use strict;
use warnings;
package Mixin::Linewise;
# ABSTRACT: write your linewise code for handles; this does the rest
$Mixin::Linewise::VERSION = '0.108';
use 5.006;
use Carp ();
Carp::confess "not meant to be loaded";
#pod =head1 DESCRIPTION
#pod
#pod It's boring to deal with opening files for IO, converting strings to
#pod handle-like objects, and all that. With L<Mixin::Linewise::Readers> and
#pod L<Mixin::Linewise::Writers>, you can just write a method to handle handles, and
#pod methods for handling strings and filenames are added for you.
#pod
#pod =cut
1;
__END__
=pod
=encoding UTF-8
=head1 NAME
Mixin::Linewise - write your linewise code for handles; this does the rest
=head1 VERSION
version 0.108
=head1 DESCRIPTION
It's boring to deal with opening files for IO, converting strings to
handle-like objects, and all that. With L<Mixin::Linewise::Readers> and
L<Mixin::Linewise::Writers>, you can just write a method to handle handles, and
methods for handling strings and filenames are added for you.
=head1 AUTHOR
Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@cpan.org>
=head1 CONTRIBUTORS
=for stopwords David Golden Steinbrunner Graham Knop
=over 4
=item *
David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>
=item *
David Steinbrunner <dsteinbrunner@pobox.com>
=item *
Graham Knop <haarg@haarg.org>
=back
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2008 by Ricardo SIGNES.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
=cut