Document the limitation of Attribute::Handlers w.r.t. UNITCHECK blocks.
[p5sagit/p5-mst-13.2.git] / lib / Attribute / Handlers.pm
CommitLineData
0e9b9e0c 1package Attribute::Handlers;
2use 5.006;
3use Carp;
4use warnings;
6d9eb87b 5$VERSION = '0.78_03';
0e9b9e0c 6# $DB::single=1;
7
8my %symcache;
9sub findsym {
10 my ($pkg, $ref, $type) = @_;
11 return $symcache{$pkg,$ref} if $symcache{$pkg,$ref};
12 $type ||= ref($ref);
13 my $found;
14 foreach my $sym ( values %{$pkg."::"} ) {
15 return $symcache{$pkg,$ref} = \$sym
16 if *{$sym}{$type} && *{$sym}{$type} == $ref;
17 }
18}
19
20my %validtype = (
21 VAR => [qw[SCALAR ARRAY HASH]],
22 ANY => [qw[SCALAR ARRAY HASH CODE]],
23 "" => [qw[SCALAR ARRAY HASH CODE]],
24 SCALAR => [qw[SCALAR]],
25 ARRAY => [qw[ARRAY]],
26 HASH => [qw[HASH]],
27 CODE => [qw[CODE]],
28);
29my %lastattr;
30my @declarations;
31my %raw;
32my %phase;
33my %sigil = (SCALAR=>'$', ARRAY=>'@', HASH=>'%');
34my $global_phase = 0;
35my %global_phases = (
36 BEGIN => 0,
37 CHECK => 1,
38 INIT => 2,
39 END => 3,
40);
41my @global_phases = qw(BEGIN CHECK INIT END);
42
43sub _usage_AH_ {
44 croak "Usage: use $_[0] autotie => {AttrName => TieClassName,...}";
45}
46
47my $qual_id = qr/^[_a-z]\w*(::[_a-z]\w*)*$/i;
48
49sub import {
50 my $class = shift @_;
51 return unless $class eq "Attribute::Handlers";
52 while (@_) {
53 my $cmd = shift;
54 if ($cmd =~ /^autotie((?:ref)?)$/) {
55 my $tiedata = ($1 ? '$ref, ' : '') . '@$data';
56 my $mapping = shift;
57 _usage_AH_ $class unless ref($mapping) eq 'HASH';
58 while (my($attr, $tieclass) = each %$mapping) {
59 $tieclass =~ s/^([_a-z]\w*(::[_a-z]\w*)*)(.*)/$1/is;
60 my $args = $3||'()';
61 _usage_AH_ $class unless $attr =~ $qual_id
62 && $tieclass =~ $qual_id
63 && eval "use base $tieclass; 1";
64 if ($tieclass->isa('Exporter')) {
65 local $Exporter::ExportLevel = 2;
66 $tieclass->import(eval $args);
67 }
68 $attr =~ s/__CALLER__/caller(1)/e;
69 $attr = caller()."::".$attr unless $attr =~ /::/;
70 eval qq{
71 sub $attr : ATTR(VAR) {
72 my (\$ref, \$data) = \@_[2,4];
73 my \$was_arrayref = ref \$data eq 'ARRAY';
74 \$data = [ \$data ] unless \$was_arrayref;
75 my \$type = ref(\$ref)||"value (".(\$ref||"<undef>").")";
76 (\$type eq 'SCALAR')? tie \$\$ref,'$tieclass',$tiedata
77 :(\$type eq 'ARRAY') ? tie \@\$ref,'$tieclass',$tiedata
78 :(\$type eq 'HASH') ? tie \%\$ref,'$tieclass',$tiedata
79 : die "Can't autotie a \$type\n"
80 } 1
81 } or die "Internal error: $@";
82 }
83 }
84 else {
85 croak "Can't understand $_";
86 }
87 }
88}
89sub _resolve_lastattr {
90 return unless $lastattr{ref};
91 my $sym = findsym @lastattr{'pkg','ref'}
92 or die "Internal error: $lastattr{pkg} symbol went missing";
93 my $name = *{$sym}{NAME};
94 warn "Declaration of $name attribute in package $lastattr{pkg} may clash with future reserved word\n"
95 if $^W and $name !~ /[A-Z]/;
96 foreach ( @{$validtype{$lastattr{type}}} ) {
97 *{"$lastattr{pkg}::_ATTR_${_}_${name}"} = $lastattr{ref};
98 }
99 %lastattr = ();
100}
101
102sub AUTOLOAD {
103 my ($class) = $AUTOLOAD =~ m/(.*)::/g;
104 $AUTOLOAD =~ m/_ATTR_(.*?)_(.*)/ or
105 croak "Can't locate class method '$AUTOLOAD' via package '$class'";
4da5364c 106 croak "Attribute handler '$2' doesn't handle $1 attributes";
0e9b9e0c 107}
108
109sub DESTROY {}
110
5ddc4af4 111my $builtin = qr/lvalue|method|locked|unique|shared/;
0e9b9e0c 112
113sub _gen_handler_AH_() {
114 return sub {
115 _resolve_lastattr;
116 my ($pkg, $ref, @attrs) = @_;
117 foreach (@attrs) {
118 my ($attr, $data) = /^([a-z_]\w*)(?:[(](.*)[)])?$/is or next;
119 if ($attr eq 'ATTR') {
120 $data ||= "ANY";
121 $raw{$ref} = $data =~ s/\s*,?\s*RAWDATA\s*,?\s*//;
122 $phase{$ref}{BEGIN} = 1
123 if $data =~ s/\s*,?\s*(BEGIN)\s*,?\s*//;
124 $phase{$ref}{INIT} = 1
125 if $data =~ s/\s*,?\s*(INIT)\s*,?\s*//;
126 $phase{$ref}{END} = 1
127 if $data =~ s/\s*,?\s*(END)\s*,?\s*//;
128 $phase{$ref}{CHECK} = 1
129 if $data =~ s/\s*,?\s*(CHECK)\s*,?\s*//
130 || ! keys %{$phase{$ref}};
131 # Added for cleanup to not pollute next call.
132 (%lastattr = ()),
133 croak "Can't have two ATTR specifiers on one subroutine"
134 if keys %lastattr;
135 croak "Bad attribute type: ATTR($data)"
136 unless $validtype{$data};
137 %lastattr=(pkg=>$pkg,ref=>$ref,type=>$data);
138 }
139 else {
c760c918 140 my $type = ref $ref;
141 my $handler = $pkg->can("_ATTR_${type}_${attr}");
0e9b9e0c 142 next unless $handler;
143 my $decl = [$pkg, $ref, $attr, $data,
144 $raw{$handler}, $phase{$handler}];
145 foreach my $gphase (@global_phases) {
146 _apply_handler_AH_($decl,$gphase)
147 if $global_phases{$gphase} <= $global_phase;
148 }
24952a9c 149 if ($global_phase != 0) {
150 # if _gen_handler_AH_ is being called after
151 # CHECK it's for a lexical, so make sure
152 # it didn't want to run anything later
153
154 local $Carp::CarpLevel = 2;
155 carp "Won't be able to apply END handler"
156 if $phase{$handler}{END};
157 }
158 else {
159 push @declarations, $decl
160 }
0e9b9e0c 161 }
162 $_ = undef;
163 }
164 return grep {defined && !/$builtin/} @attrs;
165 }
166}
167
290b54b8 168*{"Attribute::Handlers::UNIVERSAL::MODIFY_${_}_ATTRIBUTES"} =
169 _gen_handler_AH_ foreach @{$validtype{ANY}};
170push @UNIVERSAL::ISA, 'Attribute::Handlers::UNIVERSAL'
171 unless grep /^Attribute::Handlers::UNIVERSAL$/, @UNIVERSAL::ISA;
0e9b9e0c 172
173sub _apply_handler_AH_ {
174 my ($declaration, $phase) = @_;
175 my ($pkg, $ref, $attr, $data, $raw, $handlerphase) = @$declaration;
176 return unless $handlerphase->{$phase};
177 # print STDERR "Handling $attr on $ref in $phase with [$data]\n";
178 my $type = ref $ref;
179 my $handler = "_ATTR_${type}_${attr}";
180 my $sym = findsym($pkg, $ref);
181 $sym ||= $type eq 'CODE' ? 'ANON' : 'LEXICAL';
182 no warnings;
183 my $evaled = !$raw && eval("package $pkg; no warnings;
184 local \$SIG{__WARN__}=sub{die}; [$data]");
185 $data = ($evaled && $data =~ /^\s*\[/) ? [$evaled]
186 : ($evaled) ? $evaled
187 : [$data];
188 $pkg->$handler($sym,
189 (ref $sym eq 'GLOB' ? *{$sym}{ref $ref}||$ref : $ref),
190 $attr,
191 (@$data>1? $data : $data->[0]),
192 $phase,
193 );
194 return 1;
195}
196
ba690e32 197{
198 no warnings 'void';
199 CHECK {
200 $global_phase++;
201 _resolve_lastattr;
202 _apply_handler_AH_($_,'CHECK') foreach @declarations;
203 }
0e9b9e0c 204
ba690e32 205 INIT {
206 $global_phase++;
207 _apply_handler_AH_($_,'INIT') foreach @declarations
208 }
209}
0e9b9e0c 210
211END { $global_phase++; _apply_handler_AH_($_,'END') foreach @declarations }
212
2131;
214__END__
215
216=head1 NAME
217
218Attribute::Handlers - Simpler definition of attribute handlers
219
220=head1 VERSION
221
f903cfef 222This document describes version 0.78 of Attribute::Handlers,
223released October 5, 2002.
0e9b9e0c 224
225=head1 SYNOPSIS
226
227 package MyClass;
228 require v5.6.0;
229 use Attribute::Handlers;
230 no warnings 'redefine';
231
232
233 sub Good : ATTR(SCALAR) {
234 my ($package, $symbol, $referent, $attr, $data) = @_;
235
236 # Invoked for any scalar variable with a :Good attribute,
237 # provided the variable was declared in MyClass (or
238 # a derived class) or typed to MyClass.
239
240 # Do whatever to $referent here (executed in CHECK phase).
241 ...
242 }
243
244 sub Bad : ATTR(SCALAR) {
245 # Invoked for any scalar variable with a :Bad attribute,
246 # provided the variable was declared in MyClass (or
247 # a derived class) or typed to MyClass.
248 ...
249 }
250
251 sub Good : ATTR(ARRAY) {
252 # Invoked for any array variable with a :Good attribute,
253 # provided the variable was declared in MyClass (or
254 # a derived class) or typed to MyClass.
255 ...
256 }
257
258 sub Good : ATTR(HASH) {
259 # Invoked for any hash variable with a :Good attribute,
260 # provided the variable was declared in MyClass (or
261 # a derived class) or typed to MyClass.
262 ...
263 }
264
265 sub Ugly : ATTR(CODE) {
266 # Invoked for any subroutine declared in MyClass (or a
267 # derived class) with an :Ugly attribute.
268 ...
269 }
270
271 sub Omni : ATTR {
272 # Invoked for any scalar, array, hash, or subroutine
273 # with an :Omni attribute, provided the variable or
274 # subroutine was declared in MyClass (or a derived class)
275 # or the variable was typed to MyClass.
276 # Use ref($_[2]) to determine what kind of referent it was.
277 ...
278 }
279
280
281 use Attribute::Handlers autotie => { Cycle => Tie::Cycle };
282
283 my $next : Cycle(['A'..'Z']);
284
285
286=head1 DESCRIPTION
287
288This module, when inherited by a package, allows that package's class to
289define attribute handler subroutines for specific attributes. Variables
290and subroutines subsequently defined in that package, or in packages
291derived from that package may be given attributes with the same names as
292the attribute handler subroutines, which will then be called in one of
293the compilation phases (i.e. in a C<BEGIN>, C<CHECK>, C<INIT>, or C<END>
6d9eb87b 294block). (C<UNITCHECK> blocks don't correspond to a global compilation
295phase, so they can't be specified here.)
0e9b9e0c 296
297To create a handler, define it as a subroutine with the same name as
298the desired attribute, and declare the subroutine itself with the
299attribute C<:ATTR>. For example:
300
301 package LoudDecl;
302 use Attribute::Handlers;
303
304 sub Loud :ATTR {
305 my ($package, $symbol, $referent, $attr, $data, $phase) = @_;
306 print STDERR
307 ref($referent), " ",
308 *{$symbol}{NAME}, " ",
309 "($referent) ", "was just declared ",
310 "and ascribed the ${attr} attribute ",
311 "with data ($data)\n",
312 "in phase $phase\n";
313 }
314
315This creates a handler for the attribute C<:Loud> in the class LoudDecl.
316Thereafter, any subroutine declared with a C<:Loud> attribute in the class
317LoudDecl:
318
319 package LoudDecl;
320
321 sub foo: Loud {...}
322
323causes the above handler to be invoked, and passed:
324
325=over
326
327=item [0]
328
329the name of the package into which it was declared;
330
331=item [1]
332
333a reference to the symbol table entry (typeglob) containing the subroutine;
334
335=item [2]
336
337a reference to the subroutine;
338
339=item [3]
340
341the name of the attribute;
342
343=item [4]
344
345any data associated with that attribute;
346
347=item [5]
348
349the name of the phase in which the handler is being invoked.
350
351=back
352
353Likewise, declaring any variables with the C<:Loud> attribute within the
354package:
355
356 package LoudDecl;
357
358 my $foo :Loud;
359 my @foo :Loud;
360 my %foo :Loud;
361
362will cause the handler to be called with a similar argument list (except,
363of course, that C<$_[2]> will be a reference to the variable).
364
365The package name argument will typically be the name of the class into
366which the subroutine was declared, but it may also be the name of a derived
367class (since handlers are inherited).
368
369If a lexical variable is given an attribute, there is no symbol table to
370which it belongs, so the symbol table argument (C<$_[1]>) is set to the
371string C<'LEXICAL'> in that case. Likewise, ascribing an attribute to
372an anonymous subroutine results in a symbol table argument of C<'ANON'>.
373
374The data argument passes in the value (if any) associated with the
375attribute. For example, if C<&foo> had been declared:
376
377 sub foo :Loud("turn it up to 11, man!") {...}
378
379then the string C<"turn it up to 11, man!"> would be passed as the
380last argument.
381
382Attribute::Handlers makes strenuous efforts to convert
383the data argument (C<$_[4]>) to a useable form before passing it to
384the handler (but see L<"Non-interpretive attribute handlers">).
385For example, all of these:
386
387 sub foo :Loud(till=>ears=>are=>bleeding) {...}
388 sub foo :Loud(['till','ears','are','bleeding']) {...}
389 sub foo :Loud(qw/till ears are bleeding/) {...}
390 sub foo :Loud(qw/my, ears, are, bleeding/) {...}
391 sub foo :Loud(till,ears,are,bleeding) {...}
392
393causes it to pass C<['till','ears','are','bleeding']> as the handler's
394data argument. However, if the data can't be parsed as valid Perl, then
395it is passed as an uninterpreted string. For example:
396
397 sub foo :Loud(my,ears,are,bleeding) {...}
398 sub foo :Loud(qw/my ears are bleeding) {...}
399
400cause the strings C<'my,ears,are,bleeding'> and C<'qw/my ears are bleeding'>
401respectively to be passed as the data argument.
402
403If the attribute has only a single associated scalar data value, that value is
404passed as a scalar. If multiple values are associated, they are passed as an
405array reference. If no value is associated with the attribute, C<undef> is
406passed.
407
408
409=head2 Typed lexicals
410
411Regardless of the package in which it is declared, if a lexical variable is
412ascribed an attribute, the handler that is invoked is the one belonging to
413the package to which it is typed. For example, the following declarations:
414
415 package OtherClass;
416
417 my LoudDecl $loudobj : Loud;
418 my LoudDecl @loudobjs : Loud;
419 my LoudDecl %loudobjex : Loud;
420
421causes the LoudDecl::Loud handler to be invoked (even if OtherClass also
422defines a handler for C<:Loud> attributes).
423
424
425=head2 Type-specific attribute handlers
426
427If an attribute handler is declared and the C<:ATTR> specifier is
428given the name of a built-in type (C<SCALAR>, C<ARRAY>, C<HASH>, or C<CODE>),
429the handler is only applied to declarations of that type. For example,
430the following definition:
431
432 package LoudDecl;
433
434 sub RealLoud :ATTR(SCALAR) { print "Yeeeeow!" }
435
436creates an attribute handler that applies only to scalars:
437
438
439 package Painful;
440 use base LoudDecl;
441
442 my $metal : RealLoud; # invokes &LoudDecl::RealLoud
443 my @metal : RealLoud; # error: unknown attribute
444 my %metal : RealLoud; # error: unknown attribute
445 sub metal : RealLoud {...} # error: unknown attribute
446
447You can, of course, declare separate handlers for these types as well
448(but you'll need to specify C<no warnings 'redefine'> to do it quietly):
449
450 package LoudDecl;
451 use Attribute::Handlers;
452 no warnings 'redefine';
453
454 sub RealLoud :ATTR(SCALAR) { print "Yeeeeow!" }
455 sub RealLoud :ATTR(ARRAY) { print "Urrrrrrrrrr!" }
456 sub RealLoud :ATTR(HASH) { print "Arrrrrgggghhhhhh!" }
457 sub RealLoud :ATTR(CODE) { croak "Real loud sub torpedoed" }
458
459You can also explicitly indicate that a single handler is meant to be
460used for all types of referents like so:
461
462 package LoudDecl;
463 use Attribute::Handlers;
464
465 sub SeriousLoud :ATTR(ANY) { warn "Hearing loss imminent" }
466
467(I.e. C<ATTR(ANY)> is a synonym for C<:ATTR>).
468
469
470=head2 Non-interpretive attribute handlers
471
472Occasionally the strenuous efforts Attribute::Handlers makes to convert
473the data argument (C<$_[4]>) to a useable form before passing it to
474the handler get in the way.
475
476You can turn off that eagerness-to-help by declaring
477an attribute handler with the keyword C<RAWDATA>. For example:
478
479 sub Raw : ATTR(RAWDATA) {...}
480 sub Nekkid : ATTR(SCALAR,RAWDATA) {...}
481 sub Au::Naturale : ATTR(RAWDATA,ANY) {...}
482
483Then the handler makes absolutely no attempt to interpret the data it
484receives and simply passes it as a string:
485
486 my $power : Raw(1..100); # handlers receives "1..100"
487
488=head2 Phase-specific attribute handlers
489
490By default, attribute handlers are called at the end of the compilation
491phase (in a C<CHECK> block). This seems to be optimal in most cases because
492most things that can be defined are defined by that point but nothing has
493been executed.
494
495However, it is possible to set up attribute handlers that are called at
496other points in the program's compilation or execution, by explicitly
497stating the phase (or phases) in which you wish the attribute handler to
498be called. For example:
499
500 sub Early :ATTR(SCALAR,BEGIN) {...}
501 sub Normal :ATTR(SCALAR,CHECK) {...}
502 sub Late :ATTR(SCALAR,INIT) {...}
503 sub Final :ATTR(SCALAR,END) {...}
504 sub Bookends :ATTR(SCALAR,BEGIN,END) {...}
505
506As the last example indicates, a handler may be set up to be (re)called in
507two or more phases. The phase name is passed as the handler's final argument.
508
509Note that attribute handlers that are scheduled for the C<BEGIN> phase
510are handled as soon as the attribute is detected (i.e. before any
511subsequently defined C<BEGIN> blocks are executed).
512
513
514=head2 Attributes as C<tie> interfaces
515
516Attributes make an excellent and intuitive interface through which to tie
517variables. For example:
518
519 use Attribute::Handlers;
520 use Tie::Cycle;
521
522 sub UNIVERSAL::Cycle : ATTR(SCALAR) {
523 my ($package, $symbol, $referent, $attr, $data, $phase) = @_;
524 $data = [ $data ] unless ref $data eq 'ARRAY';
525 tie $$referent, 'Tie::Cycle', $data;
526 }
527
528 # and thereafter...
529
530 package main;
531
532 my $next : Cycle('A'..'Z'); # $next is now a tied variable
533
534 while (<>) {
535 print $next;
536 }
537
538Note that, because the C<Cycle> attribute receives its arguments in the
539C<$data> variable, if the attribute is given a list of arguments, C<$data>
540will consist of a single array reference; otherwise, it will consist of the
541single argument directly. Since Tie::Cycle requires its cycling values to
542be passed as an array reference, this means that we need to wrap
543non-array-reference arguments in an array constructor:
544
545 $data = [ $data ] unless ref $data eq 'ARRAY';
546
547Typically, however, things are the other way around: the tieable class expects
548its arguments as a flattened list, so the attribute looks like:
549
550 sub UNIVERSAL::Cycle : ATTR(SCALAR) {
551 my ($package, $symbol, $referent, $attr, $data, $phase) = @_;
552 my @data = ref $data eq 'ARRAY' ? @$data : $data;
553 tie $$referent, 'Tie::Whatever', @data;
554 }
555
556
557This software pattern is so widely applicable that Attribute::Handlers
558provides a way to automate it: specifying C<'autotie'> in the
559C<use Attribute::Handlers> statement. So, the cycling example,
560could also be written:
561
562 use Attribute::Handlers autotie => { Cycle => 'Tie::Cycle' };
563
564 # and thereafter...
565
566 package main;
567
568 my $next : Cycle(['A'..'Z']); # $next is now a tied variable
569
570 while (<>) {
571 print $next;
572
573Note that we now have to pass the cycling values as an array reference,
574since the C<autotie> mechanism passes C<tie> a list of arguments as a list
575(as in the Tie::Whatever example), I<not> as an array reference (as in
576the original Tie::Cycle example at the start of this section).
577
578The argument after C<'autotie'> is a reference to a hash in which each key is
579the name of an attribute to be created, and each value is the class to which
580variables ascribed that attribute should be tied.
581
582Note that there is no longer any need to import the Tie::Cycle module --
583Attribute::Handlers takes care of that automagically. You can even pass
584arguments to the module's C<import> subroutine, by appending them to the
585class name. For example:
586
587 use Attribute::Handlers
588 autotie => { Dir => 'Tie::Dir qw(DIR_UNLINK)' };
589
590If the attribute name is unqualified, the attribute is installed in the
591current package. Otherwise it is installed in the qualifier's package:
592
593 package Here;
594
595 use Attribute::Handlers autotie => {
596 Other::Good => Tie::SecureHash, # tie attr installed in Other::
597 Bad => Tie::Taxes, # tie attr installed in Here::
598 UNIVERSAL::Ugly => Software::Patent # tie attr installed everywhere
599 };
600
601Autoties are most commonly used in the module to which they actually tie,
602and need to export their attributes to any module that calls them. To
3c4b39be 603facilitate this, Attribute::Handlers recognizes a special "pseudo-class" --
0e9b9e0c 604C<__CALLER__>, which may be specified as the qualifier of an attribute:
605
606 package Tie::Me::Kangaroo:Down::Sport;
607
f903cfef 608 use Attribute::Handlers autotie => { '__CALLER__::Roo' => __PACKAGE__ };
0e9b9e0c 609
610This causes Attribute::Handlers to define the C<Roo> attribute in the package
611that imports the Tie::Me::Kangaroo:Down::Sport module.
612
f903cfef 613Note that it is important to quote the __CALLER__::Roo identifier because
614a bug in perl 5.8 will refuse to parse it and cause an unknown error.
615
0e9b9e0c 616=head3 Passing the tied object to C<tie>
617
618Occasionally it is important to pass a reference to the object being tied
619to the TIESCALAR, TIEHASH, etc. that ties it.
620
621The C<autotie> mechanism supports this too. The following code:
622
623 use Attribute::Handlers autotieref => { Selfish => Tie::Selfish };
624 my $var : Selfish(@args);
625
626has the same effect as:
627
628 tie my $var, 'Tie::Selfish', @args;
629
630But when C<"autotieref"> is used instead of C<"autotie">:
631
632 use Attribute::Handlers autotieref => { Selfish => Tie::Selfish };
633 my $var : Selfish(@args);
634
635the effect is to pass the C<tie> call an extra reference to the variable
636being tied:
637
638 tie my $var, 'Tie::Selfish', \$var, @args;
639
640
641
642=head1 EXAMPLES
643
644If the class shown in L<SYNOPSIS> were placed in the MyClass.pm
645module, then the following code:
646
647 package main;
648 use MyClass;
649
650 my MyClass $slr :Good :Bad(1**1-1) :Omni(-vorous);
651
652 package SomeOtherClass;
653 use base MyClass;
654
655 sub tent { 'acle' }
656
657 sub fn :Ugly(sister) :Omni('po',tent()) {...}
658 my @arr :Good :Omni(s/cie/nt/);
659 my %hsh :Good(q/bye) :Omni(q/bus/);
660
661
662would cause the following handlers to be invoked:
663
664 # my MyClass $slr :Good :Bad(1**1-1) :Omni(-vorous);
665
666 MyClass::Good:ATTR(SCALAR)( 'MyClass', # class
667 'LEXICAL', # no typeglob
668 \$slr, # referent
669 'Good', # attr name
670 undef # no attr data
671 'CHECK', # compiler phase
672 );
673
674 MyClass::Bad:ATTR(SCALAR)( 'MyClass', # class
675 'LEXICAL', # no typeglob
676 \$slr, # referent
677 'Bad', # attr name
678 0 # eval'd attr data
679 'CHECK', # compiler phase
680 );
681
682 MyClass::Omni:ATTR(SCALAR)( 'MyClass', # class
683 'LEXICAL', # no typeglob
684 \$slr, # referent
685 'Omni', # attr name
686 '-vorous' # eval'd attr data
687 'CHECK', # compiler phase
688 );
689
690
691 # sub fn :Ugly(sister) :Omni('po',tent()) {...}
692
693 MyClass::UGLY:ATTR(CODE)( 'SomeOtherClass', # class
694 \*SomeOtherClass::fn, # typeglob
695 \&SomeOtherClass::fn, # referent
696 'Ugly', # attr name
697 'sister' # eval'd attr data
698 'CHECK', # compiler phase
699 );
700
701 MyClass::Omni:ATTR(CODE)( 'SomeOtherClass', # class
702 \*SomeOtherClass::fn, # typeglob
703 \&SomeOtherClass::fn, # referent
704 'Omni', # attr name
705 ['po','acle'] # eval'd attr data
706 'CHECK', # compiler phase
707 );
708
709
710 # my @arr :Good :Omni(s/cie/nt/);
711
712 MyClass::Good:ATTR(ARRAY)( 'SomeOtherClass', # class
713 'LEXICAL', # no typeglob
714 \@arr, # referent
715 'Good', # attr name
716 undef # no attr data
717 'CHECK', # compiler phase
718 );
719
720 MyClass::Omni:ATTR(ARRAY)( 'SomeOtherClass', # class
721 'LEXICAL', # no typeglob
722 \@arr, # referent
723 'Omni', # attr name
724 "" # eval'd attr data
725 'CHECK', # compiler phase
726 );
727
728
729 # my %hsh :Good(q/bye) :Omni(q/bus/);
730
731 MyClass::Good:ATTR(HASH)( 'SomeOtherClass', # class
732 'LEXICAL', # no typeglob
733 \%hsh, # referent
734 'Good', # attr name
735 'q/bye' # raw attr data
736 'CHECK', # compiler phase
737 );
738
739 MyClass::Omni:ATTR(HASH)( 'SomeOtherClass', # class
740 'LEXICAL', # no typeglob
741 \%hsh, # referent
742 'Omni', # attr name
743 'bus' # eval'd attr data
744 'CHECK', # compiler phase
745 );
746
747
748Installing handlers into UNIVERSAL, makes them...err..universal.
749For example:
750
751 package Descriptions;
752 use Attribute::Handlers;
753
754 my %name;
755 sub name { return $name{$_[2]}||*{$_[1]}{NAME} }
756
757 sub UNIVERSAL::Name :ATTR {
758 $name{$_[2]} = $_[4];
759 }
760
761 sub UNIVERSAL::Purpose :ATTR {
762 print STDERR "Purpose of ", &name, " is $_[4]\n";
763 }
764
765 sub UNIVERSAL::Unit :ATTR {
766 print STDERR &name, " measured in $_[4]\n";
767 }
768
769Let's you write:
770
771 use Descriptions;
772
773 my $capacity : Name(capacity)
774 : Purpose(to store max storage capacity for files)
775 : Unit(Gb);
776
777
778 package Other;
779
780 sub foo : Purpose(to foo all data before barring it) { }
781
782 # etc.
783
784
785=head1 DIAGNOSTICS
786
787=over
788
789=item C<Bad attribute type: ATTR(%s)>
790
791An attribute handler was specified with an C<:ATTR(I<ref_type>)>, but the
792type of referent it was defined to handle wasn't one of the five permitted:
793C<SCALAR>, C<ARRAY>, C<HASH>, C<CODE>, or C<ANY>.
794
795=item C<Attribute handler %s doesn't handle %s attributes>
796
797A handler for attributes of the specified name I<was> defined, but not
798for the specified type of declaration. Typically encountered whe trying
799to apply a C<VAR> attribute handler to a subroutine, or a C<SCALAR>
800attribute handler to some other type of variable.
801
802=item C<Declaration of %s attribute in package %s may clash with future reserved word>
803
804A handler for an attributes with an all-lowercase name was declared. An
805attribute with an all-lowercase name might have a meaning to Perl
806itself some day, even though most don't yet. Use a mixed-case attribute
807name, instead.
808
809=item C<Can't have two ATTR specifiers on one subroutine>
810
811You just can't, okay?
812Instead, put all the specifications together with commas between them
813in a single C<ATTR(I<specification>)>.
814
815=item C<Can't autotie a %s>
816
817You can only declare autoties for types C<"SCALAR">, C<"ARRAY">, and
818C<"HASH">. They're the only things (apart from typeglobs -- which are
819not declarable) that Perl can tie.
820
821=item C<Internal error: %s symbol went missing>
822
823Something is rotten in the state of the program. An attributed
824subroutine ceased to exist between the point it was declared and the point
825at which its attribute handler(s) would have been called.
826
24952a9c 827=item C<Won't be able to apply END handler>
828
829You have defined an END handler for an attribute that is being applied
830to a lexical variable. Since the variable may not be available during END
831this won't happen.
832
0e9b9e0c 833=back
834
835=head1 AUTHOR
836
837Damian Conway (damian@conway.org)
838
839=head1 BUGS
840
841There are undoubtedly serious bugs lurking somewhere in code this funky :-)
842Bug reports and other feedback are most welcome.
843
844=head1 COPYRIGHT
845
846 Copyright (c) 2001, Damian Conway. All Rights Reserved.
847 This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed
848 and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself.