NAME
TryCatch - first class try catch semantics for Perl, without source filters.
SYNOPSIS
use TryCatch;
sub foo {
try {
# some code that might die
return "return value from foo";
}
catch (Some::Class $e where { $_->code > 100 } ) {
}
}
SYNTAX
This module aims to give first class exception handling to perl via 'try' and 'catch' keywords. The basic syntax this module provides is try { # block }
followed by zero or more catch blocks. Each catch block has an optional type constraint on it the resembles Perl6's method signatures.
Also worth noting is that the error variable ($@
) is localised to the try/catch blocks and will not leak outside the scope, or stomp on a previous value of $@
.
The simplest case of a catch block is just
catch { ... }
where upon the error is available in the standard $@
variable and no type checking is performed. The exception can instead be accessed via a named lexical variable by providing a simple signature to the catch block as follows:
catch ($err) { ... }
Type checking of the exception can be performed by specifing a type constraint or where clauses in the signature as follows:
catch (TypeFoo $e) { ... }
catch (Dict[code => Int, message => Str] $err) { ... }
As shown in the above example, complex Moose types can be used, including MooseX::Types style of type constraints
In addition to type checking via Moose type constraints, you can also use where clauses to only match a certain sub-condition on an error. For example, assuming that HTTPError
is a suitably defined TC:
catch (HTTPError $e where { $_->code >= 400 && $_->code <= 499 } ) {
return "4XX error";
}
catch (HTTPError $e) {
return "other http code";
}
would return "4XX error" in the case of a 404 error, and "other http code" in the case of a 302.
In the case where multiple catch blocks are present, the first one that matches the type constraints (if any) will executed.
BENEFITS
return. You can put a return in a try block, and it would do the right thing - namely return a value from the subroutine you are in, instead of just from the eval block.
Type Checking. This is nothing you couldn't do manually yourself, it does it for you using Moose type constraints.
TODO
Decide on
finally
semantics w.r.t return values.Write some more documentation
KNOWN BUGS
Currently @_
is not accessible inside try or catch blocks, so assign this to a lexical variable outside if you wish to access function arguments. i.e.:
sub foo {
try { return $_[0] };
}
will not work, instead you must do something similar to this:
sub foo {
my ($foo) = @_;
try { return $foo }
}
SEE ALSO
MooseX::Types, Moose::Util::TypeConstraints, Parse::Method::Signatures.
AUTHOR
Ash Berlin <ash@cpan.org>
THANKS
Thanks to Matt S Trout and Florian Ragwitz for work on Devel::Declare and various B::Hooks modules
Vincent Pit for Scope::Upper that makes the return from block possible.
LICENSE
Licensed under the same terms as Perl itself.