Class::MOP::Package - Package Meta Object
version 2.2203
The Package Protocol provides an abstraction of a Perl 5 package. A package is
basically namespace, and this module provides methods for looking at and
changing that namespace's symbol table.
This method creates a new "Class::MOP::Package" instance which
represents specified package. If an existing metaclass object exists for the
package, that will be returned instead. No options are valid at the package
level.
This method forcibly removes any existing metaclass for the package before
calling "initialize". In contrast to "initialize", you may
also pass an existing "Class::MOP::Package" instance instead of just
a package name as $package.
Do not call this unless you know what you are doing.
Creates a new "Class::MOP::Package" instance which represents the
specified package, and also does some initialization of that package.
Currently, this just does the same thing as "initialize", but is
overridden in subclasses, such as "Class::MOP::Class".
Creates a new anonymous package. Valid keys for %options are:
- "cache"
- If this will be "true" (the default is
"false"), the instance will be cached in
"Class::MOP"'s metaclass cache.
- "weaken"
- If this is "true" (the default "true"
when cache is "false"), the instance stored in
"Class::MOP"'s metaclass cache will be weakened, so that the
anonymous package will be garbage collected when the returned instance
goes out of scope.
Returns true if the package is an anonymous package.
This is returns the package's name, as passed to the constructor.
This returns a hash reference to the package's symbol table. The keys are symbol
names and the values are typeglob references.
This method accepts a variable name and an optional initial value. The
$variable_name must contain a leading sigil.
This method creates the variable in the package's symbol table, and sets it to
the initial value if one was provided.
Given a variable name, this method returns the variable as a reference or undef
if it does not exist. The $variable_name must contain a leading sigil.
Given a variable name, this method returns the variable as a reference. If it
does not exist, a default value will be generated if possible. The
$variable_name must contain a leading sigil.
Returns true if there is a package variable defined for $variable_name. The
$variable_name must contain a leading sigil.
This will remove the package variable specified $variable_name. The
$variable_name must contain a leading sigil.
Given the name of a glob, this will remove that glob from the package's symbol
table. Glob names do not include a sigil. Removing the glob removes all
variables and subroutines with the specified name.
This will list all the glob names associated with the current package. These
names do not have leading sigils.
You can provide an optional type filter, which should be one of 'SCALAR',
'ARRAY', 'HASH', or 'CODE'.
This works much like "list_all_package_symbols", but it returns a hash
reference. The keys are glob names and the values are references to the value
for that name.
This will return a Class::MOP::Class instance for this class.
- •
- Stevan Little <[email protected]>
- •
- Dave Rolsky <[email protected]>
- •
- Jesse Luehrs <[email protected]>
- •
- Shawn M Moore <[email protected]>
- •
- יובל
קוג'מן (Yuval Kogman)
<[email protected]>
- •
- Karen Etheridge <[email protected]>
- •
- Florian Ragwitz <[email protected]>
- •
- Hans Dieter Pearcey <[email protected]>
- •
- Chris Prather <[email protected]>
- •
- Matt S Trout <[email protected]>
This software is copyright (c) 2006 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.