table of contents
UR::Object::Command::FetchAndDo(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | UR::Object::Command::FetchAndDo(3pm) |
NAME¶
UR::Object::Command::FetchAndDo - Base class for fetching objects and then performing a function on/with them.
SYNOPSIS¶
package MyFecthAndDo; use strict; use warnings; use above "UR"; class MyFecthAndDo { is => 'UR::Object::Command::FetchAndDo', has => [ # other properties... ], }; sub _do { # required my ($self, $iterator) = @_; while (my $obj = $iterator->next) { ... } return 1; } 1;
Provided by the Developer¶
_do (required)¶
Implement this method to 'do' unto the iterator. Return true for success, false for failure.
sub _do { my ($self, $iterator) = @_; while (my $obj = $iterator->next) { ... } return 1; }
subject_class_name (optional)¶
The subject_class_name is the class for which the objects will be fetched. It can be specified one of two main ways:
- by_the_end_user_on_the_command_line
- For this do nothing, the end user will have to provide it when the command is run.
- by_the_developer_in the_class_declartion
- For this, in the class declaration, add a has key w/ arrayref of hashrefs.
One of the hashrefs needs to be subject_class_name. Give it this
declaration:
class MyFetchAndDo { is => 'UR::Object::Command::FetchAndDo', has => [ subject_class_name => { value => <CLASS NAME>, is_constant => 1, }, ], };
helps (optional)¶
Overwrite the help_brief, help_synopsis and help_detail methods to provide specific help. If overwiting the help_detail method, use call '_filter_doc' to get the filter documentation and usage to combine with your specific help.
2024-06-15 | perl v5.38.2 |