NAME¶
Class::OOorNO - Give your module classic
AND OO interfaces
STATUS!¶
This is a developer's release, and is not intended for use in the public sector.
This code is made available for developers who wish to aid in the furthering
of the code.
This is
not a registered module in the CPAN module list. It is not part
of the CPAN yet.
SYNOPSIS¶
- Functional programming interface
-
package Your::Class;
use Class::OOorNO qw( coerce_array );
- Object-Oriented programming interface
-
package Your::Class;
use Class::OOorNO;
my($obj) = Class::OOorNO->new();
- Class Inheritance
-
package Your::Class;
use vars qw( @ISA );
use Class::OOorNO;
@ISA = qw( Class::OOorNO );
PURPOSE¶
Allows you set up your module so it can
easily provide a standard
interface as well as an object-oriented interface to its users.
DESCRIPTION¶
Class::OOorNO helps your module handle the input for its subroutines whether
called in object-oriented style
(as object methods or class methods
with the arrow syntax "->"), or in
functional programming style
(as subroutines imported to the caller's
namespace via Exporter).
The bulk of this module comprises a lightweight, pure-Perl emulation of the
Devel::Caller library's "called_as_method()" routine which is
written in C.
Devel::Caller dives deep into the internals of of the Perl interpreter
(see
perlguts) to trace stack frames and can get the input for any call in the
stack. It's really handy for
Devel::opment and debugging.
This module is much more lightweight and focuses more on your module's
Class:: methods themselves.
EXPORT¶
None by default.
EXPORT_OK¶
All available methods. (see METHODS below)
":all" (exports all of @EXPORT_OK)
METHODS¶
"myself()"¶
- Syntax: "myself(@_)"
- If your subroutine has been called as an object method, a
reference to the object will be returned. If your subroutine has been
called as a class method, the name of class itself will be returned as a
string. Otherwise, a value of undef is returned.
"OOorNO()"¶
- Syntax: "OOorNO(@_)"
- If your subroutine has been called as an object method or
as a class method, a value of 1 will be returned, otherwise a false value
(an empty string, eg- '') will be returned.
"myargs()"¶
- Syntax: "myargs(@_)"
- This method retrieves the input sent to your class methods
and returns it untouched, with the exception that if a blessed object
reference from the same namespace as the caller is found in $_[0], it will
be not be included with the rest of the arguments when they are returned.
Make note that the special variable "@_" for your routine
is not altered in any way by calling this method. You can still use
and manipulate it as you normally would.
- Purpose of "OOorNO::myargs"
- This simply allows the methods in your class to get their
argment list quickly without having to check if they were called
procedurally or with object-oriented notation.
- Caveat:
- If you are expecting a blessed object reference from
your package to be in $_[0] regardless of the way your method was called -
don't use this method to get your arguments; that reference you're
expecting will obviously be excluded from the list you get back from
"myargs" if you do.
package Your::Class;
use Class::OOorNO qw( myargs );
sub bar {
my(@args) = myargs(@_);
...
-OR-
package Your::Class;
use Class::OOorNO;
our($onobj) = Class::OOorNO->new();
sub foo {
my(@args) = $onobj->myargs(@_);
...
"coerce_array()"¶
- Syntax: "coerce_array(@array/(list))"
- This method retrieves input sent to your class methods when
called with name-value pairs and returns an anonymous hash reference whose
keys and values correspond to the input argument names and their
respective values. If nothing is passed to it, an empty hash reference
will be returned, eg- "{ }"
package Your::Class;
use Class::OOorNO qw( coerce_array );
sub bar {
my($args) = coerce_array(@_);
...
-OR-
package Your::Class;
use Class::OOorNO;
our($onobj) = Class::OOorNO->new();
sub foo {
my($self) = shift(@_);
my($args) = $onobj->coerce_array(@_);
...
-OR-
package Your::Class;
use Class::OOorNO;
use vars qw( @ISA );
@ISA = qw( Class::OOorNO );
sub foo {
my($self) = shift(@_);
my($args) = $self->coerce_array(@_);
...
- Purpose of "OOorNO::coerce_array"
- It's common practice for Perl modules to accept name-value
pairs for their methods, and because @_ is an array it is easy to
encounter warnings and errors when this isn't handled correctly. An
example of what this kind of call would look like is shown below in the
imaginary subroutine
"Your::Class::method()"
Your::Class->method
(
-name => 'Joe',
-rank => 'Private, First-Class',
-SN => '87D91-35-713FOO',
);
- Avoids Common Pitfalls
- Quite often a class method will use code such as this to
handle name-value paired input:
sub foo {
my($class) = shift;
my(%args) = @_; ...
-and/or-
sub bar {
my($args) = { @_ }; ...
- What's Wrong With That?
- While this practice is not evil, it can be error-prone in
situations where:
- •
- Your class method is called in procedural style and expects
that the first element in @_ is a blessed object reference.
- •
- Your class method is errantly called with an unbalanced set
of name-value pairs, or one or more named arguments get passed with
undefined values.
- •
- You want to give your module the ability to export any or
all of its methods by using the Exporter module, but still want to
maintain an object-oriented interface to your module as well. An example
of a well known module which does this is CGI.pm. It is written to provide
both a standard procedural interface as well as an object-oriented one.
You can call its methods either way:
# object-oriented style
use CGI;
my($cgi_object) = CGI->new();
my($visitor) = $cgi_object->param('visitor name');
-OR-
# procedural style
use CGI qw( param );
my($visitor) = param('visitor name');
- Don't say I didn't warn you ;o)
- When these situations occur, class methods sorting out
name-value paired input using the common problematic technique
(demonstrated above in "Pitfalls)" encounter
problems such as undesired program behavior, general errors, and warnings
-both fatal and non-fatal. Problems include:
- •
- Argument sets that get reversed; the argument names become
the hash values and the argument values become the hash keys which is
exactly the opposite of the desired behavior.
- •
- The entire arument hash/hashref gets turned into a mess of
mixed up keys and values that don't reflect the actual input at all.
Instead, you get hash keys containing both argument names and argument
values.
- •
- The argument hash/hashref is created with an uneven number
of elements and/or uninitialized values.
Warnings
(see perldiag) resulting from the above mentioned situations
could include any the following (Some of these don't apply unless you run your
program under the warnings pragma) like you
should.
- "Can't coerce array into hash"
- This is a fatal warning, eg- if you see it your
program failed and execution aborted.)
- "Odd number of elements in hash assignment"
- non-fatal.
- "Not a %s reference"
- -where %s is probably "HASH", though it could be
complaining about a non-reference to any data type that your routine may
be attempting to treat as a reference. This is often the result of a class
method being called in procedural style rather than in the object-oriented
style using the arrow "-\"> syntax. The class method expects
the first argument to be an object reference, when it is clearly not.
(This warning is fatal as well.)
- "Can't call method %s on unblessed
reference"
- This is another a fatal warning, and will occur
under the same circumstances that surround the warning described
immediately above. The class method expects the first argument to be an
object reference when it's not.
"shave_opts()"¶
- Syntax: "shave_opts(\@_)"
- -- Documentation for this method is not yet complete!
--
EXAMPLES¶
Note: This is not a complete set of examples. It's still evolving.
using "OOorNO()"¶
Your module...
package Your::Module;
use strict;
use Exporter;
use vars qw( @EXPORT_OK );
@EXPORT_OK = qw( show_call_style );
use Class::OOorNO qw( OOorNO );
sub new { bless { }, shift }
sub show_call_style {
if (ref OOorNO(@_)) {
print __PACKAGE__ . "::foo was called as an OBJECT METHOD.\n"
}
elsif (OOorNO(@_)) {
print __PACKAGE__ . "::foo was called as an CLASS METHOD.\n"
}
else {
print __PACKAGE__ . "::foo was called as a SUBROUTINE.\n"
}
}
User's code...
package main;
use strict;
use Your::Module qw( show_call_style );
my($YM) = Your::Module->new;
$YM->show_call_style; # as an object method
Your::Module->show_call_style; # as a class method
&Your::Module::show_call_style; # as a subroutine
&show_call_style; # as imported subroutine
Output:
Your::Module::foo was called as an OBJECT METHOD.
Your::Module::foo was called as an CLASS METHOD.
Your::Module::foo was called as a SUBROUTINE.
Your::Module::foo was called as a SUBROUTINE.
using "myself()"¶
Your module...
package Your::Module;
use strict;
use Exporter;
use vars qw( @EXPORT_OK );
@EXPORT_OK = qw( print_self_name );
use Class::OOorNO qw( myself );
sub new { bless { }, shift }
sub print_self_name {
print( (ref myself(@_) || myself(@_) || __PACKAGE__), "\n" )
}
User's code...
package main;
use strict;
use Your::Module qw( print_self_name );
my($YM) = Your::Module->new;
$YM->print_self_name; # as an object method
Your::Module->print_self_name; # as a class method
&Your::Module::print_self_name; # as a subroutine
print_self_name; # as imported subroutine
Output:
Your::Module
Your::Module
Your::Module
Your::Module
Your module...
package Your::Module;
use strict;
use Exporter;
use vars qw( @EXPORT_OK );
@EXPORT_OK = qw( show_call_style get_self_ref );
use Class::OOorNO qw( OOorNO myself );
sub new { bless { }, shift }
sub show_call_style {
if (ref OOorNO(@_)) {
print __PACKAGE__ . "::foo was called as an OBJECT METHOD.\n"
}
elsif (OOorNO(@_)) {
print __PACKAGE__ . "::foo was called as an CLASS METHOD.\n"
}
else {
print __PACKAGE__ . "::foo was called as a SUBROUTINE.\n"
}
}
sub get_self_ref {
ref myself(@_) ? myself(@_) : __PACKAGE__->new
}
User's code...
package main;
use strict;
use Your::Module qw( show_call_style get_self_ref );
my($YM) = Your::Module->new;
# supports calls that go way down the stack too:
Your::Module->new->get_self_ref->show_call_style;
Your::Module->get_self_ref->show_call_style;
&Your::Module::get_self_ref->show_call_style;
get_self_ref->show_call_style;
Output:
Your::Module::foo was called as an OBJECT METHOD.
Your::Module::foo was called as an OBJECT METHOD.
Your::Module::foo was called as an OBJECT METHOD.
Your::Module::foo was called as an OBJECT METHOD.
using "myargs()"¶
Your module...
package Your::Module;
use strict;
use Exporter;
use vars qw( @EXPORT_OK );
@EXPORT_OK = qw( print_argument_list );
use Class::OOorNO qw( myargs );
sub new { bless { }, shift }
sub print_argument_list {
print "My argument list: \n" . join("\n", myargs(@_)), "\n";
}
User's code...
package main;
use strict;
use Your::Module qw( print_argument_list );
my($YM) = Your::Module->new;
my(@things) = ( 'foo',
12687.357,
$YM,
eval('*bar'),
[ 'baz', sub { "wubble" },
{ 'flarp' => 'wibble' } ] );
$YM->print_argument_list(@things); # as an object method
Your::Module->print_argument_list(@things); # as a class method
&Your::Module::print_argument_list(@things); # as a subroutine
print_argument_list(@things); # as imported subroutine
Output:
My argument list:
foo
12687.357
Your::Module=HASH(0x9bd858)
*main::bar
ARRAY(0x9bd954)
...repeated four times
using "coerce_array()"¶
Your module...
package Your::Module;
use strict;
use Exporter;
use vars qw( @EXPORT_OK );
@EXPORT_OK = qw( pass_name_value_pairs );
use Class::OOorNO qw( coerce_array );
sub new { bless { }, shift }
sub pass_name_value_pairs {
my($input) = coerce_array(@_);
my($driver) = $input->{'-driver'} || 'nobody';
my($car) = $input->{'-car'} || 'no car';
my($bike) = $input->{'-bike'} || 'no bike';
my($plane) = $input->{'-plane'} || 'no plane';
print("$driver drives $car, $bike, and $plane.\n");
}
User's code...
Output:
using "shave_opts()"¶
Your module...
package Your::Module;
use strict;
use Exporter;
use vars qw( @EXPORT_OK );
@EXPORT_OK = qw( print_options );
use Class::OOorNO qw( shave_opts );
sub new { bless { }, shift }
sub print_options {
my($opts) = shave_opts(\@_);
print "\n",
( map { qq[$_ => $opts->{$_}] . "\n" } keys %$opts ),
"\n"
}
User's code...
Output:
PREREQUISITES¶
None.
BUGS¶
This documentation isn't done yet, as you can see. This is being rectified as
quickly as possible. Please excercise caution if you choose to use this code
before it can be further documented for you. It is present on CPAN at this
time despite its unfinished condition in order to provide support for the
File::Util module which lists Class::OOorNO among its prerequisites. Please
excuse the inconvenience.
AUTHOR¶
Tommy Butler <<cpan@atrixnet.com>>
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright(c) 2001-2003, Tommy Butler. All rights reserved.
LICENSE¶
This library is free software, you may redistribute and/or modify it under the
same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO¶
- Devel::Caller
- Class::ParmList
- Class::ParamParser
- Exporter