NAME¶
Hash::Merge::Simple - Recursively merge two or more hashes, simply
VERSION¶
version 0.051
SYNOPSIS¶
use Hash::Merge::Simple qw/ merge /;
my $a = { a => 1 };
my $b = { a => 100, b => 2};
# Merge with righthand hash taking precedence
my $c = merge $a, $b;
# $c is { a => 100, b => 2 } ... Note: a => 100 has overridden => 1
# Also, merge will take care to recursively merge any subordinate hashes found
my $a = { a => 1, c => 3, d => { i => 2 }, r => {} };
my $b = { b => 2, a => 100, d => { l => 4 } };
my $c = merge $a, $b;
# $c is { a => 100, b => 2, c => 3, d => { i => 2, l => 4 }, r => {} }
# You can also merge more than two hashes at the same time
# The precedence increases from left to right (the rightmost has the most precedence)
my $everything = merge $this, $that, $mine, $yours, $kitchen_sink, ...;
DESCRIPTION¶
Hash::Merge::Simple will recursively merge two or more hashes and return the
result as a new hash reference. The merge function will descend and merge
hashes that exist under the same node in both the left and right hash, but
doesn't attempt to combine arrays, objects, scalars, or anything else. The
rightmost hash also takes precedence, replacing whatever was in the left hash
if a conflict occurs.
This code was pretty much taken straight from Catalyst::Utils, and modified to
handle more than 2 hashes at the same time.
USAGE¶
Hash::Merge::Simple->merge( <hash1>, <hash2>,
<hash3>, ..., <hashN> )¶
Hash::Merge::Simple::merge( <hash1>, <hash2>,
<hash3>, ..., <hashN> )¶
Merge <hash1> through <hashN>, with the nth-most (rightmost) hash
taking precedence.
Returns a new hash reference representing the merge.
NOTE: The code does not currently check for cycles, so infinite loops are
possible:
my $a = {};
$a->{b} = $a;
merge $a, $a;
NOTE: If you want to avoid giving/receiving side effects with the merged result,
use "clone_merge" or "dclone_merge" An example of this
problem (thanks Uri):
my $left = { a => { b => 2 } } ;
my $right = { c => 4 } ;
my $result = merge( $left, $right ) ;
$left->{a}{b} = 3 ;
$left->{a}{d} = 5 ;
# $result->{a}{b} == 3 !
# $result->{a}{d} == 5 !
Hash::Merge::Simple->clone_merge( <hash1>,
<hash2>, <hash3>, ..., <hashN> )¶
Hash::Merge::Simple::clone_merge( <hash1>, <hash2>,
<hash3>, ..., <hashN> )¶
Perform a merge, clone the merge, and return the result
This is useful in cases where you need to ensure that the result can be tweaked
without fear of giving/receiving any side effects
This method will use Clone to do the cloning
Hash::Merge::Simple->dclone_merge( <hash1>,
<hash2>, <hash3>, ..., <hashN> )¶
Hash::Merge::Simple::dclone_merge( <hash1>, <hash2>,
<hash3>, ..., <hashN> )¶
Perform a merge, clone the merge, and return the result
This is useful in cases where you need to ensure that the result can be tweaked
without fear of giving/receiving any side effects
This method will use Storable (dclone) to do the cloning
SEE ALSO¶
Hash::Merge
Catalyst::Utils
Clone
Storable
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS¶
This code was pretty much taken directly from Catalyst::Utils:
Sebastian Riedel "sri@cpan.org"
Yuval Kogman "nothingmuch@woobling.org"
AUTHOR¶
Robert Krimen <robertkrimen@gmail.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
This software is copyright (c) 2010 by Robert Krimen.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.