NAME

Devel::Ladybug::Hash - Hashtable object

DESCRIPTION

Extends Devel::Ladybug::Object to handle Perl HASH refs as Devel::Ladybug Objects. Provides constructor, getters, setters, "Ruby-esque" collection, and other methods which one might expect a Hash table object to respond to.

SYNOPSIS

use Devel::Ladybug::Hash;

my $hash = Devel::Ladybug::Hash->new();

my $hashFromNonRef = Devel::Ladybug::Hash->new(%hash); # Makes new ref

my $hashFromRef = Devel::Ladybug::Hash->new($hashref); # Keeps orig ref

PUBLIC CLASS METHODS

  • $class->assert(*@rules)

    Returns a Devel::Ladybug::Type::Hash instance encapsulating the received subtyping rules.

    Really, don't do this. If you think you need to assert a Hash, please see "AVOIDING HASH ASSERTIONS" at the end of this document for an alternative approach.

PUBLIC INSTANCE METHODS

  • $hash->each($sub), yield(item, [item, ...]), emit(item, [item...])

    Ruby-esque key iterator method. Returns a new Devel::Ladybug::Array, containing the yielded results of calling the received sub for each key in $hash.

    $hash->each is shorthand for $hash->keys->each, so you're really calling each in Devel::Ladybug::Array. yield and emit are exported by Devel::Ladybug::Array. Please see the documentation for Devel::Ladybug::Array regarding usage of each, yield, and emit.

    #
    # For example, quickly wrap <a> tags around array elements:
    #
    my $tagged = $object->each( sub {
      my $key = shift;
    
      print "Key $key is $object->{$key}\n";
    
      emit "<a name=\"$key\">$object->{$key}</a>";
    } );
  • $self->keys()

    Returns an Devel::Ladybug::Array object containing self's alpha sorted keys.

    my $hash = Devel::Ladybug::Hash->new(foo=>'alpha', bar=>'bravo');
    
    my $keys = $hash->keys();
    
    print $keys->join(','); # Prints out "bar,foo"
  • $self->values()

    Returns an Devel::Ladybug::Array object containing self's values, alpha sorted by key.

    my $hash = Devel::Ladybug::Hash->new(foo=>'alpha', bar=>'bravo');
    
    my $values = $hash->values();
    
    print $values->join(','); # Prints out "bravo,alpha"
  • $self->set($key,$value);

    Set the received instance variable. Extends Devel::Ladybug::Object::set to always use Devel::Ladybug::Hash and Devel::Ladybug::Array when it can.

    my $hash = Devel::Ladybug::Hash->new(foo=>'alpha', bar=>'bravo');
    
    $hash->set('bar', 'foxtrot'); # bar was "bravo", is now "foxtrot"
  • $self->count

    Returns the number of key/value pairs in self

  • $self->isEmpty()

    Returns true if self's count is 0, otherwise false.

AVOIDING HASH ASSERTIONS

One might think to assert the Hash type in order to store hashtables inside of objects in a free-form manner.

Devel::Ladybug could technically do this, but this documentation is here to tell you not to. A recommended approach to associating arbitrary key/value pairs with database-backed Devel::Ladybug objects is provided below.

Do not do this:

#
# File: Example.pm
#
use Devel::Ladybug qw| :all |;

create "YourApp::Example" => {
  someInlineHash => Devel::Ladybug::Hash->assert()
};

Rather, explicitly create a main class, and also an extrinsics class which handles the association of linked values. Manually creating linked classes in this manner is not as quick to code for or represent in object form, but it mitigates the creation of deeply nested, complex objects and "sprawling" sets of possible values which may arise from systems with lots of users populating data. Something akin to the following is the recommended approach:

#
# File: Example.pm
#
# This is the main class:
#
create "YourApp::Example" => {
  #
  # Assertions and methods here...
  #
};

#
# File: Example/Attrib.pm
#
# This is where we tuck extrinsic attributes:
#
use Devel::Ladybug qw| :all |;
use YourApp::Example;

create "YourApp::Example::Attrib" => {
  exampleId => YourApp::Example->assert,

  elementKey => Devel::Ladybug::Str->assert(
    #
    # ...
    #
  ),

  elementValue => Devel::Ladybug::Str->assert(
    # Assert any vector or scalar Devel::Ladybug object class, as needed.
    #
    # Devel::Ladybug::Str can act as a catch-all for scalar values.
    #
    # ...
  ),
}

An extension of this approach is to create multiple extrinsincs classes, providing specific subtyping rules for different kinds of key/value pairs. For example, one might create a table of linked values which are always either true or false:

#
# File: Example: BoolAttrib.pm
#

use Devel::Ladybug qw| :all |;
use YourApp::Example;

create "YourApp::Example::BoolAttrib" => {
  exampleId => Devel::Ladybug::ExtId->assert( "YourApp::Example" ),

  elementKey => Devel::Ladybug::Str->assert( ),

  elementValue => Devel::Ladybug::Bool->assert( ),
};

SEE ALSO

This file is part of Devel::Ladybug.