Perl6::Junction(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Perl6::Junction(3)NAME
Perl6::Junction - Perl6 style Junction operators in Perl5.
SYNOPSIS
use Perl6::Junction qw/ all any none one /;
if (any(@grant) eq 'su') {
...
}
if (all($foo, $bar) >= 10) {
...
}
if (qr/^\d+$/ == all(@answers)) {
...
}
if (all(@input) <= @limits) {
...
}
if (none(@pass) eq 'password') {
...
}
if (one(@answer) == 42) {
...
}
DESCRIPTION
This is a lightweight module which provides 'Junction' operators, the
most commonly used being "any" and "all".
Inspired by the Perl6 design docs,
<http://dev.perl.org/perl6/doc/design/exe/E06.html>.
Provides a limited subset of the functionality of
Quantum::Superpositions, see "SEE ALSO" for comment.
Notice in the "SYNOPSIS" above, that if you want to match against a
regular expression, you must use "==" or "!=". Not "=~" or "!~". You
must also use a regex object, such as "qr/\d/", not a plain regex such
as "/\d/".
SUBROUTINESall()
Returns an object which overloads the following operators:
'<', '<=', '>', '>=', '==', '!=',
'lt', 'le', 'gt', 'ge', 'eq', 'ne',
'~~'
Returns true only if all arguments test true according to the operator
used.
any()
Returns an object which overloads the following operators:
'<', '<=', '>', '>=', '==', '!=',
'lt', 'le', 'gt', 'ge', 'eq', 'ne',
'~~'
Returns true if any argument tests true according to the operator used.
none()
Returns an object which overloads the following operators:
'<', '<=', '>', '>=', '==', '!=',
'lt', 'le', 'gt', 'ge', 'eq', 'ne',
'~~'
Returns true only if no argument tests true according to the operator
used.
one()
Returns an object which overloads the following operators:
'<', '<=', '>', '>=', '==', '!=',
'lt', 'le', 'gt', 'ge', 'eq', 'ne',
'~~'
Returns true only if one and only one argument tests true according to
the operator used.
ALTERING JUNCTIONS
You cannot alter junctions. Instead, you can create new junctions out
of old junctions. You can do this by calling the "values" method on a
junction.
my $numbers = any(qw/1 2 3 4 5/);
print $numbers == 3 ? 'Yes' : 'No'; # Yes
$numbers = any( grep { $_ != 3 } $numbers->values );
print $numbers == 3 ? 'Yes' : 'No'; # No
EXPORT
'all', 'any', 'none', 'one', as requested.
All subroutines can be called by its fully qualified name, if you don't
want to export them.
use Perl6::Junction;
if (Perl6::Junction::any( @questions )) {
...
}
WARNING
When comparing against a regular expression, you must remember to use a
regular expression object: "qr/\d/" Not "/d/". You must also use either
"==" or "!=". This is because "=~" and "!~" cannot be overriden.
TO DO
Add overloading for arithmetic operators, such that this works:
$result = any(2,3,4) * 2;
if ($result == 8) {...}
SUPPORT / BUGS
Submit to the CPAN bugtracker <http://rt.cpan.org>
SEE ALSO
Quantum::Superpositions provides the same functionality as this, and
more. However, this module provides this limited functionality at a
much greater runtime speed, with my benchmarks showing between 500% and
6000% improvment.
<http://dev.perl.org/perl6/doc/design/exe/E06.html> - "The Wonderful
World of Junctions".
AUTHOR
Carl Franks
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks to "Curtis "Ovid" Poe" for the "ALTERING JUNCTIONS" changes in
release 0.40000.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2005, Carl Franks. All rights reserved.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself (perlgpl, perlartistic).
perl v5.16.2 2012-09-11 Perl6::Junction(3)