From e6904f976565ea169393a25b04432e7533372828b08823cfb366dd56ab3fa6d6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Stephan Kulow Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2013 09:38:35 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/devel:languages:perl/perl-Business-ISSN?expand=0&rev=2 --- perl-Business-ISSN.spec | 30 ------------------------------ 1 file changed, 30 deletions(-) diff --git a/perl-Business-ISSN.spec b/perl-Business-ISSN.spec index 576cd02..95891c4 100644 --- a/perl-Business-ISSN.spec +++ b/perl-Business-ISSN.spec @@ -52,36 +52,6 @@ BuildRequires: perl-macros object-oriented interface and use the c function which is exportable on demand. - If the constructor decides it can't create an object, it returns undef. - It may do this if the string passed as the ISSN can't be munged to the - internal format. - -* $obj->checksum - - Return the ISSN checksum. - -* $obj->as_string - - Return the ISSN as a string. - - A terminating 'x' is changed to 'X'. - -* $obj->is_valid - - Returns 1 if the checksum is valid. - - Returns 0 if the ISSN does not pass the checksum test. The constructor - accepts invalid ISSN's so that they might be fixed with 'fix_checksum'. - -* $obj->fix_checksum - - Replace the eighth character with the checksum the corresponds to the - previous seven digits. This does not guarantee that the ISSN corresponds - to the product one thinks it does, or that the ISSN corresponds to any - product at all. It only produces a string that passes the checksum - routine. If the ISSN passed to the constructor was invalid, the error - might have been in any of the other nine positions. - %prep %setup -q -n %{cpan_name}-%{version} find . -type f -print0 | xargs -0 chmod 644