NAME
classes - conventional Perl 5 classes
VERSION
This document covers version 0.943
SYNOPSIS
package MyClass;
use strict 'subs'; no warnings;
use classes
new => 'classes::new_init',
class_attrs => [ 'Attr' ],
class_attrs_ro => { 'Read_Only_Attr'=>'yes' },
class_attrs_pr => { 'Priv_No_Accessors'=>'ok' },
attrs => [ 'attr', '_not_really_private' ],
attrs_ro => [ 'read_only_attr' ],
attrs_pr => [ 'attr_no_accessors' ],
class_methods => { 'Empty_Method'=>0 },
methods => { abstract_method => 'ABSTRACT' },
throws => 'X::Usage',
exceptions => 'X::MyOwn',
;
Mixins:
package MyMixinMod;
use classes
type=>'mixable',
...
;
package UsesMixins;
use classes
mixes => ['MyMixinMod','AnyPackage'],
methods => {
foo => 'SomePackage::a_foo_method',
},
...
;
Inheritance:
use classes name=>'MySuper', attrs=>['color'];
package ExtendsMySuper;
use classes
extends => 'MySuper',
...
;
package MultipleInheritance:
use classes
inherits => [ 'MySuper', 'AnotherPackage' ],
...
;
Package Methods (traditional export):
package FunctionLib;
use classes
pkg_methods => [ 'foo', 'bar' ],
...
;
use FunctionLib ':all';
use FunctionLib qw( foo bar );
Dynamic Classes:
package DynamicOne;
use classes
type => 'dynamic',
class_methods => ['add_attr'],
...
;
sub add_attr {
my ($class, $attr_name) = @_;
classes attrs => [$attr_name];
return $class;
}
DECLARATION TAGS
name => 'MyClass',
type => 'static',
type => 'dynamic',
type => 'mixable',
extends => 'SuperClass',
inherits => 'SuperClass',
inherits => ['Class1', 'Class2'],
mixes => 'Module',
mixes => { Module => ... },
mixes => [
'Module1',
{ Module2 => [ 'method1', ... ] },
{ Module3 => 'ALL' | 'PUB' | 'SAFE' },
{ Module4 => qr/.../ },
],
class_mixes => ...
pkg_mixes => ...
mixes_def => 'SAFE' | 'ALL' | 'PUB',
attrs => [ 'attr1', 'attr2' ],
attrs_ro => ...
attrs_pr => ...
class_attrs => [ 'class_attr1', 'class_attr2' ],
class_attrs => {
class_attr1 => undef,
class_attr2 => 100,
class_attr3 => 'string',
class_attr4 => <ref>,
},
class_attrs_ro => ...
class_attrs_pr => ...
unqualified => 1,
unqualified => 0,
noaccessors => 1,
noaccessors => 0,
justahash => 1, # unqualified + noaccessors
justahash => 0, # unqualified + noaccessors
methods => [ 'method1', 'method2' ],
methods => {
method1 => 'method1',
method2 => 'local_method',
method3 => 'Extern::library::method',
method4 => 'ABSTRACT',
method5 => <false> | 'EMPTY',
method6 => sub { ... } | \&some::method,
},
class_methods => ...
pkg_methods => ...
new => 'new',
new => 'classes::new_args',
new => 'classes::new_only',
new => 'classes::new_init',
new => 'classes::new_fast',
new => 'MyModule::new_method',
init => 'initialize',
init => 'classes::init_args',
init => 'MyModule::initialize',
clone => 'clone',
clone => 'classes::clone',
clone => 'MyModule::clone',
dump => 'classes::dump',
throws => 'X::Usage',
throws => [ 'X::Usage' ],
exceptions => 'X::Doh',
exceptions => [
'X::Ouch',
'X::NoWay',
{ name => 'X::FileOnFire', attrs=>['file'] },
],
exceptions => { name => 'X::FileOnFire', attrs=>['file'] },
base_exception => 'X::OtherClass',
base_exception => 'X::classes',
base_exception => {
name => 'X::BaseException',
extends => 'X::Whatever',
},
def_base_exception => 'X::classes',
COMMON METHODS
my $object = MyClass->new;
my $object = MyClass->new( attr1=>1 );
my $object = MyClass->new({ attr1=>1 });
$object->initialize;
$object->initialize( attr1=>1 );
$object->initialize({ attr1=>1 });
my $deep_clone = $object->clone;
$object->dump;
MyClass->dump;
ACCESSOR METHODS
my $value = MyClass->get_My_Class_Attr;
my $value = $object->get_my_attr;
MyClass->set_My_Class_Attr(7);
$object->set_my_attr(7);
AUTOMATIC
$self->{$ATTR_foo}
$$CLASS_ATTR_foo
MyClass->DECL;
$object->DECL;
$MyClass::DECL;
MyClass->MIXIN;
$object->MIXIN;
$MyClass::MIXIN;
MyClass->CLASS;
$object->CLASS;
$MyClass::CLASS;
MyClass->SUPER; # $ISA[0]
$object->SUPER; # $ISA[0]
$MyClass::SUPER;
$classes::PERL_VERSION
UTILITY METHODS
MyClass->classes::dump;
$object->classes::dump;
$any_scalar->classes::dump;
... ->classes::dump( $handle );
... ->classes::dump( \$buffer );
classes::dump;
classes::dump(MyClass);
classes::dump($object);
classes::dump(['any', 'scalar', 'really']);
classes::load MyClass;
classes::load MyModule;
classes::load MyPackage;
MyClass->classes::set( My_Class_Attr=>1 );
$object->classes::set( my_attr=>1 );
my $value = MyClass->classes::get( 'My_Class_Attr' );
my $value = $object->classes::get( 'my_attr1' );
my $string = MyClass->classes::sprintf( '%s', 'My_Class_Attr');
my $string = $object->classes::sprintf( '%s', 'my_attr1');
MyClass->classes::printf( '%s', 'My_Class_Attr');
$object->classes::printf( '%s', 'my_attr1');
my $id = $object->classes::id;
EXCEPTIONS
X::classes
X::classes::traceable
X::AttrScope
X::Empty
X::InvalidName
X::NameUnavailable
X::NotPkgMethod
X::MethodNotFound
X::Unimplemented
X::Usage
X::Undefined
See X::classes, X::classes::traceable, classes::Throwable
DESCRIPTION
A simple, stable, fast, and flexible way to use conventional Perl 5 classes in scripts, rapid prototypes, and full-scale applications.
This reference document covers syntax only. See the following for more:
- classesoop
-
Introductory primer of concepts, ideas and terms from object oriented programming without any particular implementation specifics in mind.
- classestut
-
List of included tutorials aimed at taking a beginning Perl programmer from the basics to advanced techniques of object oriented programming with
classes
. - classescb
-
Cookbook collection of specific tasks and examples with lots of useable code.
- classesfaq
-
Questions and answers about support, design decisions, justification, motivation, and other hype.
DECLARATION TAGS
Declaration tags are passed to use classes
at compile time or to the classes
function at run time. All tags are optional depending on the context. Some have default values. Tags with undefined or otherwise negative values are usually ignored. A declaration representing the class is always available in a special DECL
meta attribute best displayed with classes::dump
.
Tag descriptions are ordered as you may expect to find them in a declaration.
- name
-
Name of the class to define. If omitted will use the implied name of the calling package--including
main
, (which is just another class). Name must be valid Perl package name. - type
-
Specifies the type of
classes
usage:- static
-
Default. Indicates a class that is not going to change during its run time life:
Does not import the
classes
functionDefines and initializes declaration
DECL
Defines the
CLASS
constantDefines the
SUPER
method
- mixable
-
Same as
static
but indicates the class/module/package can be used as a mixin. Likestatic
amixable
can be a stand-alone class or not (unlike some other languages that support mixins). The attributes and methods declared in amixable
are "mixed into" other classes that use themixes
tag. The result is something between inheritance and having defined everything originally in the receiving classes.Calls to the mixed in methods respond mostly as if they were inherited, they "see" functions and variables defined within the package in which
mixable
was declared. The only exception to this is the special$ATTR_foo
and$CLASS_ATTR_foo
keys which behave as expected pointing to the mixin from which they came. To help keep these straight they are included in the specialMIXIN
table along with every method that has been mixed in.WARNING: Every object or class method., but not necessarily function, used by any declared object or class method in a
mixable
must also be declared in order for the declared method to work. Consider$self->_next_one
called from a declaredmixable
method. See Can't locate object method underTROUBLESHOOTING
for more.Strictly speaking a mixin is not inherited. The special
@ISA
array is not updated and the normally inheritedUNIVERSAL->isa
method returns false if checked for the name of the mixin. Such an equivalent is not practical when dealing with mixins. UseMIXIN
to assist with introspection if needed. It contains every method not from that immediate class and the package it came from.See:
mixes
,$MIXIN
,$DECL
, - dynamic
-
Indicates a class that can be created or redefined in some way at run time.
dynamic
classes behave exactly asstatic
classes except they also import theclasses
function into the class itself allowing it to be used at run time to add to or redefine some part of the class.
- extends
-
Declares single class to extend that will be searched out of
@INC
and loaded exactly like thebase
pragma. Cannot be included in the same declaration withinherits
.Choose
mixes
overextends
where possible.Throws:
X::InvalidName
,X::Usage
See: base, "@INC" in perlvar,
SUPER
- inherits
-
Same as
extends
but for one or more classes (multiple inheritance).SUPER
will refer to the first inherited class. This tag cannot be included in the same class declaration asextends
.Choose
mixes
overinherits
where possible.See:
SUPER
- mixes
-
"Mixes in" methods and attributes from another class or package. Modules are loaded if needed. The meta attributes
$DECL
and$MIXIN
are updated.Behavior differs depending on what is being mixed in.
If
use classes type=>'mixable'
(seetype
) was used to declare the mixin then all of the following from the declaration are mixed in:methods class_methods pkg_methods attrs attrs_ro class_attrs class_attrs_ro
For public attributes the special associated attribute key name strings are also mixed in (ex:
$ATTR_foo
,$CLASS_ATTR_foo
, seeattrs
).Everything else is seen as a simple package, a collection of methods or functions which might be a class declared with
use classes
(not typemixable
), a traditional Perl class, a function library or any other package with subroutines. These can be selectively mixed in by name, regular expression, or one of the following aliases:- SAFE
-
Default and safest. Matches any method name that is not all caps nor preceded with an underscore.
- ALL
-
Matches any valid method name, including all caps and initial underscore except for the special:
BEGIN CHECK INIT END CLONE CLASS SUPER DECL MIXIN
WARNING: Other special all caps perl subroutines will be imported when using
ALL
. This includesDESTROY
andAUTOLOAD
if defined. - PUB
-
Matches any valid method name--including all caps--that does not begin with underscore except for the same special names listed for
ALL
above.
You can change the default alias by adding the
mixes_def
tag.When in doubt check the symbol table with
classes::dump(\%MyClass::)
.Throws:
X::InvalidName
,X::Usage
See:
class_mixes
,pkg_mixes
,mixes_def
,methods
,class_methods
,pkg_methods
,attrs
,attrs_ro
,class_attrs
,class_attrs_ro
,MIXIN
,$MIXIN
,classes::load
, perlre, perlref, perlmod, perlobj, AutoLoader - class_mixes
-
Exactly the same as
mixes
but as ifclass_methods
were used instead ofmethods
. - pkg_mixes
-
Exactly the same as
mixes
but as ifpkg_methods
were used instead ofmethods
. - mixes_def
-
Sets the default
mixes
filter for all mixins in that same declaration. Set toSAFE
by default. - attrs
-
Declares object attributes. Attribute names must begin with
[a-zA-Z_]
followed by zero or more[a-zA-Z0-9_]
characters.Each attribute receives both a public pair of accessor methods which begin with
set_
andget_
, unless specifically requested otherwise withnoaccessors
orjustahash
. A key variable of the form$ATTR_foo
is also added to the class for use within the class. Use this when referring to your object attribute key since it observes things likeunqualified
. [It is a fraction of 1% slower according to benchmarks. There are other more advanced reasons explained in classescb].$self->{$ATTR_foo} = 'blah';
TIP: Vim users can add this macro line to your .vimrc file or equivalent to create your attributes quickly by typing the attribute name, escaping, then typing backslash (\a):
map \a bi$self->{$ATTR_<ESC>ea}
All attribute values must be scalars. References to arrays, hashes and blessed objects are scalars.
WARNING: In your overriden
get_
accessor useclasses::clone
or otherwise return a clone of attribute values that are references if you are concerned your class users might directly manipulate your attribute by using the returned reference. Better yet, don't make that attribute public, even as read-only, and use other methods that operate on the attribute values instead.The
get_
accessor always return the current value of the attribute, which isundef
until some value is set. Initialize object attribute values from thenew
orinitialize
methods:package MyClass; use classes new => 'new', attrs => ['color'], ; sub new { my $class = shift; my $self = { $ATTR_color => 'chartreuse', }; bless $self, $class; return $self->classes::init_args(@_); } package main; my $object = MyClass->new; print $object->get_color; # chartreuse $object->set_color('blue'); print $object->get_color; # blue
Or, if you intend to "recycle" and reinitialize existing objects rather than throwing them away and creating new ones:
package MyClass; use classes new => 'classes::new_init', attrs => ['color'], ; sub initialize { my $self = shift; $self->{$ATTR_color} = 'chartreuse'; return $self->classes::init_args(@_); } package main; my $object = MyClass->new; print $object->get_color; # chartreuse $object->set_color('blue'); print $object->get_color; # blue
NOTE: The
classes
pragma follows the Perl best practice of adding the accessor prefixes (set_
andget_
) to increase clarity, improve performance, catch bugs at compile time, and reduce the risk of attribute methods stomping on other methods. Attibute names can even be all capitals or other reserved names because the accessor method prefix prevents name collision.WARNING: The
set_
accessor (mutator) must always return void (return
with no arguments). The return value of aset_
method should never be checked or used for anything. Throw and catch exceptions to handle bad values, etc.sub set_color { $_[0]->{$ATTR_color} = 'my:'. $_[1]; return }
Throws:
X::Usage
,X::InvalidName
,X::classes::AttrAlreadyPublic
See:
attrs_ro
,class_attrs
,class_attrs_ro
,unqualified
,initialize
, perlsub, "return" in perldoc - attrs_ro
-
Same as
attrs
but onlyget_
public accessor defined.However, if an inherited read-write attribute with the same name is detected a read-only
set_
public accessor is defined that does nothing more than throw aX::classes::ReadOnly
exception.WARNING: Beware of leaving behind custom overriden public
set_
accessors when changing a read-write attribute (attrs
) to read-only (attrs_ro
). - attrs_pr
-
Same as
attrs
but no public accessors are defined at all. The$ATTR_foo
string is still created within the declaring class. These private/protected attributes are not inherited withextends
,inherits
, oruse base
since they have no accessor methods to inherit.However, the object attribute hash key
$ATTR_foo
is mixed in if the attribute is in a explicitelymixable
module allowing$self->{$ATTR_foo}
from within the mixing class. This makes refactoring mixins from class code very easy since methods can literally be cut and paste without modification. - unqualified
-
Sets internal use of unqualified attribute key names, which is usually a bad idea unless you really know what you are doing since classes could inadvertently stomp over each other's internal keys. Set to 1 to cause the internal object hash ref to not have each key prefixed with
<CLASS>::
.NOTE: Use the
$ATTR_foo
and$CLASS_ATTR_foo
key variables containing the corresponding names in order to avoid changing class code during refactoring. Methods can be cut and paste often without modification by following this convention. Seeattrs
andclass_attrs
for more about this. - noaccessors
-
Disables creation of
set_
andget_
accessor methods for object attributes expecting them to be set directly. Usually used in conjuction withunqualified
. If so, consider settingjustahash
instead. - justahash
-
Same as
unqualified
,noaccessors
, andnew=
'classes::new_fast'> combined. Great for POPOs (plain old perl objects) that are first hashes that happen to have methods and class attributes associated with them. Objects from a class with this declaration fully expect to have their "internal" hash ref accessed directly. - class_attrs
-
Same as
attrs
but for attributes with class scope. In addition class attributes can be declared with initial values.Class attributes declared and defined with the
classes
pragma behave like most OO programmers expect; changing a class attribute value anywhere changes it for all objects from that class as well as all objects from any class that inherits or mixes it in. Classes wishing to take over the class attribute must redeclare it (thereby overriding its accessors).WARNING: This behavior is unlike Class::Data::Inheritable which obtusely allows any class to take over a "class attribute" by simply setting its value.
Class attributes are implemented as package variables. A key variable containing the qualified name of the attribute is available in the
$CLASS_ATTR_foo
form. Use it within the class to refer to class attribute package variables (with strict 'vars' off of course):no strict 'refs'; sub set_Color { $$CLASS_ATTR_color = $_[1]; return }
TIP: Vim users can add the following macro line to their .vimrc to quickly create this by typing the name of the class attribute, then escape, then backslash capital A (\A):
map \A bi$$CLASS_ATTR_<ESC>ea
The following are identical within the class. Pick the one you prefer, but keep in mind that if your class package name changes, you might have a lot of find and replace to do on your class:
$MyClass::color ${__PACKAGE__.'::color'} ${CLASS.'::color'} ${"$CLASS\::color"} ${$CLASS_ATTR_color} $$CLASS_ATTR_color
WARNING
: Don't attempt to initialize a class attribute value during duringnew
orinitialize
since it blows away any changes to the class attribute over the previous life of the class affecting all its derived classes. Provide an initial value in the hash ref form of theclass_attrs
declaration:class_attr => { foo => 'initial value', },
- class_attrs_ro
-
Same as
class_attrs
but noset_
accessor likeattrs_ro
. - class_attrs_pr
-
Same as
class_attrs
but private (no accessors) likeattrs_pr
. - methods
-
Declares member methods (more strictly, "operations") and the actual methods to which they refer. Usually the two will be the same, which seems redundant and is the default for the
ARRAY
ref form, but the actual method may refer to any method in any class, module, or package. Likemixes
the module containing the external method will be loaded if it has not been.The following special anonymous methods are also available:
- ABSTRACT
-
Assigns a nearly empty anonymous method that will throw an
X::Unimplemented
exception if called before being overriden. This is useful for defining an abstract class or interface which expects to have methods mixed in or inherited to realize the abstract ones. - EMPTY
- <false>
-
Assigns an empty anonymous method
sub {}
. Useful for nullifying a method without breaking the interface.
Method values can also be
CODE
refs with the disadvantage of only appearing asCODE
in the declarationDECL
instead of the local or qualified method name.Use
methods
,class_methods
, orpkg_methods
instead ofmixes
if you only need to pull in a few specific methods.Per perlstyle guidelines, name your public methods with an initial lowercase letter. Join multiword methods with underscores. Begin your private methods with an underscore, if you declare them at all.
Throws:
X::Usage
,X::InvalidName
,See:
class_methods
,pkg_methods
,mixes
,extends
,inherits
, perlstyle - class_methods
-
Same as
methods
but with class scope. However, since perl currently makes no distinction there is no difference between this tag andmethods
other than theclass_methods
section of the declarationDECL
.Avoid bimodal methods that can be called from both a class or object. You cannot declare a class and object method with the same name, (although should you wish you could declare a method with the same name as an attribute because of the attribute accessor prefixes
set/get
).See:
methods
,pkg_methods
- pkg_methods
-
Package methods are just functions. Using this tag is optimized shorthand for what you might do using the
Exporter
module'sEXPORT_OK
hash. Package methods are automatically available for import on request:package MyPackage; use classes pkg_methods=>['ini2hash', 'hash2ini']; package main; use MyPackage 'ini2hash'; my $hash = ini2hash($ini);
Or, use the special
':all'
tag:use MyPackage ':all'; my $hash = ini2hash($ini); my $ini = hash2ini($hash);
Under the hood the
import
routine added to your package is a slimmed down equivalent to what would be added by theExporter
module. Obviously you can override the automaticimport
with your own if you want to do something fancier with yourpkg_methods
when they are requested.Unlike
class_methods
andmethods
,pkg_methods
do not expect a first argument to be a class or object reference.See:
methods
,class_methods
,pkg_mixes
- throws
-
Declares exceptions that are thrown by the class but defined elsewhere. Loads the module containing the exception class if needed and found.
Use
throws
orexceptions
to quickly add common exceptions to your shell scripts and prototypes. Even if you are not using OO the base X::classes and X::classes::traceable classes, which both mix in classes::Throwable, can be useful.See:
exceptions
, EXCEPTIONS,classes::load
- exceptions
-
Declares exception classes be automatically defined. Exception classes are listed by name or declaration. By default each is a subclass of a automatically defined exception class matching the class name of the form
X::MyClass
.package MyClass; use classes exceptions => ['X::MyException','X::MyOther'], ;
The above is exactly equivalent to the following long hand:
classes { name=>X::MyClass, extends=>'X::classes::traceable' }, { name=>X::MyException, extends=>'X::MyClass' }, { name=>X::MyOther, extends=>'X::MyClass' }, ;
This preserves a convenient exception inheritance tree useful for catching exceptions in user code.
If the hash ref form is used and
extends
is omitted it is implied to be whatever the base exception class is, by default theX::MyClass
exception.Use
base_exception
anddef_base_exception
to change the default base exception class from theX::MyClass
one dynamically created matching the class name.Inheritance is strongly preferred over mixins for exceptions in order to trap them at different scope levels.
TIP: To save further hassle declaring exception classes, use the
X::classes::traceable
message
anditem
generic attributes instead of declaring your own additional exception attributes where practical.Declaring an exception class that already appears to exist causes a
X::NameUnavailable
exception to be thrown. To avoid this, change the declaration fromexceptions
tothrows
; or, use a different name in the hash ref declaration of the exception and specify it as extending the one that already exists; or, use a different name and just don't worry about extending the other.X::Usage
is a good example of this. It is predeclared and used byclasses
itself and therefore available to every class that uses theclasses
pragma.WARNING: Always use the conventional
X::
namespace in your exception class names. This practice makes exceptions easy to spot in code while reducing name conflicts with other legitimate classes and base exceptions. If you are really concerned with exception class namespace clashes that are out of your control then add the full class name after theX::
to qualify it further, long for sure, but safe from conflict. The followingvim
syntax hilighting macro makes spotting exceptions even easier in the code. Add it to your ~/.vim/syntax/perl.vim:syn match perlOperator "X\:\:[a-zA-Z:_0-9]*"
See:
throws
, X::classes, X::classes::traceable, classes::Throwable, EXCEPTIONS, "DECLARATION TAGS" - base_exception
-
Sets the base exception class to use for all
exceptions
declared. By default becomes a dynamically create exception class matching the name of the class in the formX::MyClass
. Applys only to the specified or implied class associated with the declaration. - def_base_exception
-
Same as
base_exception
but applies to any and all declarations that use theclasses
pragma from that time forward. Remember that this applies at compile time when usinguse classes
.TIP: If you never need or want traceablity in your exceptions set this to
X::classes
in some master class to create the lightest exceptions possible. Then when debugging, you can change in the master class back toX::classes::traceable
or something like it. - new
-
Declares the method to use for the standard
new
constructor. Shortcut forclass_methods
. The following are equivalent:new => 'new', class_methods => [qw( new )], class_methods => { new => 'new'}, new => 'classes::new_only', class_methods => { new => 'classes::new_only' }
NOTE: Athough using the name
new
for the constructor is not required it is recommended and a well-established best practice.See also:
new
,clone
,initialize
,new_args
,new_init
,new_only
,new_fast
,class_methods
- init
-
Declares the method to use for the standard
initialize
method. Shortcut formethods
. The following are equivalent:init => 'initialize', methods => [qw( initialize )], methods => { initialize => 'initialize'}, init => 'classes::init_args', methods => { initialize => 'classes::init_args' }
NOTE: Athough an
initialize
method is not required it is recommended for classes with objects that would prefer to be (re)initialized than thrown away and replaced with a new one.See also:
initialize
,new
,new_init
,init_args
,methods
- clone
-
Declares the method to use for the common
clone
method. Shortcut formethods
. The following are equivalent:clone => 'clone', methods => [qw( clone )], methods => { clone => 'clone'}, clone => 'classes::clone', methods => { clone => 'classes::clone' }
See also:
clone
,new
,methods
- dump
-
Declares the method to use for the
dump
method commonly defined during development to help with debugging. The following are equivalent:dump => 'classes::dump', methods => { dump => 'classes::dump' }
See also:
classes::dump
,methods
METHODS
The following methods are either defined into the classes and mixins that are created using classes
or are available with the fully qualifed classes::
prefix and can be mixed into your code:
- classes
- classes::classes
- classes::define
- define
-
use classes type=>'dynamic'; classes ... ; use classes (); classes::classes ... ; classes::define ... ;
Main
classes
command function. The dynamic (run time) variant ofuse classes
. Theclasses
function is imported into classes with thetype => 'dynamic'
to allow manipulation of classes at run time. Theclasses::define
function is an identical (symbol) alias toclasses::classes
that is never exported and always available in its fully qualified form.Throws: every exception listed under EXCEPTIONS
See:
type
- new
-
The standard constructor method. Defined by most all classes but often missing from
mixables
. When called from a class returns a new instance (object) of the class.classes::new_args
andclasses::new_only
are good defaults where no constructor customization is needed.classes::new_init
hands all arguments to an expectedinitialize
method.classes::new_fast
expects a single hash ref as argument and uses it for the internal object storage.Use
clone
instead ofnew
to create copies of objects.Often you will need a custom
new
method to initialize object attributes. Seeattrs
for a small example of this.Consider overriding
initialize
beforenew
if your class' objects may need to be reinitialized rather than thrown away and replaced with new ones.See:
new
,new_args
,new_only
,new_init
,new_fast
,initialize
,class_methods
, perlobj, perlref - classes::new_args
- new_args
-
Constructor implementation. Fulfills
new
. Creates object and then hands off with any arguments toclasses::init_args
:sub new_args { my $class = shift; my $self = {}; bless $self, $class; return $self->classes::init_args(@_); }
See:
init_args
,new
,new_init
,new_only
,new_fast
,class_methods
- classes::new_only
- new_only
-
Constructor implementation. Fulfills
new
. Ignores any arguments (since it does not call the initializer):sub new_only { return bless {}, $_[0] }
See:
new
,new_args
,new_init
,new_fast
,class_methods
- classes::new_init
- new_init
-
Constructor implementation. Fulfills
new
. Creates object and then hands off with any arguments toinitialize
:sub new_init { my $class = shift; my $self = {}; bless $self, $class; return $self->initialize(@_); }
See:
new
,new_args
,new_only
,new_fast
,class_methods
- classes::new_fast
- new_fast
-
Fastest constructor implementation. Fulfills
new
. Expects a compatible hash ref as the first and only argument. Blesses that ref into class.sub new_fast { return bless $_[1]||{}, $_[0] }
Useful when you have a hash that you absolutely trust and need the speed. Particularly useful when 'inflating' thousands of record objects from parsed lines and the like and have every intention of directly manipulating the internal hash ref rather than burdening it with accessors but still want to associate that record with a class. In short, a good way to tack a class onto your structure with the least amount of OO bloat.
NOTE: The only way faster to associate a hash with a class is to bypass any accessor altogether and call
bless
on the hash. Usingbless
alone completely trusts that the class will never use the constructor in any other way, which is a pretty big leap in most OO code.See:
new
,new_only
,new_init
,class_methods
- initialize
-
The initializer. Commonly defined by classes instead of a custom
new
constructor so that objects from the class can be reinitialized rather than thrown away and recreated. Usually called bynew
constructor to setup the initial object state including aggregations from other classes.classes::new_init
expects aninitialize
.The
initialize
method always takes an initial self-reference to the object being initialized as the first argument, the rest of the arguments are dependent on the class itself, but usually a hash and/or hash ref of attribute keys and values are accepted. Usuallynew
andinitialize
should accept the same argument signature andinitialize
must always return the same self reference passed to it to preserve the identify of the object.See
attrs
anddump
for examples.See:
init_args
,new
,new_init
,new_only
,methods
- classes::init_args
- init_args
-
Initializer implementation. Takes a hash or
HASH
ref as arguments--usually passed from thenew
constructor--and uses the argument keys as attribute names setting each attribute value by calling the corresponding accessor:# $object->set_attr1(1) implied $object->initialize( attr=>1 ); $object->initialize({ attr=>1 });
Combined with a
new
constructor:my $object = MyClass->new( attr1=>1 ); my $object = MyClass->new({ attr1=>1 });
Here is the actual code for quick reference:
sub init_args { my $self = shift; my $attrs = $_[0]; $attrs = {@_} if ref $attrs ne 'HASH'; while ( my ( $attr, $value ) = each %$attrs ) { my $setter = $self->can("set_$attr") or X::UnknownAttr->throw([$attr]); $self->$setter($value); } return $self; }
NOTE: Dispatching to attribute accessor methods not only supports encapsulation but also is the only reliable method of generically setting attributes during construction and initialization, despite the extra subroutine call. This is because Perl 5 does not do any attribute inheritance, only method inheritance.
See:
attrs
,class_attrs
Throws
X::UnknownAttr
if can't find a setter for the attr/key passed. - classes::clone
- clone
-
When called from an object returns a new object with the current state of the original, a deep clone. No clone method is defined by default, but it is recommended.
Use
clone
instead of a bimodalnew
:my $object = MyClass->new; # good my $clone = $object->clone; # good my $clone = $object->new; # not so good
The
classes::clone
method can be mixed into your classes:clone => 'classes::clone',
The
classes::clone
method is modeled after the Clone_PP and Clone modules to create the best clone reasonably possible with Perl 5. It returns deeply cloned copies of the original objects, but makes shallow copies of attributes that are globs, regx objects and anything other than the basicHASH
,ARRAY
,SCALAR
, andREF
, which themselves are cleanly and recursively cloned. Attributes that are objects are cloned by their primitive blessed ref type--not their ownclone
methods--and are then blessed into the same class.classes::clone
can also serve as a standalone function for cloning structures besides objects:my $array = [ 'some', {thing=>'a'}, \$little, qr/komplex/ ]; my $cloned_array = classes::clone $array;
If you need to reference the actual
classes::clone
code considerperldoc -m classes
.Throws:
X::Usage
- classes::id
- id
-
Returns the numeric, unique memory address of the object (or any ref) that is passed. Shortcut to
Scalar::Util::refaddr
:sub id { Scalar::Util::refaddr($_[0]) }
Useful when comparing clones in testing and what not:
my $event = Event->new; my $clone = $event->clone; if ($event->classes::id == $clone->classes::id) { print 'come on, that is not a _real_ clone'; }
Can be combined with the
CORE::time
and/or the current process ID to make a pretty unique object identifier for persistence and the like:package MyClass; use classes new => 'new', attrs_ro => ['id'], ; sub new { my $class = shift; my $self = {}; bless $self, $class; $self->initialize; $self->{$ATTR_id} = CORE::time . "-$$-" . $self->classes::id; return $self; }
- classes::set
- set
-
A mutator dispatch method. Companion to
classes::get
. When called from an object or class sets and returns a new value for a named attribute by calling (dispatching) the object's setter/writer/mutator method. The minimal speed loss for the dispatch pays for the flexibility of allowing attributes to be set without knowing their names before the code is executed.$crayon->classes::set( 'color' => 'purple' );
Can be mixed into your class to give them public dispatchers:
methods => { set => 'classes::set' },
Here is the actual code for quick reference:
sub set { my ( $self, $name, $value ) = @_; my $accessor = $self->can("set_$name") || X::MethodNotFound->throw("set_$name"); return $self->$accessor($value); }
Throws:
X::MethodNotFound
if the attribute was defined read-only or not defined at all. - classes::get
- get
-
The accessor dispatch method. Companion to
classes::set
. Returns the current value of the named attribute but does not set a new value.Here is the actual code for quick reference:
sub get { my ( $self, $name ) = @_; my $accessor = $self->can("get_$name") || X::MethodNotFound->throw("get_$name"); return $self->$accessor; }
Throws:
X::MethodNotFound
if the attribute was not defined. - classes::sprintf
- sprintf
-
Mixable object or class method that takes a standard
sprintf
FORMAT
and a list ofATTRNAMES
and simply looks up the attribute values by theirget_foo
equivalents and returns a formatted string with the values. - classes::printf
- printf
-
Same as
sprintf
but prints the string instead of just returning it. - classes::dump
- dump
-
Using Data::Dumper dumps a visual representation of a class, object, or any scalar to a handle (
STDERR
by default) or string buffer.NOTE: Be sure to use parens or indirect notation when dumping objects since context is important--especially when dumping the self-referencing return value or most methods:
$ini->read->classes::dump; # right classes::dump $ini->read; # not what you would expect
Can also be mixed into your classes to give them their own
dump
methods:dump => 'classes::dump',
Dumps the implied caller if no argument passed:
package MyClass; classes::dump;
Dumping a class displays three things: the current declaration
DECL
, the current state of anyclass_attrs
and the list of any methods that have been mixed in. Dumping an object also displays its internal hash ref:package MixMeSimple; sub mixed_in {'yes'}; package MixMeDeclared; use classes type => 'mixable', attrs => [qw( a_mixmedecl )], attrs_pr => [ 'private_attr' ], class_attrs => [qw( ca_mixmedecl )], class_attrs_pr => { PrivateAttr=>'yep' }, methods => [qw( m_mixmedecl )], class_methods => [qw( cm_mixmedecl )], ; package main; use classes name => 'MySuper', attrs => ['color'], new => 'classes::new_args', ; use classes name => 'MyClass', extends => 'MySuper', new => 'classes::new_init', init => 'classes::init_args', throws => 'X::Usage', exceptions => 'X::MyOwn', mixes => [qw( MixMeSimple MixMeDeclared )], class_attrs => { Attr=>1 }, class_attrs_ro => { Read_Only_Attr=>'yes' }, attrs => [ 'attr' ], attrs_ro => [ 'read_only_attr' ], class_methods => { Empty_Method=>0 }, methods => { abstract_method=>'ABSTRACT' }, ; my $object = MyClass->new(attr=>'ok'); $object->set_color('green'); $object->classes::dump;
Produces:
########################### MyClass ############################ $DECL1 = { 'attrs' => [ 'a_mixmedecl', 'attr' ], 'exceptions' => [ 'X::MyOwn' ], 'class_attrs' => { 'ca_mixmedecl' => undef, 'Attr' => 1 }, 'name' => 'MyClass', 'class_attrs_ro' => { 'Read_Only_Attr' => 'yes' }, 'class_methods' => { 'Empty_Method' => 'EMPTY', 'new' => 'classes::new_init', 'cm_mixmedecl' => 'MixMeDeclared::cm_mixmedecl' }, 'inherits' => [ 'MySuper' ], 'attrs_ro' => [ 'read_only_attr' ], 'methods' => { 'mixed_in' => 'MixMeSimple::mixed_in', 'abstract_method' => 'ABSTRACT', 'initialize' => 'classes::init_args', 'm_mixmedecl' => 'MixMeDeclared::m_mixmedecl' }, 'attrs_pr' => [ 'private_attr' ], 'type' => 'static', 'class_attrs_pr' => { 'PrivateAttr' => 'yep' }, 'throws' => [ 'X::Usage' ] }; $MIXIN1 = { '$ATTR_a_mixmedecl' => 'MixMeDeclared', '$CLASS_ATTR_PrivateAttr' => 'MixMeDeclared', '$ATTR_private_attr' => 'MixMeDeclared', 'initialize' => 'classes', 'get_ca_mixmedecl' => 'MixMeDeclared', 'cm_mixmedecl' => 'MixMeDeclared', 'set_a_mixmedecl' => 'MixMeDeclared', 'mixed_in' => 'MixMeSimple', 'get_a_mixmedecl' => 'MixMeDeclared', 'set_ca_mixmedecl' => 'MixMeDeclared', 'new' => 'classes', '$CLASS_ATTR_ca_mixmedecl' => 'MixMeDeclared', 'm_mixmedecl' => 'MixMeDeclared' }; $CLASS_STATE1 = { 'Read_Only_Attr' => 'yes', 'ca_mixmedecl' => undef, 'Attr' => 1 }; $OBJECT_STATE1 = bless( { 'MySuper::color' => 'green', 'MyClass::attr' => 'ok' }, 'MyClass' );
Throws:
X::Usage
- classes::load
- load
-
Loads a module with
use MyModule
usinguse base
compatibility, but without the@ISA
updates> andfields
stuff. Used internally by theclasses
pragma itself to load packages and modules.Throw a
X::Empty
exception (somewhat like Base class package Foo is empty erroruse base
throws) when no symbols whatsoever are found for the loaded module. - CLASS
- $CLASS
-
Returns a constant (inlined subroutine) containing the class name. Exactly the same as
__PACKAGE__
and literally stolen from CLASS module (Michael G. Schwern). Defined into anything that usesclasses
. - DECL
- $DECL
-
Returns a hash reference of the class declaration kept current as the class is altered at run time with
classes
orclasses::define
.WARNING: Do not directly alter the
DECL
hash. Take a copy if needed instead:my %own_decl = %$MyClass::DECL; my %own_decl = %$DECL;
See: example output of
DECL
fromclasses::dump
method - SUPER
-
Returns the name of the super (parent) class in which it is defined (
$<blessed_as>::ISA[0]
). This fills the gap left by theSUPER::
construct that only refers to the super class of the current package. Without aSUPER
that refers to the actual superclassmixes
that deal with inheritance would be much more difficult to code:package Parent; sub foo {'foo'}; package MixMod; sub bar1 { shift->SUPER->foo }; sub bar2 { shift->SUPER::foo }; # BAD package MyClass; use classes extends=>'Parent', mixes=>'MixMod'; print MyClass->SUPER->foo . "\n"; # foo print MyClass->SUPER::foo . "\n"; # foo print MyClass->bar1 . "\n"; # foo print MyClass->bar2 . "\n"; # ERROR
See: "SUPER" in perlobj
- MIXIN
- $MIXIN
-
Defined when the
mixes
tag is used. Contains a dynamically updated hash of mixed in method and attribute names and the package and name from which they came. This is the only way to identify if a method or attribute was mixed in rather than simply declared:package MyMixin; sub bar {'bar'}; package MyClass; use classes mixes=>'MyMixin', methods=>['foo'], ; package main; print "bar is mixin\n" if MyClass->MIXIN->{bar}; print "foo is mixin\n" if MyClass->MIXIN->{foo};
The
MIXIN
hash is displayed in theclasses::dump
output.WARNING: Testing for
defined $MIXIN
is not sufficient since the ref will usually be defined even if theHASH
it refers to contains nothing. Usedefined %$MIXIN
instead.See:
mixes
,classes::dump
- classes::PERL_VERSION
- PERL_VERSION
-
Constant referring to the current perl version (
$]
).See: "$]" in perlvar
EXCEPTIONS
The classes
pragma defines and uses the following exception classes that any code with use classes
can immediately use:
- X::classes
-
Minimal base exception class. Base class of all other exception classes. See X::classes.
- X::classes::traceable
-
Subclass of
X::classes
. Adds light traceability to similar toException::Class
. Base class of all other exception classes. See X::classes::traceable. - X::AttrScope
-
Thrown when somehow unexpectedly an attribute accessor is called where the attribute was initially declared with greater scope and then redeclared with a more limited scope,
ro
orpr
:package WideOpen; use strict 'subs'; no warnings; use classes type => 'mixable', new => 'classes::new_args', attrs => ['foo'], ; package MorePrivate; use strict 'subs'; no warnings; use classes mixes => 'WideOpen', attrs_ro => ['foo'], ; sub do_something_involving_foo { my $self = shift; $self->{$ATTR_foo} = 'something new'; return $self; } package main; my $o = MorePrivate->new; $o->do_something_involving_foo; print $o->get_foo; # ok $o->set_foo('something'); # throws X::AttrScope
Even though the redeclaration causes the correct update to
DECL
the inherited accessor method is overriden as a safety precaution. This is not a problem if the attribute with the same name was never declared with greater scope in the first place since the public accessor (the setter in this case) won't exist, causing a different Perl compile-time error. Seeattrs
for more. - X::Empty
-
Something was empty that shouldn't be, a package being loaded, a variable, etc.
- X::InvalidName
-
Class or attribute name is invalid.
- X::NotPkgMethod
-
Attempt to import a package method detected where the method is not defined or defined as a class or object method instead.
- X::MethodNotFound
-
Accessor method not found when
set
orget
dispatch methods are called. - X::Unimplemented
-
A call to an unimplemented
ABSTRACT
method is detected. - X::Usage
-
Any invalid syntax usage.
- X::Undefined
-
Attribute value undefined.
- X::UnknownAttr
-
Attribute not known to the class in question.
See: X::classes, X::classes::traceable, classes::Throwable
TROUBLESHOOTING
See classesfaq
EXAMPLES
See classes::dump
, classescb, classestut
SUPPORT
SourceForge 'perl5class' Project Site
http://sourceforge.net/projects/perl5class
Please submit any bugs or feature requests to this site.
perl5class-usage mailing list
http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/perl5class-usage
Search CPAN
AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
CPAN Ratings
DEPENDENCIES
Dependencies have been all but left out to improve portability.
Perl 5.6.1 is required.
Scalar::Utils and CORE::time are required and supported since 5.6 and standard from 5.8.
Data::Dumper is required for classes::dump
to work and has been part of Perl standard since pre 5.6.1.
SEE ALSO
classestut, classescb, classesfaq, X::classes, X::classes::traceable, classes::Throwable, classes::test
The object oriented Perl related pages:
The object oriented modules that most influenced the creation of the classes
pragma:
base, fields, CLASS, Class::Struct, Exception::Class, Clone, Clone::PP, Class::MethodMaker, Class::MakeMethods, Class::Base, Class::Contract, Class::Accessor, Class::Meta, Class::Std, Class::Data::Inheritable, Class::Maker
All the rest of the Class::
(and related) namespace on CPAN including, but by no means limited to, the following:
Attribute::Deprecated, Attribute::Unimplemented, Class::Container, Class::Field, Class::Generate, Class::HPL00::Class, Class::Inspector, Class::MOP, Clone::Clonable, Class::Class
AUTHOR
Robert S Muhlestein (rmuhle at cpan dot org)
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The classes
pragma was built from many other great modules and ideas with a lot of feedback and testing. Here are a few specific individuals who directly or indirectly contributed to its creation:
Matthew Simon Cavalletto, Damian Conway, Derek Cordon, Ray Finch, A. (Pete) Fontenot, C. Garrett Goebel, Erik Johnson, Jim Miner, ken1, Dave Rolsky, Matt Sargent, David Muir Sharnoff, Dean Roehrich, Michael G Schwern, Casey West, David Wheeler
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2005, 2006 Robert S. Muhlestein (rob at muhlestein.net) All rights reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. [See perlartistic.]