| Acme-BloodType documentation | view source | Contained in the Acme-BloodType distribution. |
Acme::BloodType - For those obsessed with celebrities' blood types
Version 0.01
Allows you to model people with different blood-types and see what would happen if they had a kid. Alpha version handles ABO only for now.
use Acme::BloodType;
# Hooray for gene sequencers
$mary = Acme::BloodType->new({ genotype => "AA" });
$bill = Acme::BloodType->new({ phenotype => "O" });
$baby = $mary->cross($bill);
print "It's a ", $baby->get_bloodtype, "!\n";
Create an Acme::Bloodtype object representing a person. You may specify genotype, phenotype (in which case a genotype is chosen at random), or nothing, in which case it's all random. Probabilities don't (yet) model real-world distributions.
Get the bloodtype (phenotype) of this person. Returns "A", "B", "AB", or "O".
Get the genotype of this person. Returns a string of two characters, which may be "A", "B", or "O".
"Mate" one person with the other, producing a result chosen randomly in the style of Mendel.
Andrew Rodland, <ARODLAND at cpan.org>
Please report any bugs or feature requests to
bug-acme-bloodtype at rt.cpan.org, or through the web interface at
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Acme-BloodType.
I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on
your bug as I make changes.
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc Acme::BloodType
You can also look for information at:
Copyright 2006 Andrew Rodland, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
| Acme-BloodType documentation | view source | Contained in the Acme-BloodType distribution. |