Commit | Line | Data |
3ed9f206 |
1 | package Switch; |
2 | |
3 | use strict; |
4 | use vars qw($VERSION); |
5 | use Carp; |
6 | |
b62fb10e |
7 | $VERSION = '2.13_01'; |
3ed9f206 |
8 | |
9 | |
10 | # LOAD FILTERING MODULE... |
11 | use Filter::Util::Call; |
12 | |
13 | sub __(); |
14 | |
15 | # CATCH ATTEMPTS TO CALL case OUTSIDE THE SCOPE OF ANY switch |
16 | |
74a6a946 |
17 | $::_S_W_I_T_C_H = sub { croak "case/when statement not in switch/given block" }; |
3ed9f206 |
18 | |
19 | my $offset; |
20 | my $fallthrough; |
74a6a946 |
21 | my ($Perl5, $Perl6) = (0,0); |
3ed9f206 |
22 | |
23 | sub import |
24 | { |
25 | $fallthrough = grep /\bfallthrough\b/, @_; |
26 | $offset = (caller)[2]+1; |
a1813bef |
27 | filter_add({}) unless @_>1 && $_[1] eq 'noimport'; |
3ed9f206 |
28 | my $pkg = caller; |
29 | no strict 'refs'; |
30 | for ( qw( on_defined on_exists ) ) |
31 | { |
32 | *{"${pkg}::$_"} = \&$_; |
33 | } |
34 | *{"${pkg}::__"} = \&__ if grep /__/, @_; |
74a6a946 |
35 | $Perl6 = 1 if grep(/Perl\s*6/i, @_); |
36 | $Perl5 = 1 if grep(/Perl\s*5/i, @_) || !grep(/Perl\s*6/i, @_); |
3ed9f206 |
37 | 1; |
38 | } |
39 | |
40 | sub unimport |
41 | { |
42 | filter_del() |
43 | } |
44 | |
45 | sub filter |
46 | { |
47 | my($self) = @_ ; |
48 | local $Switch::file = (caller)[1]; |
49 | |
50 | my $status = 1; |
b2486830 |
51 | $status = filter_read(1_000_000); |
3ed9f206 |
52 | return $status if $status<0; |
53 | $_ = filter_blocks($_,$offset); |
54 | $_ = "# line $offset\n" . $_ if $offset; undef $offset; |
3ed9f206 |
55 | return $status; |
56 | } |
57 | |
58 | use Text::Balanced ':ALL'; |
59 | |
60 | sub line |
61 | { |
62 | my ($pretext,$offset) = @_; |
74a6a946 |
63 | ($pretext=~tr/\n/\n/)+($offset||0); |
3ed9f206 |
64 | } |
65 | |
66 | sub is_block |
67 | { |
68 | local $SIG{__WARN__}=sub{die$@}; |
69 | local $^W=1; |
70 | my $ishash = defined eval 'my $hr='.$_[0]; |
71 | undef $@; |
72 | return !$ishash; |
73 | } |
74 | |
d38ca171 |
75 | |
5588bb19 |
76 | my $EOP = qr/\n|\Z/; |
d38ca171 |
77 | my $CUT = qr/\n=cut.*$EOP/; |
78 | my $pod_or_DATA = qr/ ^=(?:head[1-4]|item) .*? $CUT |
79 | | ^=pod .*? $CUT |
80 | | ^=for .*? $EOP |
81 | | ^=begin \s* (\S+) .*? \n=end \s* \1 .*? $EOP |
82 | | ^__(DATA|END)__\n.* |
83 | /smx; |
84 | |
3ed9f206 |
85 | my $casecounter = 1; |
86 | sub filter_blocks |
87 | { |
88 | my ($source, $line) = @_; |
74a6a946 |
89 | return $source unless $Perl5 && $source =~ /case|switch/ |
b2486830 |
90 | || $Perl6 && $source =~ /when|given|default/; |
3ed9f206 |
91 | pos $source = 0; |
92 | my $text = ""; |
93 | component: while (pos $source < length $source) |
94 | { |
3961318e |
95 | if ($source =~ m/(\G\s*use\s+Switch\b)/gc) |
3ed9f206 |
96 | { |
97 | $text .= q{use Switch 'noimport'}; |
98 | next component; |
99 | } |
d38ca171 |
100 | my @pos = Text::Balanced::_match_quotelike(\$source,qr/\s*/,1,0); |
3ed9f206 |
101 | if (defined $pos[0]) |
102 | { |
b2486830 |
103 | my $pre = substr($source,$pos[0],$pos[1]); # matched prefix |
4f8a7904 |
104 | my $iEol; |
105 | if( substr($source,$pos[4],$pos[5]) eq '/' && # 1st delimiter |
106 | substr($source,$pos[2],$pos[3]) eq '' && # no op like 'm' |
107 | index( substr($source,$pos[16],$pos[17]), 'x' ) == -1 && # no //x |
108 | ($iEol = index( $source, "\n", $pos[4] )) > 0 && |
109 | $iEol < $pos[8] ){ # embedded newlines |
110 | # If this is a pattern, it isn't compatible with Switch. Backup past 1st '/'. |
111 | pos( $source ) = $pos[6]; |
112 | $text .= $pre . substr($source,$pos[2],$pos[6]-$pos[2]); |
113 | } else { |
114 | $text .= $pre . substr($source,$pos[2],$pos[18]-$pos[2]); |
115 | } |
3ed9f206 |
116 | next component; |
117 | } |
6a9befb1 |
118 | if ($source =~ m/(\G\s*$pod_or_DATA)/gc) { |
119 | $text .= $1; |
d38ca171 |
120 | next component; |
121 | } |
3ed9f206 |
122 | @pos = Text::Balanced::_match_variable(\$source,qr/\s*/); |
123 | if (defined $pos[0]) |
124 | { |
52d8c818 |
125 | $text .= " " if $pos[0] < $pos[2]; |
126 | $text .= substr($source,$pos[0],$pos[4]-$pos[0]); |
3ed9f206 |
127 | next component; |
128 | } |
129 | |
74a6a946 |
130 | if ($Perl5 && $source =~ m/\G(\n*)(\s*)(switch)\b(?=\s*[(])/gc |
6596d39b |
131 | || $Perl6 && $source =~ m/\G(\n*)(\s*)(given)\b(?=\s*[(])/gc |
132 | || $Perl6 && $source =~ m/\G(\n*)(\s*)(given)\b(.*)(?=\{)/gc) |
3ed9f206 |
133 | { |
74a6a946 |
134 | my $keyword = $3; |
6596d39b |
135 | my $arg = $4; |
3ed9f206 |
136 | $text .= $1.$2.'S_W_I_T_C_H: while (1) '; |
6596d39b |
137 | unless ($arg) { |
138 | @pos = Text::Balanced::_match_codeblock(\$source,qr/\s*/,qr/\(/,qr/\)/,qr/[[{(<]/,qr/[]})>]/,undef) |
139 | or do { |
140 | die "Bad $keyword statement (problem in the parentheses?) near $Switch::file line ", line(substr($source,0,pos $source),$line), "\n"; |
141 | }; |
142 | $arg = filter_blocks(substr($source,$pos[0],$pos[4]-$pos[0]),line(substr($source,0,$pos[0]),$line)); |
143 | } |
3ed9f206 |
144 | $arg =~ s {^\s*[(]\s*%} { ( \\\%} || |
145 | $arg =~ s {^\s*[(]\s*m\b} { ( qr} || |
146 | $arg =~ s {^\s*[(]\s*/} { ( qr/} || |
147 | $arg =~ s {^\s*[(]\s*qw} { ( \\qw}; |
148 | @pos = Text::Balanced::_match_codeblock(\$source,qr/\s*/,qr/\{/,qr/\}/,qr/\{/,qr/\}/,undef) |
149 | or do { |
74a6a946 |
150 | die "Bad $keyword statement (problem in the code block?) near $Switch::file line ", line(substr($source,0, pos $source), $line), "\n"; |
3ed9f206 |
151 | }; |
152 | my $code = filter_blocks(substr($source,$pos[0],$pos[4]-$pos[0]),line(substr($source,0,$pos[0]),$line)); |
153 | $code =~ s/{/{ local \$::_S_W_I_T_C_H; Switch::switch $arg;/; |
154 | $text .= $code . 'continue {last}'; |
155 | next component; |
156 | } |
74a6a946 |
157 | elsif ($Perl5 && $source =~ m/\G(\s*)(case\b)(?!\s*=>)/gc |
b2486830 |
158 | || $Perl6 && $source =~ m/\G(\s*)(when\b)(?!\s*=>)/gc |
159 | || $Perl6 && $source =~ m/\G(\s*)(default\b)(?=\s*\{)/gc) |
3ed9f206 |
160 | { |
74a6a946 |
161 | my $keyword = $2; |
b2486830 |
162 | $text .= $1 . ($keyword eq "default" |
163 | ? "if (1)" |
164 | : "if (Switch::case"); |
165 | |
166 | if ($keyword eq "default") { |
167 | # Nothing to do |
168 | } |
169 | elsif (@pos = Text::Balanced::_match_codeblock(\$source,qr/\s*/,qr/\{/,qr/\}/,qr/\{/,qr/\}/,undef)) { |
3ed9f206 |
170 | my $code = substr($source,$pos[0],$pos[4]-$pos[0]); |
52d8c818 |
171 | $text .= " " if $pos[0] < $pos[2]; |
172 | $text .= "sub " if is_block $code; |
173 | $text .= filter_blocks($code,line(substr($source,0,$pos[0]),$line)) . ")"; |
3ed9f206 |
174 | } |
175 | elsif (@pos = Text::Balanced::_match_codeblock(\$source,qr/\s*/,qr/[[(]/,qr/[])]/,qr/[[({]/,qr/[])}]/,undef)) { |
176 | my $code = filter_blocks(substr($source,$pos[0],$pos[4]-$pos[0]),line(substr($source,0,$pos[0]),$line)); |
177 | $code =~ s {^\s*[(]\s*%} { ( \\\%} || |
178 | $code =~ s {^\s*[(]\s*m\b} { ( qr} || |
179 | $code =~ s {^\s*[(]\s*/} { ( qr/} || |
180 | $code =~ s {^\s*[(]\s*qw} { ( \\qw}; |
52d8c818 |
181 | $text .= " " if $pos[0] < $pos[2]; |
182 | $text .= "$code)"; |
3ed9f206 |
183 | } |
74a6a946 |
184 | elsif ($Perl6 && do{@pos = Text::Balanced::_match_variable(\$source,qr/\s*/)}) { |
185 | my $code = filter_blocks(substr($source,$pos[0],$pos[4]-$pos[0]),line(substr($source,0,$pos[0]),$line)); |
186 | $code =~ s {^\s*%} { \%} || |
187 | $code =~ s {^\s*@} { \@}; |
52d8c818 |
188 | $text .= " " if $pos[0] < $pos[2]; |
189 | $text .= "$code)"; |
74a6a946 |
190 | } |
d38ca171 |
191 | elsif ( @pos = Text::Balanced::_match_quotelike(\$source,qr/\s*/,1,0)) { |
3ed9f206 |
192 | my $code = substr($source,$pos[2],$pos[18]-$pos[2]); |
193 | $code = filter_blocks($code,line(substr($source,0,$pos[2]),$line)); |
194 | $code =~ s {^\s*m} { qr} || |
195 | $code =~ s {^\s*/} { qr/} || |
196 | $code =~ s {^\s*qw} { \\qw}; |
52d8c818 |
197 | $text .= " " if $pos[0] < $pos[2]; |
198 | $text .= "$code)"; |
3ed9f206 |
199 | } |
74a6a946 |
200 | elsif ($Perl5 && $source =~ m/\G\s*(([^\$\@{])[^\$\@{]*)(?=\s*{)/gc |
6596d39b |
201 | || $Perl6 && $source =~ m/\G\s*([^;{]*)()/gc) { |
3ed9f206 |
202 | my $code = filter_blocks($1,line(substr($source,0,pos $source),$line)); |
203 | $text .= ' \\' if $2 eq '%'; |
204 | $text .= " $code)"; |
205 | } |
206 | else { |
74a6a946 |
207 | die "Bad $keyword statement (invalid $keyword value?) near $Switch::file line ", line(substr($source,0,pos $source), $line), "\n"; |
3ed9f206 |
208 | } |
209 | |
6596d39b |
210 | die "Missing opening brace or semi-colon after 'when' value near $Switch::file line ", line(substr($source,0,pos $source), $line), "\n" |
211 | unless !$Perl6 || $source =~ m/\G(\s*)(?=;|\{)/gc; |
74a6a946 |
212 | |
213 | do{@pos = Text::Balanced::_match_codeblock(\$source,qr/\s*/,qr/\{/,qr/\}/,qr/\{/,qr/\}/,undef)} |
3ed9f206 |
214 | or do { |
215 | if ($source =~ m/\G\s*(?=([};]|\Z))/gc) { |
216 | $casecounter++; |
217 | next component; |
218 | } |
74a6a946 |
219 | die "Bad $keyword statement (problem in the code block?) near $Switch::file line ", line(substr($source,0,pos $source),$line), "\n"; |
3ed9f206 |
220 | }; |
221 | my $code = filter_blocks(substr($source,$pos[0],$pos[4]-$pos[0]),line(substr($source,0,$pos[0]),$line)); |
222 | $code =~ s/}(?=\s*\Z)/;last S_W_I_T_C_H }/ |
223 | unless $fallthrough; |
224 | $text .= "{ while (1) $code continue { goto C_A_S_E_$casecounter } last S_W_I_T_C_H; C_A_S_E_$casecounter: }"; |
225 | $casecounter++; |
226 | next component; |
227 | } |
228 | |
d38ca171 |
229 | $source =~ m/\G(\s*(-[sm]\s+|\w+|#.*\n|\W))/gc; |
3ed9f206 |
230 | $text .= $1; |
231 | } |
232 | $text; |
233 | } |
234 | |
235 | |
236 | |
237 | sub in |
238 | { |
239 | my ($x,$y) = @_; |
240 | my @numy; |
241 | for my $nextx ( @$x ) |
242 | { |
a1813bef |
243 | my $numx = ref($nextx) || defined $nextx && (~$nextx&$nextx) eq 0; |
3ed9f206 |
244 | for my $j ( 0..$#$y ) |
245 | { |
246 | my $nexty = $y->[$j]; |
a1813bef |
247 | push @numy, ref($nexty) || defined $nexty && (~$nexty&$nexty) eq 0 |
3ed9f206 |
248 | if @numy <= $j; |
249 | return 1 if $numx && $numy[$j] && $nextx==$nexty |
250 | || $nextx eq $nexty; |
251 | |
252 | } |
253 | } |
254 | return ""; |
255 | } |
256 | |
257 | sub on_exists |
258 | { |
259 | my $ref = @_==1 && ref($_[0]) eq 'HASH' ? $_[0] : { @_ }; |
260 | [ keys %$ref ] |
261 | } |
262 | |
263 | sub on_defined |
264 | { |
265 | my $ref = @_==1 && ref($_[0]) eq 'HASH' ? $_[0] : { @_ }; |
266 | [ grep { defined $ref->{$_} } keys %$ref ] |
267 | } |
268 | |
269 | sub switch(;$) |
270 | { |
271 | my ($s_val) = @_ ? $_[0] : $_; |
272 | my $s_ref = ref $s_val; |
273 | |
274 | if ($s_ref eq 'CODE') |
275 | { |
276 | $::_S_W_I_T_C_H = |
277 | sub { my $c_val = $_[0]; |
278 | return $s_val == $c_val if ref $c_val eq 'CODE'; |
279 | return $s_val->(@$c_val) if ref $c_val eq 'ARRAY'; |
280 | return $s_val->($c_val); |
281 | }; |
282 | } |
a1813bef |
283 | elsif ($s_ref eq "" && defined $s_val && (~$s_val&$s_val) eq 0) # NUMERIC SCALAR |
3ed9f206 |
284 | { |
285 | $::_S_W_I_T_C_H = |
286 | sub { my $c_val = $_[0]; |
287 | my $c_ref = ref $c_val; |
288 | return $s_val == $c_val if $c_ref eq "" |
a1813bef |
289 | && defined $c_val |
3ed9f206 |
290 | && (~$c_val&$c_val) eq 0; |
291 | return $s_val eq $c_val if $c_ref eq ""; |
292 | return in([$s_val],$c_val) if $c_ref eq 'ARRAY'; |
293 | return $c_val->($s_val) if $c_ref eq 'CODE'; |
294 | return $c_val->call($s_val) if $c_ref eq 'Switch'; |
295 | return scalar $s_val=~/$c_val/ |
296 | if $c_ref eq 'Regexp'; |
297 | return scalar $c_val->{$s_val} |
298 | if $c_ref eq 'HASH'; |
299 | return; |
300 | }; |
301 | } |
302 | elsif ($s_ref eq "") # STRING SCALAR |
303 | { |
304 | $::_S_W_I_T_C_H = |
305 | sub { my $c_val = $_[0]; |
306 | my $c_ref = ref $c_val; |
307 | return $s_val eq $c_val if $c_ref eq ""; |
308 | return in([$s_val],$c_val) if $c_ref eq 'ARRAY'; |
309 | return $c_val->($s_val) if $c_ref eq 'CODE'; |
310 | return $c_val->call($s_val) if $c_ref eq 'Switch'; |
311 | return scalar $s_val=~/$c_val/ |
312 | if $c_ref eq 'Regexp'; |
313 | return scalar $c_val->{$s_val} |
314 | if $c_ref eq 'HASH'; |
315 | return; |
316 | }; |
317 | } |
318 | elsif ($s_ref eq 'ARRAY') |
319 | { |
320 | $::_S_W_I_T_C_H = |
321 | sub { my $c_val = $_[0]; |
322 | my $c_ref = ref $c_val; |
323 | return in($s_val,[$c_val]) if $c_ref eq ""; |
324 | return in($s_val,$c_val) if $c_ref eq 'ARRAY'; |
325 | return $c_val->(@$s_val) if $c_ref eq 'CODE'; |
326 | return $c_val->call(@$s_val) |
327 | if $c_ref eq 'Switch'; |
328 | return scalar grep {$_=~/$c_val/} @$s_val |
329 | if $c_ref eq 'Regexp'; |
330 | return scalar grep {$c_val->{$_}} @$s_val |
331 | if $c_ref eq 'HASH'; |
332 | return; |
333 | }; |
334 | } |
335 | elsif ($s_ref eq 'Regexp') |
336 | { |
337 | $::_S_W_I_T_C_H = |
338 | sub { my $c_val = $_[0]; |
339 | my $c_ref = ref $c_val; |
340 | return $c_val=~/s_val/ if $c_ref eq ""; |
341 | return scalar grep {$_=~/s_val/} @$c_val |
342 | if $c_ref eq 'ARRAY'; |
343 | return $c_val->($s_val) if $c_ref eq 'CODE'; |
344 | return $c_val->call($s_val) if $c_ref eq 'Switch'; |
345 | return $s_val eq $c_val if $c_ref eq 'Regexp'; |
346 | return grep {$_=~/$s_val/ && $c_val->{$_}} keys %$c_val |
347 | if $c_ref eq 'HASH'; |
348 | return; |
349 | }; |
350 | } |
351 | elsif ($s_ref eq 'HASH') |
352 | { |
353 | $::_S_W_I_T_C_H = |
354 | sub { my $c_val = $_[0]; |
355 | my $c_ref = ref $c_val; |
356 | return $s_val->{$c_val} if $c_ref eq ""; |
357 | return scalar grep {$s_val->{$_}} @$c_val |
358 | if $c_ref eq 'ARRAY'; |
359 | return $c_val->($s_val) if $c_ref eq 'CODE'; |
360 | return $c_val->call($s_val) if $c_ref eq 'Switch'; |
361 | return grep {$_=~/$c_val/ && $s_val->{"$_"}} keys %$s_val |
362 | if $c_ref eq 'Regexp'; |
363 | return $s_val==$c_val if $c_ref eq 'HASH'; |
364 | return; |
365 | }; |
366 | } |
367 | elsif ($s_ref eq 'Switch') |
368 | { |
369 | $::_S_W_I_T_C_H = |
370 | sub { my $c_val = $_[0]; |
371 | return $s_val == $c_val if ref $c_val eq 'Switch'; |
372 | return $s_val->call(@$c_val) |
373 | if ref $c_val eq 'ARRAY'; |
374 | return $s_val->call($c_val); |
375 | }; |
376 | } |
377 | else |
378 | { |
379 | croak "Cannot switch on $s_ref"; |
380 | } |
381 | return 1; |
382 | } |
383 | |
d38ca171 |
384 | sub case($) { local $SIG{__WARN__} = \&carp; |
385 | $::_S_W_I_T_C_H->(@_); } |
3ed9f206 |
386 | |
387 | # IMPLEMENT __ |
388 | |
389 | my $placeholder = bless { arity=>1, impl=>sub{$_[1+$_[0]]} }; |
390 | |
391 | sub __() { $placeholder } |
392 | |
393 | sub __arg($) |
394 | { |
395 | my $index = $_[0]+1; |
396 | bless { arity=>0, impl=>sub{$_[$index]} }; |
397 | } |
398 | |
399 | sub hosub(&@) |
400 | { |
401 | # WRITE THIS |
402 | } |
403 | |
404 | sub call |
405 | { |
406 | my ($self,@args) = @_; |
407 | return $self->{impl}->(0,@args); |
408 | } |
409 | |
410 | sub meta_bop(&) |
411 | { |
412 | my ($op) = @_; |
413 | sub |
414 | { |
415 | my ($left, $right, $reversed) = @_; |
416 | ($right,$left) = @_ if $reversed; |
417 | |
418 | my $rop = ref $right eq 'Switch' |
419 | ? $right |
420 | : bless { arity=>0, impl=>sub{$right} }; |
421 | |
422 | my $lop = ref $left eq 'Switch' |
423 | ? $left |
424 | : bless { arity=>0, impl=>sub{$left} }; |
425 | |
426 | my $arity = $lop->{arity} + $rop->{arity}; |
427 | |
428 | return bless { |
429 | arity => $arity, |
430 | impl => sub { my $start = shift; |
431 | return $op->($lop->{impl}->($start,@_), |
432 | $rop->{impl}->($start+$lop->{arity},@_)); |
433 | } |
434 | }; |
435 | }; |
436 | } |
437 | |
438 | sub meta_uop(&) |
439 | { |
440 | my ($op) = @_; |
441 | sub |
442 | { |
443 | my ($left) = @_; |
444 | |
445 | my $lop = ref $left eq 'Switch' |
446 | ? $left |
447 | : bless { arity=>0, impl=>sub{$left} }; |
448 | |
449 | my $arity = $lop->{arity}; |
450 | |
451 | return bless { |
452 | arity => $arity, |
453 | impl => sub { $op->($lop->{impl}->(@_)) } |
454 | }; |
455 | }; |
456 | } |
457 | |
458 | |
459 | use overload |
460 | "+" => meta_bop {$_[0] + $_[1]}, |
461 | "-" => meta_bop {$_[0] - $_[1]}, |
462 | "*" => meta_bop {$_[0] * $_[1]}, |
463 | "/" => meta_bop {$_[0] / $_[1]}, |
464 | "%" => meta_bop {$_[0] % $_[1]}, |
465 | "**" => meta_bop {$_[0] ** $_[1]}, |
466 | "<<" => meta_bop {$_[0] << $_[1]}, |
467 | ">>" => meta_bop {$_[0] >> $_[1]}, |
468 | "x" => meta_bop {$_[0] x $_[1]}, |
469 | "." => meta_bop {$_[0] . $_[1]}, |
470 | "<" => meta_bop {$_[0] < $_[1]}, |
471 | "<=" => meta_bop {$_[0] <= $_[1]}, |
472 | ">" => meta_bop {$_[0] > $_[1]}, |
473 | ">=" => meta_bop {$_[0] >= $_[1]}, |
474 | "==" => meta_bop {$_[0] == $_[1]}, |
475 | "!=" => meta_bop {$_[0] != $_[1]}, |
476 | "<=>" => meta_bop {$_[0] <=> $_[1]}, |
477 | "lt" => meta_bop {$_[0] lt $_[1]}, |
478 | "le" => meta_bop {$_[0] le $_[1]}, |
479 | "gt" => meta_bop {$_[0] gt $_[1]}, |
480 | "ge" => meta_bop {$_[0] ge $_[1]}, |
481 | "eq" => meta_bop {$_[0] eq $_[1]}, |
482 | "ne" => meta_bop {$_[0] ne $_[1]}, |
483 | "cmp" => meta_bop {$_[0] cmp $_[1]}, |
484 | "\&" => meta_bop {$_[0] & $_[1]}, |
485 | "^" => meta_bop {$_[0] ^ $_[1]}, |
486 | "|" => meta_bop {$_[0] | $_[1]}, |
487 | "atan2" => meta_bop {atan2 $_[0], $_[1]}, |
488 | |
489 | "neg" => meta_uop {-$_[0]}, |
490 | "!" => meta_uop {!$_[0]}, |
491 | "~" => meta_uop {~$_[0]}, |
492 | "cos" => meta_uop {cos $_[0]}, |
493 | "sin" => meta_uop {sin $_[0]}, |
494 | "exp" => meta_uop {exp $_[0]}, |
495 | "abs" => meta_uop {abs $_[0]}, |
496 | "log" => meta_uop {log $_[0]}, |
497 | "sqrt" => meta_uop {sqrt $_[0]}, |
498 | "bool" => sub { croak "Can't use && or || in expression containing __" }, |
499 | |
500 | # "&()" => sub { $_[0]->{impl} }, |
501 | |
502 | # "||" => meta_bop {$_[0] || $_[1]}, |
503 | # "&&" => meta_bop {$_[0] && $_[1]}, |
504 | # fallback => 1, |
505 | ; |
506 | 1; |
507 | |
508 | __END__ |
509 | |
510 | |
511 | =head1 NAME |
512 | |
513 | Switch - A switch statement for Perl |
514 | |
515 | =head1 VERSION |
516 | |
a8700562 |
517 | This document describes version 2.11 of Switch, |
518 | released Nov 22, 2006. |
3ed9f206 |
519 | |
520 | =head1 SYNOPSIS |
521 | |
a8700562 |
522 | use Switch; |
523 | |
524 | switch ($val) { |
525 | case 1 { print "number 1" } |
526 | case "a" { print "string a" } |
527 | case [1..10,42] { print "number in list" } |
cd3d9d47 |
528 | case (\@array) { print "number in list" } |
a8700562 |
529 | case /\w+/ { print "pattern" } |
530 | case qr/\w+/ { print "pattern" } |
a8700562 |
531 | case (\%hash) { print "entry in hash" } |
532 | case (\&sub) { print "arg to subroutine" } |
533 | else { print "previous case not true" } |
534 | } |
3ed9f206 |
535 | |
536 | =head1 BACKGROUND |
537 | |
538 | [Skip ahead to L<"DESCRIPTION"> if you don't care about the whys |
539 | and wherefores of this control structure] |
540 | |
541 | In seeking to devise a "Swiss Army" case mechanism suitable for Perl, |
542 | it is useful to generalize this notion of distributed conditional |
543 | testing as far as possible. Specifically, the concept of "matching" |
544 | between the switch value and the various case values need not be |
545 | restricted to numeric (or string or referential) equality, as it is in other |
546 | languages. Indeed, as Table 1 illustrates, Perl |
547 | offers at least eighteen different ways in which two values could |
548 | generate a match. |
549 | |
550 | Table 1: Matching a switch value ($s) with a case value ($c) |
551 | |
552 | Switch Case Type of Match Implied Matching Code |
553 | Value Value |
554 | ====== ===== ===================== ============= |
555 | |
556 | number same numeric or referential match if $s == $c; |
557 | or ref equality |
558 | |
559 | object method result of method call match if $s->$c(); |
560 | ref name match if defined $s->$c(); |
561 | or ref |
562 | |
563 | other other string equality match if $s eq $c; |
564 | non-ref non-ref |
565 | scalar scalar |
566 | |
567 | string regexp pattern match match if $s =~ /$c/; |
568 | |
569 | array scalar array entry existence match if 0<=$c && $c<@$s; |
570 | ref array entry definition match if defined $s->[$c]; |
571 | array entry truth match if $s->[$c]; |
572 | |
573 | array array array intersection match if intersects(@$s, @$c); |
574 | ref ref (apply this table to |
575 | all pairs of elements |
576 | $s->[$i] and |
577 | $c->[$j]) |
578 | |
579 | array regexp array grep match if grep /$c/, @$s; |
580 | ref |
581 | |
582 | hash scalar hash entry existence match if exists $s->{$c}; |
583 | ref hash entry definition match if defined $s->{$c}; |
584 | hash entry truth match if $s->{$c}; |
585 | |
586 | hash regexp hash grep match if grep /$c/, keys %$s; |
587 | ref |
588 | |
589 | sub scalar return value defn match if defined $s->($c); |
590 | ref return value truth match if $s->($c); |
591 | |
592 | sub array return value defn match if defined $s->(@$c); |
593 | ref ref return value truth match if $s->(@$c); |
594 | |
595 | |
596 | In reality, Table 1 covers 31 alternatives, because only the equality and |
597 | intersection tests are commutative; in all other cases, the roles of |
598 | the C<$s> and C<$c> variables could be reversed to produce a |
599 | different test. For example, instead of testing a single hash for |
600 | the existence of a series of keys (C<match if exists $s-E<gt>{$c}>), |
601 | one could test for the existence of a single key in a series of hashes |
602 | (C<match if exists $c-E<gt>{$s}>). |
603 | |
3ed9f206 |
604 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
605 | |
606 | The Switch.pm module implements a generalized case mechanism that covers |
a8700562 |
607 | most (but not all) of the numerous possible combinations of switch and case |
608 | values described above. |
3ed9f206 |
609 | |
610 | The module augments the standard Perl syntax with two new control |
611 | statements: C<switch> and C<case>. The C<switch> statement takes a |
612 | single scalar argument of any type, specified in parentheses. |
613 | C<switch> stores this value as the |
614 | current switch value in a (localized) control variable. |
615 | The value is followed by a block which may contain one or more |
616 | Perl statements (including the C<case> statement described below). |
617 | The block is unconditionally executed once the switch value has |
618 | been cached. |
619 | |
620 | A C<case> statement takes a single scalar argument (in mandatory |
621 | parentheses if it's a variable; otherwise the parens are optional) and |
622 | selects the appropriate type of matching between that argument and the |
623 | current switch value. The type of matching used is determined by the |
624 | respective types of the switch value and the C<case> argument, as |
625 | specified in Table 1. If the match is successful, the mandatory |
626 | block associated with the C<case> statement is executed. |
627 | |
628 | In most other respects, the C<case> statement is semantically identical |
629 | to an C<if> statement. For example, it can be followed by an C<else> |
630 | clause, and can be used as a postfix statement qualifier. |
631 | |
632 | However, when a C<case> block has been executed control is automatically |
633 | transferred to the statement after the immediately enclosing C<switch> |
634 | block, rather than to the next statement within the block. In other |
635 | words, the success of any C<case> statement prevents other cases in the |
636 | same scope from executing. But see L<"Allowing fall-through"> below. |
637 | |
638 | Together these two new statements provide a fully generalized case |
639 | mechanism: |
640 | |
641 | use Switch; |
642 | |
643 | # AND LATER... |
644 | |
645 | %special = ( woohoo => 1, d'oh => 1 ); |
646 | |
647 | while (<>) { |
6bd77ab2 |
648 | chomp; |
3ed9f206 |
649 | switch ($_) { |
74a6a946 |
650 | case (%special) { print "homer\n"; } # if $special{$_} |
6bd77ab2 |
651 | case /[a-z]/i { print "alpha\n"; } # if $_ =~ /a-z/i |
74a6a946 |
652 | case [1..9] { print "small num\n"; } # if $_ in [1..9] |
6bd77ab2 |
653 | case { $_[0] >= 10 } { print "big num\n"; } # if $_ >= 10 |
3ed9f206 |
654 | print "must be punctuation\n" case /\W/; # if $_ ~= /\W/ |
6bd77ab2 |
655 | } |
3ed9f206 |
656 | } |
657 | |
658 | Note that C<switch>es can be nested within C<case> (or any other) blocks, |
659 | and a series of C<case> statements can try different types of matches |
660 | -- hash membership, pattern match, array intersection, simple equality, |
661 | etc. -- against the same switch value. |
662 | |
663 | The use of intersection tests against an array reference is particularly |
664 | useful for aggregating integral cases: |
665 | |
666 | sub classify_digit |
667 | { |
668 | switch ($_[0]) { case 0 { return 'zero' } |
669 | case [2,4,6,8] { return 'even' } |
6bd77ab2 |
670 | case [1,3,5,7,9] { return 'odd' } |
3ed9f206 |
671 | case /[A-F]/i { return 'hex' } |
672 | } |
673 | } |
674 | |
675 | |
676 | =head2 Allowing fall-through |
677 | |
678 | Fall-though (trying another case after one has already succeeded) |
679 | is usually a Bad Idea in a switch statement. However, this |
680 | is Perl, not a police state, so there I<is> a way to do it, if you must. |
681 | |
3c4b39be |
682 | If a C<case> block executes an untargeted C<next>, control is |
3ed9f206 |
683 | immediately transferred to the statement I<after> the C<case> statement |
684 | (i.e. usually another case), rather than out of the surrounding |
685 | C<switch> block. |
686 | |
687 | For example: |
688 | |
689 | switch ($val) { |
690 | case 1 { handle_num_1(); next } # and try next case... |
691 | case "1" { handle_str_1(); next } # and try next case... |
692 | case [0..9] { handle_num_any(); } # and we're done |
693 | case /\d/ { handle_dig_any(); next } # and try next case... |
694 | case /.*/ { handle_str_any(); next } # and try next case... |
695 | } |
696 | |
697 | If $val held the number C<1>, the above C<switch> block would call the |
698 | first three C<handle_...> subroutines, jumping to the next case test |
6bd77ab2 |
699 | each time it encountered a C<next>. After the third C<case> block |
3ed9f206 |
700 | was executed, control would jump to the end of the enclosing |
701 | C<switch> block. |
702 | |
703 | On the other hand, if $val held C<10>, then only the last two C<handle_...> |
704 | subroutines would be called. |
705 | |
706 | Note that this mechanism allows the notion of I<conditional fall-through>. |
707 | For example: |
708 | |
709 | switch ($val) { |
710 | case [0..9] { handle_num_any(); next if $val < 7; } |
711 | case /\d/ { handle_dig_any(); } |
712 | } |
713 | |
3c4b39be |
714 | If an untargeted C<last> statement is executed in a case block, this |
3ed9f206 |
715 | immediately transfers control out of the enclosing C<switch> block |
716 | (in other words, there is an implicit C<last> at the end of each |
717 | normal C<case> block). Thus the previous example could also have been |
718 | written: |
719 | |
720 | switch ($val) { |
721 | case [0..9] { handle_num_any(); last if $val >= 7; next; } |
722 | case /\d/ { handle_dig_any(); } |
723 | } |
724 | |
725 | |
726 | =head2 Automating fall-through |
727 | |
728 | In situations where case fall-through should be the norm, rather than an |
729 | exception, an endless succession of terminal C<next>s is tedious and ugly. |
730 | Hence, it is possible to reverse the default behaviour by specifying |
731 | the string "fallthrough" when importing the module. For example, the |
732 | following code is equivalent to the first example in L<"Allowing fall-through">: |
733 | |
734 | use Switch 'fallthrough'; |
735 | |
736 | switch ($val) { |
737 | case 1 { handle_num_1(); } |
738 | case "1" { handle_str_1(); } |
739 | case [0..9] { handle_num_any(); last } |
740 | case /\d/ { handle_dig_any(); } |
741 | case /.*/ { handle_str_any(); } |
742 | } |
743 | |
744 | Note the explicit use of a C<last> to preserve the non-fall-through |
745 | behaviour of the third case. |
746 | |
747 | |
748 | |
74a6a946 |
749 | =head2 Alternative syntax |
750 | |
751 | Perl 6 will provide a built-in switch statement with essentially the |
752 | same semantics as those offered by Switch.pm, but with a different |
693b9afd |
753 | pair of keywords. In Perl 6 C<switch> will be spelled C<given>, and |
74a6a946 |
754 | C<case> will be pronounced C<when>. In addition, the C<when> statement |
6596d39b |
755 | will not require switch or case values to be parenthesized. |
74a6a946 |
756 | |
6596d39b |
757 | This future syntax is also (largely) available via the Switch.pm module, by |
74a6a946 |
758 | importing it with the argument C<"Perl6">. For example: |
759 | |
760 | use Switch 'Perl6'; |
761 | |
762 | given ($val) { |
6596d39b |
763 | when 1 { handle_num_1(); } |
764 | when ($str1) { handle_str_1(); } |
765 | when [0..9] { handle_num_any(); last } |
766 | when /\d/ { handle_dig_any(); } |
767 | when /.*/ { handle_str_any(); } |
b2486830 |
768 | default { handle anything else; } |
74a6a946 |
769 | } |
770 | |
6596d39b |
771 | Note that scalars still need to be parenthesized, since they would be |
772 | ambiguous in Perl 5. |
773 | |
774 | Note too that you can mix and match both syntaxes by importing the module |
74a6a946 |
775 | with: |
776 | |
777 | use Switch 'Perl5', 'Perl6'; |
778 | |
779 | |
3ed9f206 |
780 | =head2 Higher-order Operations |
781 | |
782 | One situation in which C<switch> and C<case> do not provide a good |
783 | substitute for a cascaded C<if>, is where a switch value needs to |
784 | be tested against a series of conditions. For example: |
785 | |
786 | sub beverage { |
787 | switch (shift) { |
6bd77ab2 |
788 | case { $_[0] < 10 } { return 'milk' } |
789 | case { $_[0] < 20 } { return 'coke' } |
790 | case { $_[0] < 30 } { return 'beer' } |
791 | case { $_[0] < 40 } { return 'wine' } |
792 | case { $_[0] < 50 } { return 'malt' } |
793 | case { $_[0] < 60 } { return 'Moet' } |
794 | else { return 'milk' } |
3ed9f206 |
795 | } |
796 | } |
797 | |
6bd77ab2 |
798 | (This is equivalent to writing C<case (sub { $_[0] < 10 })>, etc.; C<$_[0]> |
799 | is the argument to the anonymous subroutine.) |
800 | |
3ed9f206 |
801 | The need to specify each condition as a subroutine block is tiresome. To |
802 | overcome this, when importing Switch.pm, a special "placeholder" |
803 | subroutine named C<__> [sic] may also be imported. This subroutine |
804 | converts (almost) any expression in which it appears to a reference to a |
805 | higher-order function. That is, the expression: |
806 | |
807 | use Switch '__'; |
808 | |
6bd77ab2 |
809 | __ < 2 |
3ed9f206 |
810 | |
811 | is equivalent to: |
812 | |
6bd77ab2 |
813 | sub { $_[0] < 2 } |
3ed9f206 |
814 | |
815 | With C<__>, the previous ugly case statements can be rewritten: |
816 | |
817 | case __ < 10 { return 'milk' } |
818 | case __ < 20 { return 'coke' } |
819 | case __ < 30 { return 'beer' } |
820 | case __ < 40 { return 'wine' } |
821 | case __ < 50 { return 'malt' } |
822 | case __ < 60 { return 'Moet' } |
823 | else { return 'milk' } |
824 | |
825 | The C<__> subroutine makes extensive use of operator overloading to |
826 | perform its magic. All operations involving __ are overloaded to |
827 | produce an anonymous subroutine that implements a lazy version |
828 | of the original operation. |
829 | |
830 | The only problem is that operator overloading does not allow the |
831 | boolean operators C<&&> and C<||> to be overloaded. So a case statement |
832 | like this: |
833 | |
834 | case 0 <= __ && __ < 10 { return 'digit' } |
835 | |
836 | doesn't act as expected, because when it is |
837 | executed, it constructs two higher order subroutines |
838 | and then treats the two resulting references as arguments to C<&&>: |
839 | |
840 | sub { 0 <= $_[0] } && sub { $_[0] < 10 } |
841 | |
842 | This boolean expression is inevitably true, since both references are |
843 | non-false. Fortunately, the overloaded C<'bool'> operator catches this |
3b46207f |
844 | situation and flags it as an error. |
3ed9f206 |
845 | |
846 | =head1 DEPENDENCIES |
847 | |
848 | The module is implemented using Filter::Util::Call and Text::Balanced |
849 | and requires both these modules to be installed. |
850 | |
851 | =head1 AUTHOR |
852 | |
b62fb10e |
853 | Damian Conway (damian@conway.org). This module is now maintained by Rafael |
854 | Garcia-Suarez (rgarciasuarez@gmail.com) and more generally by the Perl 5 |
855 | Porters (perl5-porters@perl.org), as part of the Perl core. |
3ed9f206 |
856 | |
857 | =head1 BUGS |
858 | |
859 | There are undoubtedly serious bugs lurking somewhere in code this funky :-) |
860 | Bug reports and other feedback are most welcome. |
861 | |
b2486830 |
862 | =head1 LIMITATIONS |
d38ca171 |
863 | |
4f8a7904 |
864 | Due to the heuristic nature of Switch.pm's source parsing, the presence of |
865 | regexes with embedded newlines that are specified with raw C</.../> |
866 | delimiters and don't have a modifier C<//x> are indistinguishable from |
867 | code chunks beginning with the division operator C</>. As a workaround |
868 | you must use C<m/.../> or C<m?...?> for such patterns. Also, the presence |
d38ca171 |
869 | of regexes specified with raw C<?...?> delimiters may cause mysterious |
870 | errors. The workaround is to use C<m?...?> instead. |
871 | |
b2486830 |
872 | Due to the way source filters work in Perl, you can't use Switch inside |
873 | an string C<eval>. |
874 | |
875 | If your source file is longer then 1 million characters and you have a |
876 | switch statement that crosses the 1 million (or 2 million, etc.) |
877 | character boundary you will get mysterious errors. The workaround is to |
878 | use smaller source files. |
879 | |
3ed9f206 |
880 | =head1 COPYRIGHT |
881 | |
6bd77ab2 |
882 | Copyright (c) 1997-2006, Damian Conway. All Rights Reserved. |
55a1c97c |
883 | This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed |
884 | and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself. |