Scroll to navigation

Kwargs(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Kwargs(3pm)

NAME

Kwargs - Simple, clean handing of named/keyword arguments.

VERSION

version 0.01

SYNOPSIS

    use Kwargs;
    # just named
    my ($foo, $bar, baz) = kw @_, qw(foo bar baz);
    # positional followed by named
    my ($pos, $opt_one, $opt_two) = kwn @_, 1, qw(opt_one opt_two)
    # just a hashref
    my $opts = kw @_;
    # positional then hashref
    my ($one, $two, $opts) = kwn @_, 2;

WHY?

Named arguments are good, especially when you take lots of (sometimes optional) arguments. There are two styles of passing named arguments (by convention) in perl though, with and without braces:

    sub foo {
        my $args = shift;
        my $bar  = $args->{bar};
    }
    foo({ bar => 'baz' });
    sub bar {
        my %args = @_;
        my $foo  = $args{foo};
    }
    bar(foo => 'baz');

If you want to support both calling styles (because it should be mainly a style issue), then you have to do something like this:

    sub foo {
        my $args = ref $_[0] eq 'HASH' ? $_[0] : { @_ };
        my $bar  = $args->{bar};
    }

Which is annoying, and not even entirely correct. What if someone wanted to pass in a tied object for their optional arguments? That could work, but what are the right semantics for checking for it? It also gets uglier if you want to unpack your keyword arguments in one line for clarity:

    sub foo {
        my ($one, $two, $three) = 
            @{ ref $_[0] eq 'HASH' ? $_[0] : { @_ } }{qw(one two three) };
    }

Did I say clarity? HAHAHAHAHA! Surely no one would actually put something like that in his code. Except I found myself typing this very thing, and That Is Why.

EXPORTS

Two functions (kw and kwn) are exported by default. You can also ask for them individually or rename them to something else. See Sub::Exporter for details.

kw(@array, @names)

Short for "kwn(@array, 0, @names)"

kwn(@array, $number_of_positional_args, @names)

Conceptually shifts off n positional arguments from array, then figures out whether the rest of the array is a list of key-value pairs or a single argument (usually, but not necessarily, a hashref). If you passed in any @names, these are used as keys into the hash, and the values at those keys are appended to any positional arguments and returned. If you do not pass @names, you will get a hashref (or whatever the single argument was, like a tied object) back.

Note that if the single argument cannot be dereferenced as a hashref, this can die. No attempt is made by this module to handle the exception.

AUTHOR

Paul Driver <frodwith@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2011 by Paul Driver <frodwith@cpan.org>.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.

2021-01-02 perl v5.32.0