Class::MakeMethods::Template::Generic - Templates for common meta-method types
package MyObject;
use Class::MakeMethods (
'Template::Hash:new' => [ 'new' ],
'Template::Hash:scalar' => [ 'foo' ]
'Template::Static:scalar' => [ 'bar' ]
);
package main;
my $obj = MyObject->new( foo => "Foozle", bar => "Bozzle" );
print $obj->foo();
$obj->bar("Bamboozle");
This package provides a variety of abstract interfaces for constructors and
accessor methods, which form a common foundation for meta-methods provided by
the Hash, Scalar, Flyweight, Static, PackageVar, and ClassVar implementations.
Generally speaking, the Generic meta-methods define calling interfaces and
behaviors which are bound to differently scoped data by each of those
subclasses.
There are several types of hash-based object constructors to choose from.
Each of these methods creates and returns a reference to a new blessed instance.
They differ in how their (optional) arguments are interpreted to set initial
values, and in how they operate when called as class or instance methods.
Interfaces: The following interfaces are supported.
- -with_values,
- Provides the with_values behavior.
- -with_init
- Provides the with_init behavior.
- -with_methods
- Provides the with_methods behavior.
- -new_and_init
- Provides the with_init behavior for *, and the
general purpose method_init behavior as an init method.
- -copy_with_values
- Provides the copy behavior.
Behaviors: The following types of constructor methods are available.
- with_values
- Creates and blesses a new instance.
If arguments are passed they are included in the instance, otherwise it will
be empty.
Returns the new instance.
May be called as a class or instance method.
- with_methods
- Creates, blesses, and returns a new instance.
The arguments are treated as a hash of method-name/argument-value pairs,
with each such pair causing a call
"$self->name($value)".
- with_init
- Creates and blesses a new instance, then calls a method
named "init", passing along any arguments that were initially
given.
Returns the new instance.
The init() method should be defined in the class declaring these
methods.
May be called as a class or instance method.
- and_then_init
- Creates a new instance using method-name/argument-value
pairs, like "with_methods", but then calls a method named
"init" before returning the new object. The "init"
method does not receive any arguments.
The init() method should be defined in the class declaring these
methods.
- instance_with_methods
- If called as a class method, creates, blesses, and returns
a new instance. If called as an object method, operates on and returns the
existing instance.
Accepts name-value pair arguments, or a reference to hash of such pairs, and
calls the named method for each with the supplied value as a single
argument. (See the Universal method_init behavior for more discussion of
this pattern.)
- copy_with values
- Produce a copy of an instance. Can not be called as a class
method.
The copy is a *shallow* copy; any references will be shared by the instance
upon which the method is called and the returned newborn.
If a list of key-value pairs is passed as arguments to the method, they are
added to the copy, overwriting any values with the same key that may have
been copied from the original.
- copy_with_methods
- Produce a copy of an instance. Can not be called as a class
method.
The copy is a *shallow* copy; any references will be shared by the instance
upon which the method is called and the returned newborn.
Accepts name-value pair arguments, or a reference to hash of such pairs, and
calls the named method on the copy for each with the supplied value as a
single argument before the copy is returned.
- copy_instance_with_values
- If called as a class method, creates, blesses, and returns
a new instance. If called as an object method, produces and returns a copy
of an instance.
The copy is a *shallow* copy; any references will be shared by the instance
upon which the method is called and the returned newborn.
If a list of key-value pairs is passed as arguments to the method, they are
added to the copy, overwriting any values with the same key that may have
been copied from the original.
- copy_instance_with_methods
- If called as a class method, creates, blesses, and returns
a new instance. If called as an object method, produces and returns a copy
of an instance.
The copy is a *shallow* copy; any references will be shared by the instance
upon which the method is called and the returned newborn.
Accepts name-value pair arguments, or a reference to hash of such pairs, and
calls the named method on the copy for each with the supplied value as a
single argument before the copy is returned.
Parameters: The following parameters are supported:
- init_method
- The name of the method to call after creating a new
instance. Defaults to 'init'.
A generic scalar-value accessor meta-method which serves as an abstraction for
basic "get_set" methods and numerous related interfaces
use Class::MakeMethods -MakerClass => "...",
scalar => [ 'foo', 'bar' ];
...
$self->foo( 'my new foo value' );
print $self->foo();
(Note that while you can use the scalar methods to store references to various
data structures, there are other meta-methods defined below that may be more
useful for managing references to arrays, hashes, and objects.)
Interfaces: The following calling interfaces are available.
- get_set (default)
- Provides get_set method for *.
Example: Create method foo, which sets the value of 'foo' for this instance
if an argument is passed in, and then returns the value whether or not
it's been changed:
use Class::MakeMethods -MakerClass => "...",
scalar => [ 'foo' ];
- get_protected_set
- Provides an get_set accessor for * that croaks if a
new value is passed in from a package that is not a subclass of the
declaring one.
- get_private_set
- Provides an get_set accessor for * that croaks if a
new value is passed in from a package other than the declaring one.
- read_only
- Provides an accessor for * that does not modify its
value. (Its initial value would have to be set by some other means.)
- eiffel
- Provides get behavior as *, and set behavior as
set_*.
Example: Create methods bar which returns the value of 'bar' for this
instance (takes no arguments), and set_bar, which sets the value of 'bar'
(no return):
use Class::MakeMethods -MakerClass => "...",
scalar => [ --eiffel => 'bar' ];
- java
- Provides get behavior as get*, and set behavior as
set *.
Example: Create methods getBaz which returns the value of 'Baz' for this
instance (takes no arguments), and setBaz, which sets the value for this
instance (no return):
use Class::MakeMethods -MakerClass => "...",
scalar => [ --java => 'Baz' ];
- init_and_get
- Creates methods which cache their results in a hash key.
Provides the get_init behavior for *, and an delete behavior for
clear_ *. Specifies default value for init_method parameter of
init_ *.
- with_clear
- Provides get_set behavior for *, and a
clear_* method.
Behaviors: The following types of accessor methods are available.
- get_set
- If no argument is provided, returns the value of the
current instance. The value defaults to undef.
If an argument is provided, it is stored as the value of the current
instance (even if the argument is undef), and that value is returned.
Also available as get_protected_set and get_private_set, which are available
for public read-only access, but have access control limitations.
- get
- Returns the value from the current instance.
- set
- Sets the value for the current instance. If called with no
arguments, the value is set to undef. Does not return a value.
- clear
- Sets value to undef.
- get_set_chain
- Like get_set, but if called with an argument, returns the
object it was called on. This allows a series of mutators to be called as
follows:
package MyObject;
use Class::MakeMethods (
'Template::Hash:scalar --get_set_chain' => 'foo bar baz'
);
...
my $obj = MyObject->new->foo('Foozle');
$obj->bar("none")->baz("Brazil");
print $obj->foo, $obj->bar, $obj->baz;
- get_set_prev
- Like get_set, but if called with an argument, returns the
previous value before it was changed to the new one.
- get_init
- If the value is currently undefined, calls the init_method.
Returns the value.
Parameters: The following parameters are supported:
- init_method
- The name of a method to be called to initialize this
meta-method.
Only used by the get_init behavior.
A generic scalar-value accessor meta-method which serves as an abstraction for
basic "get_set" methods and numerous related interfaces
use Class::MakeMethods -MakerClass => "...",
string => [ 'foo', 'bar' ];
...
$self->foo( 'my new foo value' );
print $self->foo();
This meta-method extends the scalar meta-method, and supports the same
interfaces and parameters.
However, it generally treats values as strings, and can not be used to store
references.
Interfaces: In addition to those provided by "scalar", the
following calling interfaces are available.
- -get_concat
- Provides the get_concat behavior for *, and a
clear_* method.
Example:
use Class::MakeMethods
get_concat => { name => 'words', join => ", " };
$obj->words('foo');
$obj->words('bar');
$obj->words() eq 'foo, bar';
Behaviors: In addition to those provided by "scalar", the
following types of accessor methods are available.
- concat
- Concatenates the argument value with the existing
value.
- get_concat
- Like get_set except sets do not clear out the original
value, but instead concatenate the new value to the existing one.
Parameters: In addition to those provided by "scalar", the
following parameters are supported.
- join
- If the join parameter is defined, each time the get_concat
behavior is invoked, it will glue its argument onto any existing value
with the join string as the separator. The join field is applied
between values, not prior to the first or after the last. Defaults
to undefined
string_index => [ qw / foo bar baz / ]
Creates string accessor methods, like string above, but also maintains a static
hash index in which each object is stored under the value of the field when
the slot is set.
This is a unique index, so only one object can have a given key. If an object
has a slot set to a value which another object is already set to the object
currently set to that value has that slot set to undef and the new object will
be put into the hash under that value.
Objects with undefined values are not stored in the index.
Note that to free items from memory, you must clear these values!
Methods:
- •
- The method find_x is defined which if called with any
arguments returns a list of the objects stored under those values in the
hash. Called with no arguments, it returns a reference to the hash.
Profiles:
- •
- find_or_new
'string_index -find_or_new' => [ qw / foo bar baz / ]
Just like string_index except the find_x method is defined to call the new
method to create an object if there is no object already stored under any
of the keys you give as arguments.
A generic scalar-value accessor meta-method which serves as an abstraction for
basic "get_set" methods and numerous related interfaces
use Class::MakeMethods -MakerClass => "...",
string => [ 'foo', 'bar' ];
...
$self->foo( 23 );
print $self->foo();
This meta-method extends the scalar meta-method, and supports the same
interfaces and parameters.
However, it generally treats values as numbers, and can not be used to store
strings or references.
Interfaces: In addition to those provided by "scalar", the
following calling interfaces are available.
- -counter
- Provides the numeric get_set behavior for *, and
numeric *_incr and *_reset methods.
Behaviors: In addition to those provided by "scalar", the
following types of accessor methods are available.
- get_set
- The get_set behavior is similar to the default scalar
behavior except that empty values are treated as zero.
- increment
- If no argument is provided, increments the hash_key
value by 1. If an argument is provided, the value is incremented by that
amount. Returns the increased value.
- clear
- Sets the value to zero.
A generic scalar-value accessor meta-method which serves as an abstraction for
basic "get_set" methods and numerous related interfaces
use Class::MakeMethods -MakerClass => "...",
string => [ 'foo', 'bar' ];
...
$self->foo( 1 );
print $self->foo();
$self->clear_foo;
This meta-method extends the scalar meta-method, and supports the same
interfaces and parameters. However, it generally treats values as
true-or-false flags, and can not be used to store strings, numbers, or
references.
Interfaces:
- flag_set_clear (default)
- Provides the get_set behavior for *, and
set_* and clear_ * methods to set the value to true or
false.
Behaviors: In addition to those provided by "scalar", the
following types of accessor methods are available.
- get_set
- The get_set behavior is similar to the get_set scalar
behavior except that empty or false values are treated as zero, and true
values are treated as zero.
- set_true
- Sets the value to one.
- set_false
- Sets the value to zero.
A generic accessor for bit-field values.
The difference between 'Template::Generic:bits' and 'Template::Generic:boolean'
is that all flags created with this meta-method are stored in a single vector
for space efficiency.
Interfaces: The following calling interfaces are available.
- default
- Provides get_set behavior for *, a set_*
method which sets the value to true and a clear_ * method which
sets the value to false.
Also defines methods named bits, bit_fields, and bit_dump with the behaviors
below. These methods are shared across all of the boolean meta-methods
defined by a single class.
- class_methods
- .
Basic Behaviors: The following types of bit-level accessor methods are
available.
- get_set
- Returns the value of the named flag. If called with an
argument, it first sets the named flag to the truth-value of the
argument.
- set_true
- Sets the value to true.
- set_false
- Sets the value to false.
Group Methods: The following types of methods manipulate the overall
vector value.
- bits
- Returns the vector containing all of the bit fields
(remember however that a vector containing all 0 bits is still true).
- bit_dump
- Returns a hash of the flag-name/flag-value pairs.
- bits_size
- Returns the number of bits that can fit into the current
vector.
- bits_complement
- Returns the twos-complement of the vector.
- bit_pos_get
- Takes a single argument and returns the value of the bit
stored in that position.
- bit_pos_set
- Takes two arguments and sets the bit stored in the position
of the first argument to the value of the second argument.
Class Methods: The following types of class methods are available.
- bit_names
- Returns a list of all the flags by name.
Creates accessor methods for manipulating arrays of values.
Interfaces: The following calling interfaces are available.
- default
- Provides get_set behavior for *, and
verb_* methods for the non-get behaviors below.
- minimal
- Provides get_set behavior for *, and
*_verb methods for clear behavior.
- get_set_items
- Provides the get_set_items for *.
- x_verb
- Provides get_push behavior for *, and
*_verb methods for the non-get behaviors below.
- get_set_ref
- Provides the get_set_ref for *.
- get_set_ref_help
- Provides the get_set_ref for *, and
verb_* methods for the non-get behaviors below.
Behaviors: The following types of accessor methods are available.
- get_set_items
- Called with no arguments returns a reference to the array
stored in the slot.
Called with one simple scalar argument it treats the argument as an index
and returns the value stored under that index.
Called with more than one argument, treats them as a series of index/value
pairs and adds them to the array.
- get_push
- If arguments are passed, these values are pushed on to the
list; if a single array ref is passed, its values are used as the
arguments.
This method returns the list of values stored in the slot. In an array
context it returns them as an array and in a scalar context as a reference
to the array.
- get_set_ref
- If arguments are passed, these values are placed on the
list, replacing the current contents; if a single array ref is passed, its
values are used as the arguments.
This method returns the list of values stored in the slot. In an array
context it returns them as an array and in a scalar context as a reference
to the array.
- get_set
- If arguments are passed, these values are placed on the
list, replacing the current contents.
This method returns the list of values stored in the slot. In an array
context it returns them as an array and in a scalar context as a reference
to the array.
- push
- Append items to tail.
- pop
- Remove an item from the tail.
- shift
- Remove an item from the front.
- unshift
- Prepend items to front.
- splice
- Remove or replace items.
- clear
- Remove all items.
- count
- Returns the number of item in the list.
Creates accessor methods for manipulating hashes of key-value pairs.
Interfaces: The following calling interfaces are available.
- default
- Provides get_set behavior for *, and
*_verb methods for most of the other behaviors below.
- get_set_items
- Provides the get_set_items for *.
Behaviors: The following types of accessor methods are available.
- get_set_items
- Called with no arguments returns a reference to the hash
stored.
Called with one simple scalar argument it treats the argument as a key and
returns the value stored under that key.
Called with more than one argument, treats them as a series of key/value
pairs and adds them to the hash.
- get_push
- Called with no arguments returns the hash stored, as a hash
in a list context or as a reference in a scalar context.
Called with one simple scalar argument it treats the argument as a key and
returns the value stored under that key.
Called with one array reference argument, the array elements are considered
to be be keys of the hash. x returns the list of values stored under those
keys (also known as a hash slice.)
Called with one hash reference argument, the keys and values of the hash are
added to the hash.
Called with more than one argument, treats them as a series of key/value
pairs and adds them to the hash.
- get_set
- Like get_push, except if called with more then one
argument, empties the current hash items before adding those arguments to
the hash.
- push
- Called with one hash reference argument, the keys and
values of the hash are added to the hash.
Called with more than one argument, treats them as a series of key/value
pairs and adds them to the hash.
- keys
- Returns a list of the keys of the hash.
- values
- Returns a list of the values in the hash.
- tally
- Takes a list of arguments and for each scalar in the list
increments the value stored in the hash and returns a list of the current
(after the increment) values.
- exists
- Takes a single key, returns whether that key exists in the
hash.
- delete
- Takes a list, deletes each key from the hash, and returns
the corresponding values.
- clear
- Resets hash to empty.
A variant of Generic:hash which initializes the hash by tieing it to a
caller-specified package.
See the documentation on "Generic:hash" for interfaces and behaviors.
Parameters: The following parameters
must be provided:
- tie
-
Required. The name of the class to tie to. Make
sure you have "use"d the required class.
- args
-
Required. Additional arguments for the tie, as an
array ref.
Example:
use Class::MakeMethods
tie_hash => [ hits => { tie => q/Tie::RefHash/, args => [] } ];
use Class::MakeMethods
tie_hash => [ [qw(hits errors)] => { tie => q/Tie::RefHash/, args => [] } ];
use Class::MakeMethods
tie_hash => [ { name => hits, tie => q/Tie::RefHash/, args => [] } ];
Creates accessor methods for manipulating hashes of array-refs.
Interfaces: The following calling interfaces are available.
- default
- Provides get behavior for *, and
*_verb methods for the other behaviors below.
Behaviors: The following types of accessor methods are available.
- get
- Returns all the values for all the given keys, in order. If
no keys are given, returns all the values (in an unspecified key order).
The result is returned as an arrayref in scalar context. This arrayref is
not part of the data structure; messing with it will not affect the
contents directly (even if a single key was provided as argument.)
If any argument is provided which is an arrayref, then the members of that
array are used as keys. Thus, the trivial empty-key case may be utilized
with an argument of [].
- keys
- Returns the keys of the hash. As an arrayref in scalar
context.
- exists
- Takes a list of keys, and returns whether all of the key
exists in the hash (i.e., the "and" of whether the individual
keys exist).
- delete
- Takes a list, deletes each key from the hash.
- push
- Takes a key, and some values. Pushes the values onto the
list denoted by the key. If the first argument is an arrayref, then each
element of that arrayref is treated as a key and the elements pushed onto
each appropriate list.
- pop
- Takes a list of keys, and pops each one. Returns the list
of popped elements. undef is returned in the list for each key that is has
an empty list.
- unshift
- Like push, only the from the other end of the lists.
- shift
- Like pop, only the from the other end of the lists.
- splice
- Takes a key, offset, length, and a values list. Splices the
list named by the key. Anything from the offset argument (inclusive) may
be omitted. See "splice" in perlfunc.
- clear
- Takes a list of keys. Resets each named list to empty (but
does not delete the keys.)
- count
- Takes a list of keys. Returns the sum of the number of
elements for each named list.
- index
- Takes a key, and a list of indices. Returns a list of each
item at the corresponding index in the list of the given key. Uses undef
for indices beyond range.
- remove
- Takes a key, and a list of indices. Removes each
corresponding item from the named list. The indices are effectively looked
up at the point of call -- thus removing indices 3, 1 from list (a, b, c,
d) will remove (d) and (b).
- sift
- Takes a key, and a set of named arguments, which may be a
list or a hash ref. Removes list members based on a grep-like
approach.
- filter
- The filter function used (as a coderef). Is passed two
arguments, the value compared against, and the value in the list that is
potential for grepping out. If returns true, the value is removed. Default
is "sub { $_[0] == $_[1] }".
- keys
- The list keys to sift through (as an arrayref). Unknown
keys are ignored. Default: all the known keys.
- values
- The values to sift out (as an arrayref). Default:
"[undef]"
Creates accessor methods for manipulating references to objects.
In addition to creating a method to get and set the object reference, the
meta-method can also define forwarded methods that automatically pass calls
onto the object stored in that slot; see the description of the 'delegate'
parameter below.
Interfaces: The following calling interfaces are available.
- default
- Provides get_set behavior for *, clear behavior for
'delete_*', and forwarding methods for any values in the method's
'delegate' or 'soft_delegate' parameters.
- get_and_set
- Provides named get method, set_x and clear_x
methods.
- get_init_and_set
- Provides named get_init method, set_x and
clear_x methods.
Behaviors: The following types of accessor methods are available.
- get_set
- The get_set method, if called with a reference to an object
of the given class as the first argument, stores it.
If called with any other arguments, creates and stores a new object, passing
the arguemnts to the new() method for the object.
If called without arguments, returns the current value, which may be
undefined if one has not been stored yet.
- get_set_init
- The get_set_init method, if called with a reference to an
object of the given class as the first argument, stores it.
If the slot is not filled yet it creates an object by calling the given new
method of the given class. Any arguments passed to the get_set_init method
are passed on to new.
In all cases the object now stored is returned.
- get_init
- If the instance is empty, creates and stores a new one.
Returns the instance.
- get
- Returns the current value, which may be undefined if one
has not been stored yet.
- set
- If called with a reference to an object of the given class
as the first argument, stores it.
If called with any other arguments, creates and stores a new object, passing
the arguments to the new() method.
If called without arguments, creates and stores a new object, without any
arguments to the new() method.
- clear
- Removes the reference value.
- forwarding
- If a 'delegate' or 'soft_delegate' parameter is provided,
methods with those names are created that are forwarded directly to the
object in the slot, as described below.
Parameters: The following parameters are supported:
- class
-
Required. The type of object that will be
stored.
- new_method
- The name of the method to call on the above class to create
a new instance. Defaults to 'new'.
- delegate
- The methods to forward to the object. Can contain a method
name, a string of space-spearated method names, or an array of method
names. This type of method will croak if it is called when the target
object is not defined.
- soft_delegate
- The methods to forward to the object, if it is present. Can
contain a method name, a string of space-spearated method names, or an
array of method names. This type of method will return nothing if it is
called when the target object is not defined.
Creates methods to handle an instance of the calling class.
PROFILES
- default
- Provides named get method, and verb_x set,
new, and clear methods.
- -implicit_new
- Provides named get_init method, and verb_x
set, and clear methods.
- -x_verb
- Provides named get method, and x_verb set,
new, and clear methods.
Behaviors: The following types of accessor methods are available.
- get
- Returns the value of the instance parameter, which may be
undefined if one has not been stored yet.
- get_init
- If the instance is empty, creates and stores a new one.
Returns the instance.
- set
- Takes a single argument and sets the instance to that
value.
- new
- Creates and stores a new instance.
- clear
- Sets the instance parameter to undef.
Parameters: The following parameters are supported:
- instance
- Holds the instance reference. Defaults to undef
- new_method
- The name of the method to call when creating a new
instance. Defaults to 'new'.
Creates accessor methods for manipulating references to arrays of object
references.
Operates like "Generic:array", but prior to adding any item to the
array, it first checks to see if it is an instance of the designated class,
and if not passes it as an argument to that class's new method and stores the
result instead.
Forwarded methods return a list of the results returned by "map"ing
the method over each object in the array.
See the documentation on "Generic:array" for interfaces and behaviors.
Parameters: The following parameters are supported:
- class
-
Required. The type of object that will be
stored.
- delegate
- The methods to forward to the object. Can contain a method
name, a string of space-spearated method names, or an array of method
names.
- new_method
- The name of the method to call on the above class to create
a new instance. Defaults to 'new'.
Creates accessor methods for manipulating references to subroutines.
Interfaces: The following calling interfaces are available.
- default
- Provides the call_set functionality.
- method
- Provides the call_method functionality.
Behaviors: The following types of accessor methods are available.
- call_set
- If called with one argument which is a CODE reference, it
installs that code in the slot. Otherwise it runs the code stored in the
slot with whatever arguments (including none) were passed in.
- call_method
- Just like call_set, except the code is called like a
method, with $self as its first argument. Basically, you are creating a
method which can be different for each object.
Creates accessor methods for manipulating either strings or references to
subroutines.
You can store any scalar value; code refs are executed when you retrieve the
value, while other scalars are returned as-is.
Interfaces: The following calling interfaces are available.
- default
- Provides the call_set functionality.
- method
- Provides the call_method functionality.
- eiffel
- Provides the named get_method, and a helper set_*
method.
Behaviors: The following types of accessor methods are available.
- get_set_call
- If called with an argument, either a CODE reference or some
other scalar, it installs that code in the slot. Otherwise, if the current
value runs the code stored in the slot with whatever arguments (including
none) were passed in.
- get_set_method
- Just like call_set, except the code is called like a
method, with $self as its first argument. Basically, you are creating a
method which can be different for each object.
See Class::MakeMethods for general information about this distribution.
See Class::MakeMethods::Template for information about this family of
subclasses.