MakeMethods::CompositeUserrContributed Perl DoMakeMethods::Composite::Array(3)NAMEClass::MakeMethods::Composite::Array - Basic array methods
SYNOPSIS
package MyObject;
use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Array (
new => 'new',
scalar => [ 'foo', 'bar' ],
array => 'my_list',
hash => 'my_index',
);
...
my $obj = MyObject->new( foo => 'Foozle' );
print $obj->foo();
$obj->bar('Barbados');
print $obj->bar();
$obj->my_list(0 => 'Foozle', 1 => 'Bang!');
print $obj->my_list(1);
$obj->my_index('broccoli' => 'Blah!', 'foo' => 'Fiddle');
print $obj->my_index('foo');
DESCRIPTION
The Composite::Array suclass of MakeMethods provides a basic
constructor and accessors for blessed-array object instances.
Class::MakeMethods Calling Conventions
When you "use" this package, the method declarations you provide as
arguments cause subroutines to be generated and installed in your
module.
You can also omit the arguments to "use" and instead make methods at
runtime by passing the declarations to a subsequent call to "make()".
You may include any number of declarations in each call to "use" or
"make()". If methods with the same name already exist, earlier calls to
"use" or "make()" win over later ones, but within each call, later
declarations superceed earlier ones.
You can install methods in a different package by passing "-TargetClass
=> package" as your first arguments to "use" or "make".
See Class::MakeMethods for more details.
Class::MakeMethods::Basic Declaration Syntax
The following types of Basic declarations are supported:
· generator_type => "method_name"
· generator_type => "name_1 name_2..."
· generator_type => [ "name_1", "name_2", ...]
See the "METHOD GENERATOR TYPES" section below for a list of the
supported values of generator_type.
For each method name you provide, a subroutine of the indicated type
will be generated and installed under that name in your module.
Method names should start with a letter, followed by zero or more
letters, numbers, or underscores.
Class::MakeMethods::Composite Declaration Syntax
The Composite syntax also provides several ways to optionally associate
a hash of additional parameters with a given method name.
· generator_type => [ "name_1" => { param=>value... }, ... ]
A hash of parameters to use just for this method name.
(Note: to prevent confusion with self-contained definition hashes,
described below, parameter hashes following a method name must not
contain the key 'name'.)
· generator_type => [ [ "name_1", "name_2", ... ] => {
param=>value... } ]
Each of these method names gets a copy of the same set of
parameters.
· generator_type => [ { "name"=>"name_1", param=>value... }, ... ]
By including the reserved parameter "name", you create a self
contained declaration with that name and any associated hash
values.
Basic declarations, as described above, are treated as having an empty
parameter hash.
Positional Accessors and %FIELDS
Each accessor method is assigned the next available array index at
which to store its value.
The mapping between method names and array positions is stored in a
hash named %FIELDS in the declaring package. When a package declares
its first positional accessor, its %FIELDS are initialized by searching
its inheritance tree.
Warning: Subclassing packages that use positional accessors is somewhat
fragile, since you may end up with two distinct methods assigned to the
same position. Specific cases to avoid are:
· If you inherit from more than one class with positional accessors,
the positions used by the two sets of methods will overlap.
· If your superclass adds additional positional accessors after you
declare your first, they will overlap yours.
METHOD GENERATOR TYPES
new - Constructor
For each method name passed, returns a subroutine with the following
characteristics:
· Has a reference to a sample item to copy. This defaults to a
reference to an empty array, but you may override this with the
"'defaults' =" array_ref> method parameter.
· If called as a class method, makes a new array containing values
from the sample item, and blesses it into that class.
· If called on an array-based instance, makes a copy of it and
blesses the copy into the same class as the original instance.
· If passed a list of method-value pairs, calls each named method
with the associated value as an argument.
· Returns the new instance.
Sample declaration and usage:
package MyObject;
use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Array (
new => 'new',
);
...
# Bare constructor
my $empty = MyObject->new();
# Constructor with initial sequence of method calls
my $obj = MyObject->new( foo => 'Foozle', bar => 'Barbados' );
# Copy with overriding sequence of method calls
my $copy = $obj->new( bar => 'Bob' );
new_with_values - Constructor
For each method name passed, returns a subroutine with the following
characteristics:
· May be called as a class method, or (equivalently) on any existing
object of that class.
· Creates an array, blesses it into the class, and returns the new
instance.
· If no arguments are provided, the returned array will be empty. If
passed a single array-ref argument, copies its contents into the
new array. If called with multiple arguments, copies them into the
new array. (Note that this is a "shallow" copy, not a "deep"
clone.)
Sample declaration and usage:
package MyObject;
use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Array (
new => 'new',
);
...
# Bare constructor
my $empty = MyObject->new();
# Constructor with initial sequence of method calls
my $obj = MyObject->new( foo => 'Foozle', bar => 'Barbados' );
# Copy with overriding sequence of method calls
my $copy = $obj->new( bar => 'Bob' );
scalar - Instance Accessor
For each method name passed, uses a closure to generate a subroutine
with the following characteristics:
· Must be called on an array-based instance.
· Determines the array position associated with the method name, and
uses that as an index into each instance to access the related
value. This defaults to the next available slot in %FIELDS, but you
may override this with the "'array_index' =" number> method
parameter, or by pre-filling the contents of %FIELDS.
· If called without any arguments returns the current value (or
undef).
· If called with an argument, stores that as the value, and returns
it,
· If called with multiple arguments, stores a reference to a new
array with those arguments as contents, and returns that array
reference.
Sample declaration and usage:
package MyObject;
use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Array (
scalar => 'foo',
);
...
# Store value
$obj->foo('Foozle');
# Retrieve value
print $obj->foo;
array - Instance Ref Accessor
For each method name passed, uses a closure to generate a subroutine
with the following characteristics:
· Must be called on an array-based instance.
· Determines the array position associated with the method name, and
uses that as an index into each instance to access the related
value. This defaults to the next available slot in %FIELDS, but you
may override this with the "'array_index' =" number> method
parameter, or by pre-filling the contents of %FIELDS.
· The value for each instance will be a reference to an array (or
undef).
· If called without any arguments, returns the current array-ref
value (or undef).
· If called with a single non-ref argument, uses that argument as an
index to retrieve from the referenced array, and returns that value
(or undef).
· If called with a single array ref argument, uses that list to
return a slice of the referenced array.
· If called with a list of argument pairs, each with a non-ref index
and an associated value, stores the value at the given index in the
referenced array. If the instance's value was previously undefined,
a new array is autovivified. The current value in each position
will be overwritten, and later arguments with the same index will
override earlier ones. Returns the current array-ref value.
· If called with a list of argument pairs, each with the first item
being a reference to an array of up to two numbers, loops over each
pair and uses those numbers to splice the value array.
The first controlling number is the position at which the splice
will begin. Zero will start before the first item in the list.
Negative numbers count backwards from the end of the array.
The second number is the number of items to be removed from the
list. If it is omitted, or undefined, or zero, no items are
removed. If it is a positive integer, that many items will be
returned.
If both numbers are omitted, or are both undefined, they default to
containing the entire value array.
If the second argument is undef, no values will be inserted; if it
is a non-reference value, that one value will be inserted; if it is
an array-ref, its values will be copied.
The method returns the items that removed from the array, if any.
Sample declaration and usage:
package MyObject;
use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Array (
array => 'bar',
);
...
# Clear and set contents of list
print $obj->bar([ 'Spume', 'Frost' ] );
# Set values by position
$obj->bar(0 => 'Foozle', 1 => 'Bang!');
# Positions may be overwritten, and in any order
$obj->bar(2 => 'And Mash', 1 => 'Blah!');
# Retrieve value by position
print $obj->bar(1);
# Direct access to referenced array
print scalar @{ $obj->bar() };
There are also calling conventions for slice and splice operations:
# Retrieve slice of values by position
print join(', ', $obj->bar( undef, [0, 2] ) );
# Insert an item at position in the array
$obj->bar([3], 'Potatoes' );
# Remove 1 item from position 3 in the array
$obj->bar([3, 1], undef );
# Set a new value at position 2, and return the old value
print $obj->bar([2, 1], 'Froth' );
hash - Instance Ref Accessor
For each method name passed, uses a closure to generate a subroutine
with the following characteristics:
· Must be called on an array-based instance.
· Determines the array position associated with the method name, and
uses that as an index into each instance to access the related
value. This defaults to the next available slot in %FIELDS, but you
may override this with the "'array_index' =" number> method
parameter, or by pre-filling the contents of %FIELDS.
· The value for each instance will be a reference to a hash (or
undef).
· If called without any arguments, returns the contents of the hash
in list context, or a hash reference in scalar context (or undef).
· If called with one non-ref argument, uses that argument as an index
to retrieve from the referenced hash, and returns that value (or
undef).
· If called with one array-ref argument, uses the contents of that
array to retrieve a slice of the referenced hash.
· If called with one hash-ref argument, sets the contents of the
referenced hash to match that provided.
· If called with a list of key-value pairs, stores the value under
the given key in the referenced hash. If the instance's value was
previously undefined, a new hash is autovivified. The current value
under each key will be overwritten, and later arguments with the
same key will override earlier ones. Returns the contents of the
hash in list context, or a hash reference in scalar context.
Sample declaration and usage:
package MyObject;
use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Array (
hash => 'baz',
);
...
# Set values by key
$obj->baz('foo' => 'Foozle', 'bar' => 'Bang!');
# Values may be overwritten, and in any order
$obj->baz('broccoli' => 'Blah!', 'foo' => 'Fiddle');
# Retrieve value by key
print $obj->baz('foo');
# Retrive slice of values by position
print join(', ', $obj->baz( ['foo', 'bar'] ) );
# Direct access to referenced hash
print keys %{ $obj->baz() };
# Reset the hash contents to empty
@{ $obj->baz() } = ();
object - Instance Ref Accessor
For each method name passed, uses a closure to generate a subroutine
with the following characteristics:
· Must be called on an array-based instance.
· Determines the array position associated with the method name, and
uses that as an index into each instance to access the related
value. This defaults to the next available slot in %FIELDS, but you
may override this with the "'array_index' =" number> method
parameter, or by pre-filling the contents of %FIELDS.
· The value for each instance will be a reference to an object (or
undef).
· If called without any arguments returns the current value.
· If called with an argument, stores that as the value, and returns
it,
Sample declaration and usage:
package MyObject;
use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Hash (
object => 'foo',
);
...
# Store value
$obj->foo( Foozle->new() );
# Retrieve value
print $obj->foo;
SEE ALSO
See Class::MakeMethods for general information about this distribution.
See Class::MakeMethods::Composite for more about this family of
subclasses.
perl v5.14.2 2004-09-06 MakeMethods::Composite::Array(3)