NAME
Tie::Nested - multiple levels of nested tied HASHes and ARRAYs
SYNOPSIS
tie my(%d), 'Tie::Nested', recurse => 'Hash::Case::Lower';
$d{FOO} = 'BAR';
print $d{Foo}; # BAR
print $d{fOo}; # BAR
print keys %$d; # foo
$d{FOO}{BAR} = 42;
print Data::Dumper::Dumper \%d; # {foo => {bar => 42}};
$d{nEw} = +{with}{NestEd}{asSIgn => 3}; # works!
tie my(%e), 'Tie::Nested'
, nestings => ['Hash::Case::Lower', 'Hash::Case::Upper'];
$e{FOO}{bar}{Tic} = 42;
print Data::Dumper::Dumper \%e; # {foo => {BAR => {Tic => 42}}};
DESCRIPTION
Tie a data-structure automatically. On the top level, we specify for each of the sub-levels how they have to be tied. But after that, we do not need to care.
For instance, we have read/are reading a directory structure for a case-insensitive file-system.
METHODS
constructors
- ARRAY(, 'Tie::Nested', [DATA], OPTIONS)
-
See tie on HASH. You can use ARRAYs as well! All examples are with HASHes, but you are not limited to HASHes!
- HASH(, 'Tie::Nested', [DATA], OPTIONS)
-
Tie to a new HASH. The optional DATA contains the initial contents for the HASH.
Either the
recurse
or thenesting
option is required. For examples, see the SYNOPSIS.-Option --Default nesting [] recurse undef
- nesting => ARRAY-of-TIECLASS
-
Each of the TIECLASSes implements a tie. For the first level, the first TIECLASS is used. For the second the next, and so forth until you run out of classes. Then, we proceed with
- recurse => TIECLASS
-
The TIECLASS implements a tie. Each of the nested structures will tie to this same TIECLASS.
SEE ALSO
This module is part of Tie-Nested distribution version 0.11, built on January 19, 2018. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/CPAN/
LICENSE
Copyrights 2010-2018 by [Mark Overmeer]. For other contributors see ChangeLog.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/