Files
perl-Lingua-EN-Numbers/perl-Lingua-EN-Numbers.spec
2025-08-12 18:15:01 +02:00

77 lines
2.4 KiB
RPMSpec

#
# spec file for package perl-Lingua-EN-Numbers
#
# Copyright (c) 2024 SUSE LLC
#
# All modifications and additions to the file contributed by third parties
# remain the property of their copyright owners, unless otherwise agreed
# upon. The license for this file, and modifications and additions to the
# file, is the same license as for the pristine package itself (unless the
# license for the pristine package is not an Open Source License, in which
# case the license is the MIT License). An "Open Source License" is a
# license that conforms to the Open Source Definition (Version 1.9)
# published by the Open Source Initiative.
# Please submit bugfixes or comments via https://bugs.opensuse.org/
#
%define cpan_name Lingua-EN-Numbers
Name: perl-Lingua-EN-Numbers
Version: 2.30.0
Release: 0
# 2.03 -> normalize -> 2.30.0
%define cpan_version 2.03
#Upstream: SUSE-Public-Domain
License: GPL-2.0-only
Summary: Turn "407" into "four hundred and seven", etc
URL: https://metacpan.org/release/%{cpan_name}
Source0: https://cpan.metacpan.org/authors/id/N/NE/NEILB/%{cpan_name}-%{cpan_version}.tar.gz
Source1: cpanspec.yml
Source100: README.md
BuildArch: noarch
BuildRequires: perl
BuildRequires: perl-macros
BuildRequires: perl(Test::More) >= 0.88
Provides: perl(Lingua::EN::Numbers) = %{version}
%undefine __perllib_provides
%{perl_requires}
%description
This module provides a function 'num2en', which converts a number (such as
123) into English text ("one hundred and twenty-three"). It also provides a
function 'num2en_ordinal', which converts a number into the ordinal form in
words, so 54 becomes "fifty-fourth".
If you pass either function something that doesn't look like a number, they
will return 'undef'.
This module can handle integers like "12" or "-3" and real numbers like
"53.19".
This module also understands exponential notation -- it turns "4E9" into
"four times ten to the ninth"). And it even turns "INF", "-INF", "NaN" into
"infinity", "negative infinity", and "not a number", respectively.
Any commas in the input numbers are ignored.
%prep
%autosetup -n %{cpan_name}-%{cpan_version}
%build
perl Makefile.PL INSTALLDIRS=vendor
%make_build
%check
make test
%install
%perl_make_install
%perl_process_packlist
%perl_gen_filelist
%files -f %{name}.files
%doc Changes README
%changelog