NAME
MemHandle - supply memory-based FILEHANDLE methods
DEPRECATED - Please use IO::Scalar from CPAN package IO::stringy instead!
SYNOPSIS
use MemHandle;
use IO::Seekable;
my $mh = new MemHandle;
print $mh "foo\n";
$mh->print( "bar\n" );
printf $mh "This is a number: %d\n", 10;
$mh->printf( "a string: \"%s\"\n", "all strings come to those who wait" );
my $len = $mh->tell(); # Use $mh->tell();
# tell( $mh ) will NOT work!
$mh->seek(0, SEEK_SET); # Use $mh->seek($where, $whence)
# seek($mh, $where, $whence)
# will NOT work!
my $memory = $mh->mem();
Here's the real meat:
my $mh = new MemHandle;
my $old = select( $mh );
.
.
.
print "foo bar\n";
print "baz\n";
&MyPrintSub();
select( $old );
print "here it all is: ", $mh->mem(), "\n";
DESCRIPTION
Generates inherits from IO::Handle
and IO::Seekable
. It provides an interface to the file routines which uses memory instead. See perldoc IO::Handle, and perldoc IO::Seekable as well as perlfunc for more detailed descriptions of the provided built-in functions:
print
printf
readline
sysread
syswrite
getc
gets
The following functions are provided, but tie doesn't allow them to be tied to the built in functions. They should be used by calling the appropriate method on the MemHandle object.
seek
tell
call them like this:
my $mh = new MemHandle();
.
.
.
my $pos = $mh->tell();
$mh->seek( 0, SEEK_SET );
CONSTRUCTOR
- new( [mem] )
-
Creates a
MemHandle
, which is a reference to a newly created symbol (see theSymbol
package). It then ties the FILEHANDLE toMemHandle::Tie
(see "Tying FileHandles" in perltie). Tied methods inMemHandle::Tie
translate file operations into reads/writes into a string, which can be accessed by callingMemHandle::mem
.
METHODS
- seek( POS, WHENCE )
-
Sets the read/write position to WHENCE + POS. WHENCE is one of the constants which are available from IO::Seekable or POSIX:
SEEK_SET # absolute position from the beginning. SEEK_CUR # offset from the current location. SEEK_END # from the end (POS can be negative).
- tell()
-
Returns the current position of the mem-file, similar to the way tell would. (See perlfunc).
- mem( [mem] )
-
gets or sets the memory. If called with a parameter, it copies it to the memory and sets the position to be immediately after (so if you write more to it, you append the string). Returns the current value of memory.
NOTES
I don't have much time to contribute to this. If you'd like to contribute, please fork https://github.com/scr/cpan and send me a pull request.
AUTHOR
"Sheridan C. Rawlins" <scr14@cornell.edu>
SEE ALSO
perl. perlfunc. "Tying FileHandles" in perltie. perldoc IO::Handle. perldoc IO::Seekable. perldoc Symbol.