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1 | package Exporter; |
2 | |
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3 | require 5.006; |
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4 | |
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5 | # Be lean. |
6 | #use strict; |
7 | #no strict 'refs'; |
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8 | |
9 | our $Debug = 0; |
10 | our $ExportLevel = 0; |
11 | our $Verbose ||= 0; |
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12 | our $VERSION = '5.566'; |
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13 | $Carp::Internal{Exporter} = 1; |
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14 | |
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15 | sub as_heavy { |
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16 | require Exporter::Heavy; |
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17 | # Unfortunately, this does not work if the caller is aliased as *name = \&foo |
18 | # Thus the need to create a lot of identical subroutines |
19 | my $c = (caller(1))[3]; |
20 | $c =~ s/.*:://; |
21 | \&{"Exporter::Heavy::heavy_$c"}; |
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22 | } |
23 | |
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24 | sub export { |
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25 | goto &{as_heavy()}; |
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26 | } |
27 | |
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28 | sub import { |
29 | my $pkg = shift; |
30 | my $callpkg = caller($ExportLevel); |
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31 | |
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32 | # We *need* to treat @{"$pkg\::EXPORT_FAIL"} since Carp uses it :-( |
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33 | my($exports, $export_cache, $fail) |
34 | = (\@{"$pkg\::EXPORT"}, \%{"$pkg\::EXPORT"}, \@{"$pkg\::EXPORT_FAIL"}); |
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35 | return export $pkg, $callpkg, @_ |
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36 | if $Verbose or $Debug or @$fail > 1; |
37 | my $args = @_ or @_ = @$exports; |
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38 | |
39 | local $_; |
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40 | if ($args and not %$export_cache) { |
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41 | s/^&//, $export_cache->{$_} = 1 |
42 | foreach (@$exports, @{"$pkg\::EXPORT_OK"}); |
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43 | } |
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44 | my $heavy; |
45 | # Try very hard not to use {} and hence have to enter scope on the foreach |
46 | # We bomb out of the loop with last as soon as heavy is set. |
47 | if ($args or $fail) { |
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48 | ($heavy = (/\W/ or $args and not exists $export_cache->{$_} |
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49 | or @$fail and $_ eq $fail->[0])) and last |
50 | foreach (@_); |
51 | } else { |
52 | ($heavy = /\W/) and last |
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53 | foreach (@_); |
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54 | } |
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55 | return export $pkg, $callpkg, ($args ? @_ : ()) if $heavy; |
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56 | local $SIG{__WARN__} = |
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57 | sub {require Carp; &Carp::carp}; |
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58 | # shortcut for the common case of no type character |
59 | *{"$callpkg\::$_"} = \&{"$pkg\::$_"} foreach @_; |
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60 | } |
61 | |
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62 | # Default methods |
63 | |
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64 | sub export_fail { |
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65 | my $self = shift; |
66 | @_; |
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67 | } |
68 | |
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69 | # Unfortunately, caller(1)[3] "does not work" if the caller is aliased as |
70 | # *name = \&foo. Thus the need to create a lot of identical subroutines |
71 | # Otherwise we could have aliased them to export(). |
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72 | |
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73 | sub export_to_level { |
74 | goto &{as_heavy()}; |
75 | } |
76 | |
77 | sub export_tags { |
78 | goto &{as_heavy()}; |
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79 | } |
80 | |
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81 | sub export_ok_tags { |
82 | goto &{as_heavy()}; |
83 | } |
84 | |
85 | sub require_version { |
86 | goto &{as_heavy()}; |
87 | } |
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88 | |
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89 | 1; |
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90 | __END__ |
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91 | |
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92 | =head1 NAME |
93 | |
94 | Exporter - Implements default import method for modules |
95 | |
96 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
97 | |
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98 | In module YourModule.pm: |
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99 | |
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100 | package YourModule; |
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101 | require Exporter; |
102 | @ISA = qw(Exporter); |
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103 | @EXPORT_OK = qw(munge frobnicate); # symbols to export on request |
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104 | |
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105 | In other files which wish to use YourModule: |
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106 | |
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107 | use ModuleName qw(frobnicate); # import listed symbols |
108 | frobnicate ($left, $right) # calls YourModule::frobnicate |
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109 | |
110 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
111 | |
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112 | The Exporter module implements an C<import> method which allows a module |
113 | to export functions and variables to its users' namespaces. Many modules |
114 | use Exporter rather than implementing their own C<import> method because |
115 | Exporter provides a highly flexible interface, with an implementation optimised |
116 | for the common case. |
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117 | |
118 | Perl automatically calls the C<import> method when processing a |
119 | C<use> statement for a module. Modules and C<use> are documented |
120 | in L<perlfunc> and L<perlmod>. Understanding the concept of |
121 | modules and how the C<use> statement operates is important to |
122 | understanding the Exporter. |
123 | |
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124 | =head2 How to Export |
125 | |
126 | The arrays C<@EXPORT> and C<@EXPORT_OK> in a module hold lists of |
127 | symbols that are going to be exported into the users name space by |
128 | default, or which they can request to be exported, respectively. The |
129 | symbols can represent functions, scalars, arrays, hashes, or typeglobs. |
130 | The symbols must be given by full name with the exception that the |
131 | ampersand in front of a function is optional, e.g. |
132 | |
133 | @EXPORT = qw(afunc $scalar @array); # afunc is a function |
134 | @EXPORT_OK = qw(&bfunc %hash *typeglob); # explicit prefix on &bfunc |
135 | |
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136 | If you are only exporting function names it is recommended to omit the |
137 | ampersand, as the implementation is faster this way. |
138 | |
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139 | =head2 Selecting What To Export |
140 | |
141 | Do B<not> export method names! |
142 | |
143 | Do B<not> export anything else by default without a good reason! |
144 | |
145 | Exports pollute the namespace of the module user. If you must export |
146 | try to use @EXPORT_OK in preference to @EXPORT and avoid short or |
147 | common symbol names to reduce the risk of name clashes. |
148 | |
149 | Generally anything not exported is still accessible from outside the |
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150 | module using the ModuleName::item_name (or $blessed_ref-E<gt>method) |
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151 | syntax. By convention you can use a leading underscore on names to |
152 | informally indicate that they are 'internal' and not for public use. |
153 | |
154 | (It is actually possible to get private functions by saying: |
155 | |
156 | my $subref = sub { ... }; |
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157 | $subref->(@args); # Call it as a function |
158 | $obj->$subref(@args); # Use it as a method |
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159 | |
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160 | However if you use them for methods it is up to you to figure out |
161 | how to make inheritance work.) |
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162 | |
163 | As a general rule, if the module is trying to be object oriented |
164 | then export nothing. If it's just a collection of functions then |
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165 | @EXPORT_OK anything but use @EXPORT with caution. For function and |
166 | method names use barewords in preference to names prefixed with |
167 | ampersands for the export lists. |
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168 | |
169 | Other module design guidelines can be found in L<perlmod>. |
170 | |
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171 | =head2 How to Import |
172 | |
173 | In other files which wish to use your module there are three basic ways for |
174 | them to load your module and import its symbols: |
175 | |
176 | =over 4 |
177 | |
178 | =item C<use ModuleName;> |
179 | |
180 | This imports all the symbols from ModuleName's @EXPORT into the namespace |
181 | of the C<use> statement. |
182 | |
183 | =item C<use ModuleName ();> |
184 | |
185 | This causes perl to load your module but does not import any symbols. |
186 | |
187 | =item C<use ModuleName qw(...);> |
188 | |
189 | This imports only the symbols listed by the caller into their namespace. |
190 | All listed symbols must be in your @EXPORT or @EXPORT_OK, else an error |
191 | occurs. The advanced export features of Exporter are accessed like this, |
192 | but with list entries that are syntactically distinct from symbol names. |
193 | |
194 | =back |
195 | |
196 | Unless you want to use its advanced features, this is probably all you |
197 | need to know to use Exporter. |
198 | |
199 | =head1 Advanced features |
200 | |
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201 | =head2 Specialised Import Lists |
202 | |
203 | If the first entry in an import list begins with !, : or / then the |
204 | list is treated as a series of specifications which either add to or |
205 | delete from the list of names to import. They are processed left to |
206 | right. Specifications are in the form: |
207 | |
208 | [!]name This name only |
209 | [!]:DEFAULT All names in @EXPORT |
210 | [!]:tag All names in $EXPORT_TAGS{tag} anonymous list |
211 | [!]/pattern/ All names in @EXPORT and @EXPORT_OK which match |
212 | |
213 | A leading ! indicates that matching names should be deleted from the |
214 | list of names to import. If the first specification is a deletion it |
215 | is treated as though preceded by :DEFAULT. If you just want to import |
216 | extra names in addition to the default set you will still need to |
217 | include :DEFAULT explicitly. |
218 | |
219 | e.g., Module.pm defines: |
220 | |
221 | @EXPORT = qw(A1 A2 A3 A4 A5); |
222 | @EXPORT_OK = qw(B1 B2 B3 B4 B5); |
223 | %EXPORT_TAGS = (T1 => [qw(A1 A2 B1 B2)], T2 => [qw(A1 A2 B3 B4)]); |
224 | |
225 | Note that you cannot use tags in @EXPORT or @EXPORT_OK. |
226 | Names in EXPORT_TAGS must also appear in @EXPORT or @EXPORT_OK. |
227 | |
228 | An application using Module can say something like: |
229 | |
230 | use Module qw(:DEFAULT :T2 !B3 A3); |
231 | |
232 | Other examples include: |
233 | |
234 | use Socket qw(!/^[AP]F_/ !SOMAXCONN !SOL_SOCKET); |
235 | use POSIX qw(:errno_h :termios_h !TCSADRAIN !/^EXIT/); |
236 | |
237 | Remember that most patterns (using //) will need to be anchored |
238 | with a leading ^, e.g., C</^EXIT/> rather than C</EXIT/>. |
239 | |
240 | You can say C<BEGIN { $Exporter::Verbose=1 }> to see how the |
241 | specifications are being processed and what is actually being imported |
242 | into modules. |
243 | |
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244 | =head2 Exporting without using Exporter's import method |
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245 | |
246 | Exporter has a special method, 'export_to_level' which is used in situations |
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247 | where you can't directly call Exporter's import method. The export_to_level |
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248 | method looks like: |
249 | |
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250 | MyPackage->export_to_level($where_to_export, $package, @what_to_export); |
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251 | |
252 | where $where_to_export is an integer telling how far up the calling stack |
253 | to export your symbols, and @what_to_export is an array telling what |
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254 | symbols *to* export (usually this is @_). The $package argument is |
255 | currently unused. |
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256 | |
257 | For example, suppose that you have a module, A, which already has an |
258 | import function: |
259 | |
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260 | package A; |
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261 | |
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262 | @ISA = qw(Exporter); |
263 | @EXPORT_OK = qw ($b); |
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264 | |
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265 | sub import |
266 | { |
267 | $A::b = 1; # not a very useful import method |
268 | } |
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269 | |
270 | and you want to Export symbol $A::b back to the module that called |
271 | package A. Since Exporter relies on the import method to work, via |
272 | inheritance, as it stands Exporter::import() will never get called. |
273 | Instead, say the following: |
274 | |
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275 | package A; |
276 | @ISA = qw(Exporter); |
277 | @EXPORT_OK = qw ($b); |
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278 | |
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279 | sub import |
280 | { |
281 | $A::b = 1; |
282 | A->export_to_level(1, @_); |
283 | } |
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284 | |
285 | This will export the symbols one level 'above' the current package - ie: to |
286 | the program or module that used package A. |
287 | |
288 | Note: Be careful not to modify '@_' at all before you call export_to_level |
289 | - or people using your package will get very unexplained results! |
290 | |
291 | |
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292 | =head2 Module Version Checking |
293 | |
294 | The Exporter module will convert an attempt to import a number from a |
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295 | module into a call to $module_name-E<gt>require_version($value). This can |
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296 | be used to validate that the version of the module being used is |
297 | greater than or equal to the required version. |
298 | |
299 | The Exporter module supplies a default require_version method which |
300 | checks the value of $VERSION in the exporting module. |
301 | |
302 | Since the default require_version method treats the $VERSION number as |
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303 | a simple numeric value it will regard version 1.10 as lower than |
304 | 1.9. For this reason it is strongly recommended that you use numbers |
305 | with at least two decimal places, e.g., 1.09. |
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306 | |
307 | =head2 Managing Unknown Symbols |
308 | |
309 | In some situations you may want to prevent certain symbols from being |
310 | exported. Typically this applies to extensions which have functions |
311 | or constants that may not exist on some systems. |
312 | |
313 | The names of any symbols that cannot be exported should be listed |
314 | in the C<@EXPORT_FAIL> array. |
315 | |
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316 | If a module attempts to import any of these symbols the Exporter |
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317 | will give the module an opportunity to handle the situation before |
318 | generating an error. The Exporter will call an export_fail method |
319 | with a list of the failed symbols: |
320 | |
321 | @failed_symbols = $module_name->export_fail(@failed_symbols); |
322 | |
323 | If the export_fail method returns an empty list then no error is |
324 | recorded and all the requested symbols are exported. If the returned |
325 | list is not empty then an error is generated for each symbol and the |
326 | export fails. The Exporter provides a default export_fail method which |
327 | simply returns the list unchanged. |
328 | |
329 | Uses for the export_fail method include giving better error messages |
330 | for some symbols and performing lazy architectural checks (put more |
331 | symbols into @EXPORT_FAIL by default and then take them out if someone |
332 | actually tries to use them and an expensive check shows that they are |
333 | usable on that platform). |
334 | |
335 | =head2 Tag Handling Utility Functions |
336 | |
337 | Since the symbols listed within %EXPORT_TAGS must also appear in either |
338 | @EXPORT or @EXPORT_OK, two utility functions are provided which allow |
339 | you to easily add tagged sets of symbols to @EXPORT or @EXPORT_OK: |
340 | |
341 | %EXPORT_TAGS = (foo => [qw(aa bb cc)], bar => [qw(aa cc dd)]); |
342 | |
343 | Exporter::export_tags('foo'); # add aa, bb and cc to @EXPORT |
344 | Exporter::export_ok_tags('bar'); # add aa, cc and dd to @EXPORT_OK |
345 | |
346 | Any names which are not tags are added to @EXPORT or @EXPORT_OK |
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347 | unchanged but will trigger a warning (with C<-w>) to avoid misspelt tags |
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348 | names being silently added to @EXPORT or @EXPORT_OK. Future versions |
349 | may make this a fatal error. |
350 | |
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351 | =head2 Generating combined tags |
352 | |
353 | If several symbol categories exist in %EXPORT_TAGS, it's usually |
354 | useful to create the utility ":all" to simplify "use" statements. |
355 | |
356 | The simplest way to do this is: |
357 | |
358 | %EXPORT_TAGS = (foo => [qw(aa bb cc)], bar => [qw(aa cc dd)]); |
359 | |
360 | # add all the other ":class" tags to the ":all" class, |
361 | # deleting duplicates |
362 | { |
363 | my %seen; |
364 | |
365 | push @{$EXPORT_TAGS{all}}, |
366 | grep {!$seen{$_}++} @{$EXPORT_TAGS{$_}} foreach keys %EXPORT_TAGS; |
367 | } |
368 | |
369 | CGI.pm creates an ":all" tag which contains some (but not really |
370 | all) of its categories. That could be done with one small |
371 | change: |
372 | |
373 | # add some of the other ":class" tags to the ":all" class, |
374 | # deleting duplicates |
375 | { |
376 | my %seen; |
377 | |
378 | push @{$EXPORT_TAGS{all}}, |
379 | grep {!$seen{$_}++} @{$EXPORT_TAGS{$_}} |
380 | foreach qw/html2 html3 netscape form cgi internal/; |
381 | } |
382 | |
383 | Note that the tag names in %EXPORT_TAGS don't have the leading ':'. |
384 | |
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385 | =head2 C<AUTOLOAD>ed Constants |
386 | |
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387 | Many modules make use of C<AUTOLOAD>ing for constant subroutines to |
388 | avoid having to compile and waste memory on rarely used values (see |
389 | L<perlsub> for details on constant subroutines). Calls to such |
390 | constant subroutines are not optimized away at compile time because |
391 | they can't be checked at compile time for constancy. |
392 | |
393 | Even if a prototype is available at compile time, the body of the |
394 | subroutine is not (it hasn't been C<AUTOLOAD>ed yet). perl needs to |
395 | examine both the C<()> prototype and the body of a subroutine at |
396 | compile time to detect that it can safely replace calls to that |
397 | subroutine with the constant value. |
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398 | |
399 | A workaround for this is to call the constants once in a C<BEGIN> block: |
400 | |
401 | package My ; |
402 | |
403 | use Socket ; |
404 | |
405 | foo( SO_LINGER ); ## SO_LINGER NOT optimized away; called at runtime |
406 | BEGIN { SO_LINGER } |
407 | foo( SO_LINGER ); ## SO_LINGER optimized away at compile time. |
408 | |
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409 | This forces the C<AUTOLOAD> for C<SO_LINGER> to take place before |
410 | SO_LINGER is encountered later in C<My> package. |
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411 | |
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412 | If you are writing a package that C<AUTOLOAD>s, consider forcing |
413 | an C<AUTOLOAD> for any constants explicitly imported by other packages |
414 | or which are usually used when your package is C<use>d. |
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415 | |
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416 | =cut |