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Declare::Constraints::Simple::Library::Base(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Declare::Constraints::Simple::Library::Base(3pm) |
NAME¶
Declare::Constraints::Simple::Library::Base - Library Base Class
SYNOPSIS¶
package My::Constraint::Library; use warnings; use strict; # this installs the base class and helper functions use Declare::Constraints::Simple-Library; # we can also automagically provide other libraries # to the importer use base 'Declare::Constraints::Simple::Library::Numericals'; # with this we define a constraint to check a value # against a serial number regular expression constraint 'SomeSerial', sub { return sub { return _true if $_[0] =~ /\d{3}-\d{3}-\d{4}/; return _false('Not in SomeSerial format'); }; }; 1;
DESCRIPTION¶
This base class contains the common library functionalities. This includes helper functions and install mechanisms.
METHODS¶
install_into($target)¶
Installs the base classes and helper functions into the $target namespace. The %CONSTRAINT_GENERATORS package variable of that class will be used as storage for it's constraints.
fetch_constraint_declarations()¶
Class method. Returns all constraints registered to the class.
fetch_constraint_generator($name)¶
Class method. Returns the constraint generator code reference registered under $name. The call will raise a "croak" if the generator could not be found.
prepare_generator($constraint_name, $generator)¶
Class method. This wraps the $generator in a closure that provides stack and failure-collapsing decisions.
add_constraint_generator($name, $code)¶
Class method. The actual registration method, used by "constraint".
HELPER FUNCTIONS¶
Note that some of the helper functions are prefixed with "_". Although this means they are internal functions, it is ok to call them, as they have a fixed API. They are not distribution internal, but library internal, and only intended to be used from inside constraints.
constraint($name, $code)¶
constraint 'Foo', sub { ... };
This registers a new constraint in the calling library. Note that constraints have to return result objects. To do this, you can use the helper functions "_result($bool, $msg", _true() and _false($msg).
_result($bool, $msg)¶
Returns a new result object. It's validity flag will depend on the $bool argument. The $msg argument is the error message to use on failure.
_false($msg)¶
Returns a non-valid result object, with it's message set to $msg.
_true()¶
Returns a valid result object.
_info($info)¶
Sets the current failure info to use in the stack info part.
_apply_checks($value, \@constraints, [$info])¶
This applies all constraints in the "\@constraints" array reference to the passed $value. You can optionally specify an $info string to be used in the stack of the newly created non-valid results.
_listify($value)¶
Puts $value into an array reference and returns it, if it isn't already one.
_with_message($msg, $closure, @args)¶
This is the internal version of the general "Message" constraint. It sets the current overridden message to $msg and executes the $closure with @args as arguments.
_with_scope($scope_name, $constraint, @args)¶
Applies the $constraint to @args in a newly created scope named by $scope_name.
_set_result($scope, $name, $result)¶
Stores the given $result unter the name $name in $scope.
_get_result($scope, $name)¶
Returns the result named $name from $scope.
_has_result($scope, $name)¶
Returns true only if such a result was registered already.
SEE ALSO¶
Declare::Constraints::Simple, Declare::Constraints::Simple::Library
AUTHOR¶
Robert 'phaylon' Sedlacek "<phaylon@dunkelheit.at>"
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT¶
This module is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as perl itself.
2021-01-09 | perl v5.32.0 |