Àµµ¬É½¸½Ãæ¤ÎÂ礫¤Ã¤³Ê¸»ú¥¯¥é¥¹¤ÎÃæ¤Ç¡¢ÈÏ°Ï»ØÄê¤ÎÊÒÊý¤Ï C<\N{}> ¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ +»ØÄꤷ¡¢¤â¤¦ÊÒÊý¤Ï°Ü¿¢À¤Î¤Ê¤¤ÊýË¡¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ»ØÄꤷ¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ +Perl ¤Ï¤³¤ÎÈϰϤò Unicode ¤ÎÈϰϤȤ·¤Æ°·¤¤¤Þ¤¹; ¤Ä¤Þ¤ê¡¢¤½¤ÎÃæ¤ÎÁ´¤Æ¤Îʸ»ú¤Ï +Unicode ʸ»ú¤È¤·¤Æ°·¤ï¤ì¡¢Perl ¤¬¼Â¹Ô¤µ¤ì¤ë°ìÉô¤Î¥×¥é¥Ã¥È¥Õ¥©¡¼¥à¤Ç¤Ï +°Û¤Ê¤ëÉä¹æ°ÌÃ֤ˤʤ뤫¤â¤·¤ì¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ +Î㤨¤Ð¡¢C<[\N{U+06}-\x08]> ¤Ï¡¢C<[\N{U+06}-\N{U+08}]> ¤È +½ñ¤¤¤¿¤«¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ë°·¤ï¤ì¡¢Unicode ¤ÎÉä¹æ°ÌÃÖ 6, 7, 8 ¤Îʸ»ú¤Ë¥Þ¥Ã¥Á¥ó¥°¤·¤Þ¤¹¡£ +¤·¤«¤·¡¢C<\x08> ¤Ï¤Ê¤Ë¤«°ã¤¦¤³¤È¤ò°ÕÌ£¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤³¤È¤ò¼¨¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤Î¤Ç¡¢ +·Ù¹ð¤¬È¯À¸¤·¤Þ¤¹¡£ =item Buffer overflow in prime_env_iter: %s @@ -2609,10 +2603,9 @@ =end original -(F) Only a limited number of constructs can be used as the argument to a -reference constructor on the left-hand side of an assignment, and what -you used was not one of them. See L<perlref/Assigning to References>. -(TBT) +(F) ÂåÆþ¤Îº¸Â¦¤Î¥ê¥Õ¥¡¥ì¥ó¥¹¥³¥ó¥¹¥È¥é¥¯¥¿¤Î°ú¿ô¤Ë»È¤¨¤ë¹½Ê¸¤Ï +°ìÉô¤ËÀ©¸Â¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Æ¡¢¤³¤³¤Ç»È¤Ã¤¿¤â¤Î¤Ï¤½¤Î°ì¤Ä¤Ç¤Ï¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ +L<perlref/Assigning to References> ¤ò»²¾È¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤¡£ =item Can't modify reference to localized parenthesized array in list assignment @@ -2627,12 +2620,12 @@ =end original -(F) Assigning to C<\local(@array)> or C<\(local @array)> is not supported, as -it is not clear exactly what it should do. If you meant to make @array -refer to some other array, use C<\@array = \@other_array>. If you want to -make the elements of @array aliases of the scalars referenced on the -right-hand side, use C<\(@array) = @scalar_refs>. -(TBT) +(F) C<\local(@array)> ¤ä C<\(local @array)> ¤Ø¤ÎÂåÆþ¤ÏÂбþ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤»¤ó; +Àµ³Î¤Ë²¿¤ò¤¹¤ë¤Ù¤¤«¤¬ÌÀ³Î¤Ç¤Ï¤Ê¤¤¤«¤é¤Ç¤¹¡£ + @ array ¤¬Â¾¤ÎÇÛÎó¤ò»²¾È¤¹¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤ò°ÕÌ£¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤Ê¤é¡¢ +C<\@array = \@other_array> ¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤¡£ + @ array ¤ÎÍ×ÁǤ¬±¦Â¦¤Ç¥ê¥Õ¥¡¥ì¥ó¥¹¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¥¹¥«¥é¤Ø¤ÎÊÌ̾¤Ë¤·¤¿¤¤¤Ê¤é¡¢ +C<\(@array) = @scalar_refs> ¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤¡£ =item Can't modify reference to parenthesized hash in list assignment @@ -2645,11 +2638,11 @@ =end original -(F) Assigning to C<\(%hash)> is not supported. If you meant to make %hash -refer to some other hash, use C<\%hash = \%other_hash>. If you want to -make the elements of %hash into aliases of the scalars referenced on the -right-hand side, use a hash slice: C<\@hash{@keys} = @those_scalar_refs>. -(TBT) +(F) C<\(%hash)> ¤Ø¤ÎÂåÆþ¤ÏÂбþ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ +%hash ¤¬Â¾¤Î¥Ï¥Ã¥·¥å¤ò»²¾È¤¹¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤ò°ÕÌ£¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤Ê¤é¡¢ +C<\%hash = \%other_hash> ¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤¡£ +%hash ¤ÎÍ×ÁǤ¬±¦Â¦¤Ç¥ê¥Õ¥¡¥ì¥ó¥¹¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¥¹¥«¥é¤Ø¤ÎÊÌ̾¤Ë¤·¤¿¤¤¤Ê¤é¡¢ +¥Ï¥Ã¥·¥å¥¹¥é¥¤¥¹¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤: C<\@hash{@keys} = @those_scalar_refs>¡£ =item Can't msgrcv to read-only var @@ -2925,11 +2918,10 @@ =end original -(F) There is a hard limit to how big a character code point can be due -to the fundamental properties of UTF-8, especially on EBCDIC -platforms. The given code point exceeds that. The only work-around is -to not use such a large code point. -(TBT) +(F) ¤É¤ì¤À¤±Â礤Êʸ»úÉä¹æ°ÌÃÖ¤¬»È¤¨¤ë¤«¤Ë¤Ä¤¤¤Æ¤Ï¸ÇÄêÃͤÎÀ©¸Â¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹; +¤³¤ì¤Ï UTF-8 ¤Î¡¢ÆÃ¤Ë EBCDIC ¥×¥é¥Ã¥È¥Õ¥©¡¼¥à¤Ç¤Î´ðÁÃŪ¤ÊÆÃÀ¤Ë¤è¤ë¤â¤Î¤Ç¤¹¡£ +»ØÄꤵ¤ì¤¿Éä¹æ°ÌÃ֤Ϥ½¤ì¤ò±Û¤¨¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹¡£ +Í£°ì¤Î²óÈòºö¤Ï¤½¤Î¤è¤¦¤ÊÂ礤ÊÉä¹æ°ÌÃÖ¤ò»È¤ï¤Ê¤¤¤³¤È¤Ç¤¹¡£ =item Can't reset %ENV on this system @@ -3102,11 +3094,11 @@ =end original -(F) You tried to use a hash as a reference, as in -C<< %foo->{"bar"} >> or C<< %$ref->{"hello"} >>. Versions of perl -<= 5.22.0 used to allow this syntax, but shouldn't -have. This was deprecated in perl 5.6.1. -(TBT) +(F) C<< %foo->{"bar"} >> or C<< %$ref->{"hello"} >> ¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ë¡¢ +¥Ï¥Ã¥·¥å¤ò¥ê¥Õ¥¡¥ì¥ó¥¹¤È¤·¤Æ»È¤ª¤¦¤È¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ +<= 5.22.0 ¤Î¥Ð¡¼¥¸¥ç¥ó¤Î perl ¤Ç¤Ï¤³¤Îʸˡ¤¬µö¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤·¤¿¤¬¡¢ +¤½¤¦¤¹¤ë¤Ù¤¤Ç¤Ï¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ +¤³¤ì¤Ï perl 5.6.1 ¤«¤éÇÑ»ßͽÄê¤Ç¤¹¡£ =item Can't use an array as a reference @@ -3119,11 +3111,11 @@ =end original -(F) You tried to use an array as a reference, as in -C<< @foo->[23] >> or C<< @$ref->[99] >>. Versions of perl <= 5.22.0 -used to allow this syntax, but shouldn't have. This -was deprecated in perl 5.6.1. -(TBT) +(F) C<< @foo->[23] >> or C<< @$ref->[99] >> ¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ë¡¢ +ÇÛÎó¤ò¥ê¥Õ¥¡¥ì¥ó¥¹¤È¤·¤Æ»È¤ª¤¦¤È¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ +<= 5.22.0 ¤Î¥Ð¡¼¥¸¥ç¥ó¤Î perl ¤Ç¤Ï¤³¤Îʸˡ¤¬µö¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤·¤¿¤¬¡¢ +¤½¤¦¤¹¤ë¤Ù¤¤Ç¤Ï¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ +¤³¤ì¤Ï perl 5.6.1 ¤«¤éÇÑ»ßͽÄê¤Ç¤¹¡£ =item Can't use anonymous symbol table for method lookup @@ -3952,11 +3944,11 @@ =end original -but $var is referenced elsewhere and could be modified after the C<sub> -expression is evaluated. Either it is explicitly modified elsewhere -(C<$var = 3>) or it is passed to a subroutine or to an operator like -C<printf> or C<map>, which may or may not modify the variable. -(TBT) +$var ¤Ï¤É¤³¤«Ê̤ξì½ê¤Ø¤Î¥ê¥Õ¥¡¥ì¥ó¥¹¤Ç¡¢ +C<sub> ¼°¤¬É¾²Á¤µ¤ì¤¿¸å¤ËÊѹ¹¤µ¤ì¤ë¤«¤â¤·¤ì¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ +¤É¤³¤«¤ÇÌÀ¼¨Åª¤ËÊѹ¹¤µ¤ì¤¿¤ê¡¢(C<$var = 3>) ¡¢ +ÊÑ¿ô¤òÊѹ¹¤¹¤ë¤«¤É¤¦¤«¤ï¤«¤é¤Ê¤¤¡¢ +C<printf> ¤ä C<map> ¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ê¥µ¥Ö¥ë¡¼¥Á¥ó¤ä±é»»»Ò¤ËÅϤµ¤ì¤¿¤ê¤·¤Þ¤¹¡£ =begin original @@ -4071,11 +4063,11 @@ =end original -(S experimental::const_attr) The "const" attribute is experimental. -If you want to use the feature, disable the warning with C<no warnings -'experimental::const_attr'>, but know that in doing so you are taking -the risk that your code may break in a future Perl version. -(TBT) +(S experimental::const_attr) "const" °À¤Ï¼Â¸³Åª¤Ç¤¹¡£ +¤³¤Îµ¡Ç½¤ò»È¤¤¤¿¤¤¾ì¹ç¡¢ +C<no warnings 'experimental::const_attr'> ¤Ç·Ù¹ð¤ò̵¸ú¤Ë¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤; +¤·¤«¤·¡¢¤½¤¦¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤Ç¤¢¤Ê¤¿¤Î¥³¡¼¥É¤¬¾Íè¤Î Perl ¤Î¥Ð¡¼¥¸¥ç¥ó¤Ç +²õ¤ì¤ë¥ê¥¹¥¯¤ò¼è¤ë¤³¤È¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹¡£ =item :const is not permitted on named subroutines @@ -4087,10 +4079,10 @@ =end original -(F) The "const" attribute causes an anonymous subroutine to be run and -its value captured at the time that it is cloned. Named subroutines are -not cloned like this, so the attribute does not make sense on them. -(TBT) +(F) The "const" °À¤Ï¡¢¥¯¥í¡¼¥ó¤µ¤ì¤¿¤È¤¤ËÃͤòÊ᪤µ¤ì¤¿ +̵̾¥µ¥Ö¥ë¡¼¥Á¥ó¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹¡£ +̾Á°ÉÕ¤¥µ¥Ö¥ë¡¼¥Á¥ó¤Ï¤³¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ë¥¯¥í¡¼¥ó¤µ¤ì¤Ê¤¤¤Î¤Ç¡¢ +°À¤Ï¤³¤ì¤é¤Ë´Ø¤·¤Æ°ÕÌ£¤ò»ý¤Á¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ =item Copy method did not return a reference @@ -5589,11 +5581,10 @@ =end original -(D deprecated, regexp) You used the indicated regular expression pattern -modifier at least twice in a string of modifiers. It is deprecated to -do this with this particular modifier, to allow future extensions to the -Perl language. -(TBT) +(D deprecated, regexp) ʸ»úÎ󽤾þ»Ò¤ÎÃæ¤Ç¾¯¤Ê¤¯¤È¤â 2 ²ó¡¢ +´ÖÀÜÀµµ¬É½¸½¥Ñ¥¿¡¼¥ó½¤¾þ»Ò¤ò»È¤¤¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ +Perl ¸À¸ì¤ò¾Íè³ÈÄ¥¤Ç¤¤ë¤è¤¦¤Ë¡¢ +¤³¤ÎÆÃÄê¤Î½¤¾þ»Ò¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ¹Ô¤¦¤³¤È¤ÏÇÑ»ßͽÄê¤Ç¤¹¡£ =item Hexadecimal float: exponent overflow @@ -5639,7 +5630,7 @@ =end original -(W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point literal had more bits in +(W overflow) 16 ¿ÊÉâÆ°¾®¿ôÅÀ¿ô¥ê¥Æ¥é¥ë¤Ï had more bits in the mantissa (the part between the 0x and the exponent, also known as the fraction or the significand) than the floating point supports. (TBT) @@ -5655,7 +5646,7 @@ =end original -(W overflow) The hexadecimal floating point had internally more +(W overflow) 16 ¿ÊÉâÆ°¾®¿ôÅÀ¿ô¥ê¥Æ¥é¥ë¤Ï had internally more digits than could be output. This can be caused by unsupported long double formats, or by 64-bit integers not being available (needed to retrieve the digits under some configurations). @@ -5671,10 +5662,9 @@ =end original -(F) You have configured Perl to use long doubles but -the internals of the long double format are unknown; -therefore the hexadecimal float output is impossible. -(TBT) +(F) long double ¤ò»È¤¦¤è¤¦¤ËÀßÄꤵ¤ì¤¿ Perl ¤ò»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹¤¬¡¢ +long double ¤ÎÆâÉô·Á¼°¤¬ÉÔÌÀ¤Ç¤¹; ½¾¤Ã¤Æ 16 ¿ÊÉâÆ°¾®¿ôÅÀ¿ô½ÐÎÏ¤Ï +ÉÔ²Äǽ¤Ç¤¹¡£ =item Hexadecimal number > 0xffffffff non-portable @@ -6579,11 +6569,11 @@ =end original -(F) The pattern looks like a {min,max} quantifier, but the min or max -could not be parsed as a valid number - either it has leading zeroes, -or it represents too big a number to cope with. The S<<-- HERE> shows -where in the regular expression the problem was discovered. See L<perlre>. -(TBT) +(F) ¥Ñ¥¿¡¼¥ó¤Ï {min,max} ÎÌ»ØÄê»Ò¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ë¸«¤¨¤Þ¤¹¤¬¡¢min ¤Þ¤¿¤Ï max ¤¬ +ÀµÅö¤Ê¿ôÃͤȤ·¤Æ¥Ñ¡¼¥¹¤Ç¤¤Þ¤»¤ó¤Ç¤·¤¿ - ÀèƬ¤Ë 0 ¤¬ÉÕ¤¤¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤«¡¢ +¿ôÃͤȤ·¤Æ°·¤¦¤Ë¤ÏÂ礤¹¤®¤Þ¤¹¡£ +S<<-- HERE> ¤ÇÀµµ¬É½¸½¤Î¤É¤³¤ËÌäÂ꤬ȯ¸«¤µ¤ì¤¿¤«¤ò¼¨¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹¡£ +L<perlre> ¤ò»²¾È¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤¡£ =item Invalid [] range "%s" in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/ @@ -7799,9 +7789,8 @@ =end original -(W missing) You called a function with fewer arguments than other -arguments you supplied indicated would be needed. -(TBT) +(W missing) ¾¤Ç»ØÄꤷ¤¿°ú¿ô¤Ë¤è¤Ã¤ÆɬÍפǤ¢¤ë¤È¼¨¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤è¤ê¤â +¾¯¤Ê¤¤°ú¿ô¤Ç´Ø¿ô¤ò¸Æ¤Ó½Ð¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ =begin original @@ -7812,11 +7801,10 @@ =end original -Currently only emitted when a printf-type format required more -arguments than were supplied, but might be used in the future for -other cases where we can statically determine that arguments to -functions are missing, e.g. for the L<perlfunc/pack> function. -(TBT) +¸½ºß¤Î¤È¤³¤í¤Ï printf ·¿¼°¤Î¥Õ¥©¡¼¥Þ¥Ã¥È¤¬Ä󶡤µ¤ì¤¿¤è¤ê¤â¿¤¯¤Î°ú¿ô¤ò +Í׵ᤷ¤¿¾ì¹ç¤Ë¤Î¤ßȯÀ¸¤·¤Þ¤¹¤¬¡¢ +¾Íè¡¢L<perlfunc/pack> ´Ø¿ô¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ê¡¢´Ø¿ô¤Î°ú¿ô¤òÀÅŪ¤Ë·èÄê¤Ç¤¤ë +¤½¤Î¾¤Î¾ì¹ç¤Ë»È¤ï¤ì¤ë¤«¤â¤·¤ì¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ =item Missing argument to -%c @@ -7958,10 +7946,9 @@ =end original -(F) You tried to call require with no argument or with an undefined -value as an argument. Require expects either a package name or a -file-specification as an argument. See L<perlfunc/require>. -(TBT) +(F) °ú¿ô¤Ê¤·¡¢¤Þ¤¿¤Ï̤ÄêµÁÃͤò°ú¿ô¤È¤·¤Æ require ¤ò¸Æ¤Ó½Ð¤½¤¦¤È¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ +require ¤Ï¥Ñ¥Ã¥±¡¼¥¸Ì¾¤Þ¤¿¤Ï¥Õ¥¡¥¤¥ë»ØÄê¤ò°ú¿ô¤È¤·¤ÆÁÛÄꤷ¤Þ¤¹¡£ +L<perlfunc/require> ¤ò»²¾È¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤¡£ =item Missing right brace on \%c{} in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/ @@ -8295,9 +8282,8 @@ =end original -(F) Lexically scoped subroutines aren't in a package, so it doesn't make -sense to try to declare one with a package qualifier on the front. -(TBT) +(F) ¥ì¥¥·¥«¥ë¥¹¥³¡¼¥×¥µ¥Ö¥ë¡¼¥Á¥ó¤Ï¥Ñ¥Ã¥±¡¼¥¸Æâ¤Ë¤Ê¤¤¤Î¤Ç¡¢ +Ƭ¤Ë¥Ñ¥Ã¥±¡¼¥¸Ì¾¤òÉÕ¤±¤ÆÀë¸À¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤Ï¡¢Ìµ°ÕÌ£¤Ç¤¹¡£ =item "my %s" used in sort comparison @@ -8360,15 +8346,14 @@ =end original -NOTE: This warning detects package symbols that have been used -only once. This means lexical variables will never trigger this -warning. It also means that all of the package variables $c, @c, -%c, as well as *c, &c, sub c{}, c(), and c (the filehandle or -format) are considered the same; if a program uses $c only once -but also uses any of the others it will not trigger this warning. -Symbols beginning with an underscore and symbols using special -identifiers (q.v. L<perldata>) are exempt from this warning. -(TBT) +Ãí°Õ: ¤³¤Î·Ù¹ð¤Ï°ìÅÙ¤·¤«»È¤ï¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Ê¤¤¥Ñ¥Ã¥±¡¼¥¸¥·¥ó¥Ü¥ë¤ò¸¡½Ð¤·¤Þ¤¹¡£ +¤Ä¤Þ¤ê¡¢¥ì¥¥·¥«¥ëÊÑ¿ô¤Ï¤³¤Î·Ù¹ð¤ò°ú¤µ¯¤³¤µ¤Ê¤¤¤È¸À¤¦¤³¤È¤Ç¤¹¡£ +¤Þ¤¿¡¢¥Ñ¥Ã¥±¡¼¥¸ÊÑ¿ô $c, @c, %c ¤ª¤è¤Ó +*c, &c, sub c{}, c(), c (¥Õ¥¡¥¤¥ë¥Ï¥ó¥É¥ë¤Þ¤¿¤Ï¥Õ¥©¡¼¥Þ¥Ã¥È) ¤Ï +Ʊ¤¸¤Ç¤¢¤ë¤È¹Í¤¨¤Þ¤¹; ¥×¥í¥°¥é¥à¤¬ $c ¤ò°ìÅÙ¤À¤±»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ë½³¤ì¤É¤Ã¤â +¤½¤Î¾¤Î¤â¤Î¤â»È¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ë¾ì¹ç¡¢¤³¤Î·Ù¹ð¤Ï°ú¤µ¯¤³¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ +²¼Àþ¤Ç»Ï¤Þ¤ë¥·¥ó¥Ü¥ë¤ÈÆü켱ÊÌ»Ò +(L<perldata> »²¾È) ¤ò»È¤Ã¤¿¥·¥ó¥Ü¥ë¤Ï¤³¤Î·Ù¹ð¤òÌȤì¤Þ¤¹¡£ =item Need exactly 3 octal digits in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/ @@ -8454,10 +8439,8 @@ =end original -(W numeric) You tried to execute the -L<C<x>|perlop/Multiplicative Operators> repetition operator fewer than 0 -times, which doesn't make sense. -(TBT) +(W numeric) L<C<x>|perlop/Multiplicative Operators> ·«¤êÊÖ¤·±é»»»Ò¤ò +0 ¤è¤ê¾®¤µ¤¤²ó¿ô¼Â¹Ô¤·¤è¤¦¤È¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿; ¤³¤ì¤Ï̵°ÕÌ£¤Ç¤¹¡£ =item Nested quantifiers in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/ @@ -8564,9 +8547,8 @@ =end original -What is meant here is unclear, as the C<\N{...}> escape is a sequence -of code points, so this is made an error. -(TBT) +¤³¤³¤Ç°ÕÌ£¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤â¤Î¤ÏÉÔÌÀ³Î¤Ç¤¹; C<\N{...}> ¥¨¥¹¥±¡¼¥×¤Ï +Éä¹æ°ÌÃÖ¤ÎʤӤÀ¤«¤é¤Ç¤¹; ½¾¤Ã¤Æ¤³¤ì¤Ï¥¨¥é¡¼¤òȯÀ¸¤µ¤»¤Þ¤¹¡£ =item \N{NAME} must be resolved by the lexer in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/ @@ -8664,12 +8646,12 @@ =end original -(D deprecated) You defined a character name which contained a no-break -space character. Change it to a regular space. Usually these names are -defined in the C<:alias> import argument to C<use charnames>, but they -could be defined by a translator installed into C<$^H{charnames}>. See -L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES>. -(TBT) +(D deprecated) Èóʬ³ä¶õÇòʸ»ú¤ò´Þ¤àʸ»ú̾¤òÄêµÁ¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ +Ä̾ï¤Î¥¹¥Ú¡¼¥¹¤ËÊѹ¹¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤¡£ +ÉáÄ̤Ϥ³¤ì¤é¤Î̾Á°¤Ï C<use charnames> ¤Î C<:alias> ¥¤¥ó¥Ý¡¼¥È°ú¿ô¤Ç +ÄêµÁ¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹¤¬¡¢C<$^H{charnames}> ¤Ç¥¤¥ó¥¹¥È¡¼¥ë¤µ¤ì¤¿ +ÊÑ´¹´ï¤ÇÄêµÁ¤µ¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤³¤È¤â¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹¡£ +L<charnames/CUSTOM ALIASES> ¤ò»²¾È¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤¡£ =item No code specified for -%c @@ -8873,10 +8855,9 @@ =end original -(W numeric) You tried to execute the -L<C<x>|perlop/Multiplicative Operators> repetition operator C<Inf> (or -C<-Inf>) or C<NaN> times, which doesn't make sense. -(TBT) +(W numeric) L<C<x>|perlop/Multiplicative Operators> ·«¤êÊÖ¤·±é»»»Ò¤ò +C<Inf> (¤Þ¤¿¤Ï C<-Inf>) ²ó¡¢¤Þ¤¿¤Ï C<NaN> ²ó¼Â¹Ô¤·¤è¤¦¤È¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿; +¤³¤ì¤Ï°ÕÌ£¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ =item Non-hex character in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/ @@ -10610,9 +10591,8 @@ =end original -(F) The XS module in question was compiled against a different incompatible -version of Perl than the one that has loaded the XS module. -(TBT) +(F) ¤³¤Î XS ¥â¥¸¥å¡¼¥ë¤Ï¡¢¤³¤ì¤òÆɤ߹þ¤ó¤À Perl ¤È¤Ï¸ß´¹À¤Î¤Ê¤¤¥Ð¡¼¥¸¥ç¥ó¤Î +Perl ÍѤ˥³¥ó¥Ñ¥¤¥ë¤µ¤ì¤¿¤â¤Î¤Ç¤¹¡£ =item Perl folding rules are not up-to-date for 0x%X; please use the perlbug utility to report; in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/ @@ -10641,10 +10621,8 @@ =end original -(S experimental::win32_perlio) The C<:win32> PerlIO layer is -experimental. If you want to take the risk of using this layer, -simply disable this warning: -(TBT) +(S experimental::win32_perlio) C<:win32> PerlIO Áؤϼ¸³Åª¤Ç¤¹¡£ +¤³¤ÎÁؤò»È¤¦¥ê¥¹¥¯¤ò¼è¤ê¤¿¤¤¾ì¹ç¤Ï¡¢Ã±¤Ë¤³¤Î·Ù¹ð¤ò̵¸ú¤Ë¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤: no warnings "experimental::win32_perlio"; @@ -11525,13 +11503,12 @@ =end original -Stricter rules help to find typos and other errors. Perhaps you didn't -even intend a range here, if the C<"-"> was meant to be some other -character, or should have been escaped (like C<"\-">). If you did -intend a range, the one that was used is not portable between ASCII and -EBCDIC platforms, and doesn't have an obvious meaning to a casual -reader. -(TBT) +¤è¤ê¸·Ì©¤Êµ¬Â§¤Ï¥¿¥¤¥×¥ß¥¹¤ä¤½¤Î¾¤Î¥¨¥é¡¼¤ò¸«¤Ä¤±¤ë½õ¤±¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹¡£ +¤ª¤½¤é¤¯¤½¤â¤½¤â¤³¤³¤ÇÈϰϤò°Õ¿Þ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Ê¤¤¤«¡¢C<"-"> ¤¬Â¾¤Îʸ»ú¤Î +¤Ä¤â¤ê¤À¤Ã¤¿¤«¡¢(C<"\-"> ¤Î¤è¤¦¤Ë)¥¨¥¹¥±¡¼¥×¤µ¤ì¤ë¤Ù¤¤À¤Ã¤¿¤Î¤Ç¤·¤ç¤¦¡£ +ÈϰϤò°Õ¿Þ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤¿¤Î¤Ê¤é¡¢»È¤ï¤ì¤Æ¤¤¤ë¤â¤Î¤Ï ASCII ¤È EBCDIC +¥×¥é¥Ã¥È¥Õ¥©¡¼¥à¤Î´Ö¤Ç°Ü¿¢À¤¬¤Ê¤¯¡¢¥«¥¸¥å¥¢¥ë¤ÊÆɼԤˤÏÉÔÌÀ³Î¤Ê +°ÕÌ£¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹¡£ [3-7] # OK; Obvious and portable [d-g] # OK; Obvious and portable @@ -11584,11 +11561,10 @@ =end original -Stricter rules help to find typos and other errors. You included a -range, and at least one of the end points is a decimal digit. Under the -stricter rules, when this happens, both end points should be digits in -the same group of 10 consecutive digits. -(TBT) +¤è¤ê¸·Ì©¤Êµ¬Â§¤Ï¥¿¥¤¥×¥ß¥¹¤ä¤½¤Î¾¤Î¥¨¥é¡¼¤ò¸«¤Ä¤±¤ë½õ¤±¤Ë¤Ê¤ê¤Þ¤¹¡£ +ÈϰϤò´Þ¤ó¤Ç¤¤¤Æ¡¢¾¯¤Ê¤¯¤È¤âÊÒÊý¤Îü¤Ï¿ô»ú¤Ç¤¹¡£ +¤è¤ê¸·Ì©¤Êµ¬Â§¤Ç¤Ï¡¢¤³¤ì¤¬µ¯¤¤¿¤È¤¤Ï¡¢Î¾Ã¼¤¬ 10 Ϣ³¤·¤¿¿ô»ú¤ÎƱ¤¸ +¥°¥ë¡¼¥×¤Ë°¤¹¤ëÉä¹æ°ÌÃ֤Ǥ¢¤ëɬÍפ¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹¡£ =item readdir() attempted on invalid dirhandle %s @@ -11715,9 +11691,10 @@ =end original (W redundant) You called a function with more arguments than other -arguments you supplied indicated would be needed. Currently only -emitted when a printf-type format required fewer arguments than were -supplied, but might be used in the future for e.g. L<perlfunc/pack>. +arguments you supplied indicated would be needed. +¸½ºß¤Î¤È¤³¤í¡¢printf ·¿¤Î¥Õ¥©¡¼¥Þ¥Ã¥È¤¬»ØÄꤵ¤ì¤¿¤â¤Î¤è¤ê¾¯¤Ê¤¤¿ô¤Î +°ú¿ô¤·¤«É¬ÍפȤ·¤Æ¤¤¤Ê¤¤¾ì¹ç¤Ë¤Î¤ßȯÀ¸¤·¤Þ¤¹¤¬¡¢¾Íè¤Ï +Î㤨¤Ð L<perlfunc/pack> ¤Ç»È¤ï¤ì¤ë¤«¤â¤·¤ì¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ (TBT) =item refcnt_dec: fd %d%s @@ -12248,12 +12225,12 @@ =end original -(F) These three characters may not appear in sequence in a -double-quotish context. This message is raised only on non-ASCII -platforms (a different error message is output on ASCII ones). If you -were intending to specify a control character with this sequence, you'll -have to use a different way to specify it. -(TBT) +(F) ¤³¤ì¤é»°¤Ä¤Îʸ»ú¤ÎʤӤϥÀ¥Ö¥ë¥¯¥©¡¼¥ÈÉ÷¤Î¥³¥ó¥Æ¥¥¹¥È¤Ç¤Ï +»È¤¨¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ +¤³¤Î¥á¥Ã¥»¡¼¥¸¤ÏÈó ASCII ¥×¥é¥Ã¥È¥Õ¥©¡¼¥à¤Ç¤Î¤ßȯÀ¸¤·¤Þ¤¹ +(ASCII ¤Ç¤Ï°Û¤Ê¤Ã¤¿¤¨¤é¥á¥Ã¥»¡¼¥¸¤¬½ÐÎϤµ¤ì¤Þ¤¹)¡£ +¤³¤ÎʤӤÎÀ©¸æʸ»ú¤ò»ØÄꤹ¤ë¤³¤È¤ò°Õ¿Þ¤·¤Æ¤¤¤ë¾ì¹ç¤Ï¡¢»ØÄꤹ¤ë¤¿¤á¤Ë +°Û¤Ê¤ëÊýË¡¤ò»È¤¦É¬Íפ¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤¹¡£ =item Sequence (? incomplete in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/ @@ -12376,10 +12353,8 @@ =end original -(F) There was no matching closing parenthesis for the '('. The -S<<-- HERE> shows whereabouts in the regular expression the problem was -discovered. -(TBT) +(F) '(' ¤ËÂбþ¤¹¤ëÊĤ¸¤«¤Ã¤³¤¬¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó¡£ +S<<-- HERE> ¤ÇÀµµ¬É½¸½¤Î¤É¤³¤ËÌäÂ꤬ȯ¸«¤µ¤ì¤¿¤«¤ò¼¨¤·¤Æ¤¤¤Þ¤¹¡£ =item Sequence \%s... not terminated in regex; marked by S<<-- HERE> in m/%s/ @@ -12582,9 +12557,8 @@ =end original -(D deprecated) You assigned a non-C<undef> value to C<${^ENCODING}>. -This is deprecated; see C<L<perlvar/${^ENCODING}>> for details. -(TBT) +(D deprecated) C<${^ENCODING}> ¤Ë C<undef> °Õ³°¤ÎÃͤòÂåÆþ¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ +¤³¤ì¤ÏÇÑ»ßͽÄê¤Ç¤¹; ¾Ü¤·¤¯¤Ï C<L<perlvar/${^ENCODING}>> ¤ò»²¾È¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤¡£ =item Setting $/ to a reference to %s as a form of slurp is deprecated, treating as undef @@ -12922,9 +12896,8 @@ =end original -(F) Lexically scoped subroutines aren't in a package, so it doesn't make -sense to try to declare one with a package qualifier on the front. -(TBT) +(F) ¥ì¥¥·¥«¥ë¥¹¥³¡¼¥×¥µ¥Ö¥ë¡¼¥Á¥ó¤Ï¥Ñ¥Ã¥±¡¼¥¸Æâ¤Ë¤¢¤ê¤Þ¤»¤ó; +Ƭ¤Ë¥Ñ¥Ã¥±¡¼¥¸Ì¾¤òÉÕ¤±¤ÆÀë¸À¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤Ï¡¢Ìµ°ÕÌ£¤Ç¤¹¡£ =item "state %s" used in sort comparison @@ -13108,9 +13081,8 @@ =end original -(W closure) An inner (nested) I<named> subroutine is referencing a "my" -subroutine defined in an outer named subroutine. -(TBT) +(W closure) Æ⦤Π(¥Í¥¹¥È¤·¤¿) I<̾Á°ÉÕ¤> ¥µ¥Ö¥ë¡¼¥Á¥ó¤¬¡¢ +³°Â¦¤Î̾Á°ÉÕ¤¥µ¥Ö¥ë¡¼¥Á¥ó¤ÇÄêµÁ¤µ¤ì¤¿ "my" ¤Ç»²¾È¤µ¤ì¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ =begin original @@ -13307,10 +13279,9 @@ =end original -(F) You omitted to close a (?(condition)...) block somewhere -in the pattern. Add a closing parenthesis in the appropriate -position. See L<perlre>. -(TBT) +(F) ¥Ñ¥¿¡¼¥óÃæ¤Î¤É¤³¤«¤Ç (?(condition)...) ¥Ö¥í¥Ã¥¯¤òÊĤ¸¤ë¤Î¤ò¾Êά¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ +ŬÀڤʰÌÃÖ¤ËÊĤ¸¤«¤Ã¤³¤òÄɲ䷤Ƥ¯¤À¤µ¤¤¡£ +L<perlre> ¤ò»²¾È¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤¡£ =item switching effective %s is not implemented @@ -13567,12 +13538,11 @@ =end original -(S experimental::bitwise) This warning is emitted if you use bitwise -operators (C<& | ^ ~ &. |. ^. ~.>) with the "bitwise" feature enabled. +(S experimental::bitwise) ¤³¤Î·Ù¹ð¤Ï¡¢"bitwise" µ¡Ç½¤¬Í¸ú¤Î¤È¤¤Ë +¥Ó¥Ã¥Èñ°Ì±é»»»Ò (C<& | ^ ~ &. |. ^. ~.>) ¤ò»È¤¦¤È¤¤Ë½ÐÎϤµ¤ì¤Þ¤¹¡£ ¤³¤Îµ¡Ç½¤ò»È¤¤¤¿¤¤¤±¤ì¤É¤â¡¢¤½¤¦¤¹¤ë¤³¤È¤Ç¾Íè¤Î Perl ¥Ð¡¼¥¸¥ç¥ó¤Ç Êѹ¹¤µ¤ì¤ë¤«¤â¤·¤ì¤Ê¤¤¼Â¸³Åªµ¡Ç½¤ò»È¤¦¥ê¥¹¥¯¤ò¼è¤ë¤³¤È¤òʬ¤«¤Ã¤Æ¤¤¤ë¾ì¹ç¤Ï¡¢ ñ¤Ë·Ù¹ð¤òÍÞÀ©¤·¤Æ¤¯¤À¤µ¤¤: -(TBT) no warnings "experimental::bitwise"; use feature "bitwise"; @@ -16596,9 +16566,8 @@ =end original -(S io) An error occurred when Perl implicitly closed a filehandle. This -usually indicates your file system ran out of disk space. -(TBT) +(S io) Perl ¤¬°ÅÌۤ˥ե¡¥¤¥ë¥Ï¥ó¥É¥ë¤òÊĤ¸¤ë¤È¤¤Ë¥¨¥é¡¼¤¬µ¯¤¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ +¤³¤ì¤ÏÉáÄ̤ϥե¡¥¤¥ë¥·¥¹¥Æ¥à¤Î¥Ç¥£¥¹¥¯ÍÆÎ̤¬¤Ê¤¯¤Ê¤Ã¤¿¤³¤È¤ò°ÕÌ£¤·¤Þ¤¹¡£ =item Warning: Use of "%s" without parentheses is ambiguous @@ -16701,14 +16670,15 @@ =end original -(W locale) While in a single-byte locale (I<i.e.>, a non-UTF-8 -one), a multi-byte character was encountered. Perl considers this -character to be the specified Unicode code point. Combining non-UTF-8 -locales and Unicode is dangerous. Almost certainly some characters -will have two different representations. For example, in the ISO 8859-7 -(Greek) locale, the code point 0xC3 represents a Capital Gamma. But so -also does 0x393. This will make string comparisons unreliable. -(TBT) +(W locale) ñ°ì¥Ð¥¤¥È¥í¥±¡¼¥ë (¤Ä¤Þ¤êÈó UTF-8 ¤Î¤â¤Î)¤Ç¡¢ +Ê£¿ô¥Ð¥¤¥Èʸ»ú¤ËÁø¶ø¤·¤Þ¤·¤¿¡£ +Perl ¤Ï¤³¤Îʸ»ú¤ò»ØÄꤵ¤ì¤¿ Unicode Éä¹æ°ÌÃ֤Ȥ·¤Æ°·¤¤¤Þ¤¹¡£ +Èó UTF-8 ¥í¥±¡¼¥ë¤È Unicode ¤ò·ë¹ç¤¹¤ë¤Î¤Ï´í¸±¤Ç¤¹¡£ +¤Û¤È¤ó¤É³Î¼Â¤Ë°ìÉô¤Îʸ»ú¤ÏÊ£¿ô¤Î°Û¤Ê¤ëɽ¸½¤ò»ý¤Á¤Þ¤¹¡£ +Î㤨¤Ð¡¢ISO 8859-7 (¥®¥ê¥·¥ã¸ì) ¥í¥±¡¼¥ë¤Ç¤Ï¡¢ +Éä¹æ°ÌÃÖ 0xC3 ¤Ï Capital Gamma ¤òɽ¸½¤·¤Þ¤¹¡£ +¤·¤«¤· 0x393 ¤âƱ¤¸¤Ç¤¹¡£ +¤³¤ì¤Ïʸ»úÎóÈæ³Ó¤ò¿®Íê¤Ç¤¤Ê¤¤¤â¤Î¤Ë¤·¤Þ¤¹¡£ =begin original