NAME
YATT::Lite::Object - fields based, Tcl/Tk like object
SYNOPSIS
package MyProduct {
sub MY () {__PACKAGE__} # Shorthand alias.
use base qw/YATT::Lite::Object/; # For fields, you must use 'base'.
use fields qw/cf_name cf_price/; # Or YATT::Lite::MFields, if you like.
sub as_string {
(my MY $self, my ($fmt)) = @_;
$fmt //= '%s (%d)';
sprintf $fmt, $self->{cf_name}, $self->{cf_price}; # statically checked!
}
}
1;
Then you can use this class like this:
my $prod = MyProduct->new(name => 'foo', price => 100);
print $prod->cget('name');
DESCRIPTION
XXX: See YATT::Lite::docs::whyfields. (But it is not yet translated to English:-<)
METHODS
new
my $obj = YATT::Lite::Object->new(cf1 => val1, cf2 => val2, ...);
my $obj = YATT::Lite::Object->new({cf1 => val1, cf2 => val2, ...});
configure
Bulk setter(sets multiple configs at once).
$obj->configure(cf1 => val1, cf2 => val2, ...);
$obj->configure({cf1 => val1, cf2 => val2, ...});
cget
$obj->cget('cf1')
$obj->cget('cf1', 'default')
HOOKS
configure_CFx
If your class has method named configure_CFx
, it is called whenever $obj->configure(CFx => val)
is called.
after_new
Mainly used for initializing default config values. Typical code will be:
sub after_new {
(my MY $self) = @_;
$self->SUPER::after_new;
$self->{cf_xxx} //= "foo";
$self->{cf_yyy} //= "bar";
# ...
}
_before_after_new
Ideally, having two hooks is useless. But user-level programmers could forget to call SUPER::new
in their <after_new> hook, which can lead hard to debug situation. So, I divided hooks, one for user-level programmers and the other for framework designers. This _before_after_new
is the later one.