NAME

Message::Match - Fast, simple message matching

SYNOPSIS

use Message::Match qw(mmatch);

#basic usage
mmatch(
    {a => 'b', c => 'd'},   #message
    {a => 'b'}              #match
); #true
mmatch(
    {a => 'b', c => {x => 'y'}, #message
    {c => {x => 'y'}}           #match
); #true
mmatch(
    {a => 'b', c => 'd'},   #message
    {x => 'y'}              #match
); #false

#set membership
mmatch(
    {a => [1,2,3], some => 'thing'},    #message
    {a => 2},                           #match
); #true
mmatch(
    {a => [1,2,3], some => 'thing'},    #message
    {a => 4},                           #match
); #false

#array recursion
mmatch(
    {a => [{a => 'b'},2,3], x => 'y'},      #message
    {a => [{a => 'b'},2,3]},                #match
); #true

#regex
mmatch(
    {a => 'forefoot'},          #message
    {a => ' special/foo/'},     #match
); #true

#universal match
mmatch(
    {some => 'random', stuff => 'here'},    #message
    {},                                     #match
); #true

DESCRIPTION

This is a very light-weight and fast library that does some basic but reasonably powerful message matching.

FUNCTION

mmatch($message, $match);

Takes two and only two arguments, both HASH references.

SEE ALSO

Good question; I found some things somewhat similiar to this, but not quite close enough to mention here.

TODO

Define handling for other tuples: HASH,scalar scalar,HASH scalar,ARRAY ARRAY,HASH HASH,ARRAY

More special handling.

BUGS

None known.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2012, 2013, 2016 Dana M. Diederich. All Rights Reserved.

AUTHOR

Dana M. Diederich <diederich@gmail.com>