NAME
Iterator::IO - Filesystem and stream iterators.
VERSION
This documentation describes version 0.02 of Iterator::IO.pm, August 23, 2005.
SYNOPSIS
use Iterator::IO;
# Return the names of files in a directory (except . and ..)
$iter = idir_listing ($path);
# Return all the files in a directory tree, one at a time.
# Like File::Find, in slow motion.
$iter = idir_walk ($path);
# Return the lines of a file, one at a time.
$iter = ifile ($filename, \%options);
# Return the lines of a file, in reverse order
$iter = ifile_reverse ($filename, \%options);
DESCRIPTION
This module provides filesystem and stream iterator functions. See the Iterator module for more information about how to use iterators.
FUNCTIONS
- idir_listing
-
$iter = idir_listing ($path);
Iterator that returns the names of the files in the
$path
directory. If$path
is omitted, defaults to the current directory. Does not return the.
and..
files (under unix).Example:
To return only certain files, combine this with an igrep:
$iter = igrep {-s && -M < 1} idir "/some/path";
(Returns non-empty files modified less than a day ago). (igrep) is defined in the Iterator::Util module).
- idir_walk
-
$iter = idir_walk ($path);
Returns the files in a directory tree, one by one. It's sort of like File::Find in slow motion.
- ifile
-
$iter = ifile ($filename, \%options);
Opens a file, generates an iterator to return the lines of the file.
\%options
is a reference to a hash of options. Currently, two options are supported:- chomp
-
chomp => boolean
indicates whether lines should bechomp
ed before being returned by the iterator. The default is true. - $/
-
'$/' => value
specifies what string to use as the record separator. If not specified, the current value of$/
is used."
rs
" or "input_record_separator
" may be used as option names instead of "$/
", if you find that to be more readable. See the English module.
Option names are case-insensitive.
ifile
requires IO::File. - ifile_reverse
-
$iter = ifile_reverse ($filename, \%options);
Exactly the same as "ifile", but reads the lines of the file backwards.
The
input_record_separator
option valuesundef
(slurp whole file) and scalar references (fixed-length records) are not currently supported.
INTERFACE CHANGE
In version 0.01 of Iterator::IO, the "ifile" and ifile_reverse functions accepted their options in a different manner. This has now changed to operate via a hash reference of options. The old way will still work, but is deprecated and will be removed in a future release.
EXPORTS
This module exports all function names to the caller's namespace by default.
DIAGNOSTICS
Iterator::IO uses Exception::Class objects for throwing exceptions. If you're not familiar with Exception::Class, don't worry; these exception objects work just like $@
does with die
and croak
, but they are easier to work with if you are trapping errors.
See the Iterator module documentation for more information on how to trap and handle these exception objects.
Parameter Errors
Class:
Iterator::X::Parameter_Error
You called an Iterator::IO function with one or more bad parameters. Since this is almost certainly a coding error, there is probably not much use in handling this sort of exception.
As a string, this exception provides a human-readable message about what the problem was.
Exhausted Iterators
Class:
Iterator::X::Exhausted
You called
value
on an iterator that is exhausted; that is, there are no more values in the sequence to return.As a string, this exception is "Iterator is exhausted."
I/O Errors
Class:
Iterator::X::IO_Error
This exception is thrown when any sort of I/O error occurs; this only happens with the filesystem iterators.
This exception has one method,
os_error
, which returns the original$!
that was trapped by the Iterator object.As a string, this exception provides some human-readable information along with
$!
.Internal Errors
Class:
Iterator::X::Internal_Error
Something happened that I thought couldn't possibly happen. I would appreciate it if you could send me an email message detailing the circumstances of the error.
REQUIREMENTS
Requires the following additional modules:
IO::Dir and Cwd are required if you use "idir_listing" or "idir_walk".
IO::File is required if you use "ifile" or "ifile_reverse"
SEE ALSO
Higher Order Perl, Mark Jason Dominus, Morgan Kauffman 2005.
THANKS
Much thanks to Will Coleda and Paul Lalli (and the RPI lily crowd in general) for suggestions for the pre-release version.
AUTHOR / COPYRIGHT
Eric J. Roode, roode@cpan.org
Copyright (c) 2005 by Eric J. Roode. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
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