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1 | =head1 NAME |
2 | |
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3 | perlmod - Perl modules (packages and symbol tables) |
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4 | |
5 | =head1 DESCRIPTION |
6 | |
7 | =head2 Packages |
8 | |
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9 | Perl provides a mechanism for alternative namespaces to protect |
10 | packages from stomping on each other's variables. In fact, there's |
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11 | really no such thing as a global variable in Perl. The package |
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12 | statement declares the compilation unit as being in the given |
13 | namespace. The scope of the package declaration is from the |
14 | declaration itself through the end of the enclosing block, C<eval>, |
15 | or file, whichever comes first (the same scope as the my() and |
16 | local() operators). Unqualified dynamic identifiers will be in |
17 | this namespace, except for those few identifiers that if unqualified, |
18 | default to the main package instead of the current one as described |
19 | below. A package statement affects only dynamic variables--including |
20 | those you've used local() on--but I<not> lexical variables created |
21 | with my(). Typically it would be the first declaration in a file |
22 | included by the C<do>, C<require>, or C<use> operators. You can |
23 | switch into a package in more than one place; it merely influences |
24 | which symbol table is used by the compiler for the rest of that |
25 | block. You can refer to variables and filehandles in other packages |
26 | by prefixing the identifier with the package name and a double |
27 | colon: C<$Package::Variable>. If the package name is null, the |
28 | C<main> package is assumed. That is, C<$::sail> is equivalent to |
29 | C<$main::sail>. |
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30 | |
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31 | The old package delimiter was a single quote, but double colon is now the |
32 | preferred delimiter, in part because it's more readable to humans, and |
33 | in part because it's more readable to B<emacs> macros. It also makes C++ |
34 | programmers feel like they know what's going on--as opposed to using the |
35 | single quote as separator, which was there to make Ada programmers feel |
36 | like they knew what's going on. Because the old-fashioned syntax is still |
37 | supported for backwards compatibility, if you try to use a string like |
38 | C<"This is $owner's house">, you'll be accessing C<$owner::s>; that is, |
39 | the $s variable in package C<owner>, which is probably not what you meant. |
40 | Use braces to disambiguate, as in C<"This is ${owner}'s house">. |
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41 | |
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42 | Packages may themselves contain package separators, as in |
43 | C<$OUTER::INNER::var>. This implies nothing about the order of |
44 | name lookups, however. There are no relative packages: all symbols |
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45 | are either local to the current package, or must be fully qualified |
46 | from the outer package name down. For instance, there is nowhere |
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47 | within package C<OUTER> that C<$INNER::var> refers to |
48 | C<$OUTER::INNER::var>. It would treat package C<INNER> as a totally |
49 | separate global package. |
50 | |
51 | Only identifiers starting with letters (or underscore) are stored |
52 | in a package's symbol table. All other symbols are kept in package |
53 | C<main>, including all punctuation variables, like $_. In addition, |
54 | when unqualified, the identifiers STDIN, STDOUT, STDERR, ARGV, |
55 | ARGVOUT, ENV, INC, and SIG are forced to be in package C<main>, |
56 | even when used for other purposes than their built-in one. If you |
57 | have a package called C<m>, C<s>, or C<y>, then you can't use the |
58 | qualified form of an identifier because it would be instead interpreted |
59 | as a pattern match, a substitution, or a transliteration. |
60 | |
61 | Variables beginning with underscore used to be forced into package |
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62 | main, but we decided it was more useful for package writers to be able |
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63 | to use leading underscore to indicate private variables and method names. |
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64 | $_ is still global though. See also |
65 | L<perlvar/"Technical Note on the Syntax of Variable Names">. |
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66 | |
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67 | C<eval>ed strings are compiled in the package in which the eval() was |
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68 | compiled. (Assignments to C<$SIG{}>, however, assume the signal |
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69 | handler specified is in the C<main> package. Qualify the signal handler |
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70 | name if you wish to have a signal handler in a package.) For an |
71 | example, examine F<perldb.pl> in the Perl library. It initially switches |
72 | to the C<DB> package so that the debugger doesn't interfere with variables |
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73 | in the program you are trying to debug. At various points, however, it |
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74 | temporarily switches back to the C<main> package to evaluate various |
75 | expressions in the context of the C<main> package (or wherever you came |
76 | from). See L<perldebug>. |
77 | |
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78 | The special symbol C<__PACKAGE__> contains the current package, but cannot |
79 | (easily) be used to construct variables. |
80 | |
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81 | See L<perlsub> for other scoping issues related to my() and local(), |
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82 | and L<perlref> regarding closures. |
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83 | |
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84 | =head2 Symbol Tables |
85 | |
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86 | The symbol table for a package happens to be stored in the hash of that |
87 | name with two colons appended. The main symbol table's name is thus |
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88 | C<%main::>, or C<%::> for short. Likewise the symbol table for the nested |
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89 | package mentioned earlier is named C<%OUTER::INNER::>. |
90 | |
91 | The value in each entry of the hash is what you are referring to when you |
92 | use the C<*name> typeglob notation. In fact, the following have the same |
93 | effect, though the first is more efficient because it does the symbol |
94 | table lookups at compile time: |
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95 | |
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96 | local *main::foo = *main::bar; |
97 | local $main::{foo} = $main::{bar}; |
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98 | |
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99 | (Be sure to note the B<vast> difference between the second line above |
100 | and C<local $main::foo = $main::bar>. The former is accessing the hash |
101 | C<%main::>, which is the symbol table of package C<main>. The latter is |
102 | simply assigning scalar C<$bar> in package C<main> to scalar C<$foo> of |
103 | the same package.) |
104 | |
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105 | You can use this to print out all the variables in a package, for |
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106 | instance. The standard but antiquated F<dumpvar.pl> library and |
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107 | the CPAN module Devel::Symdump make use of this. |
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108 | |
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109 | Assignment to a typeglob performs an aliasing operation, i.e., |
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110 | |
111 | *dick = *richard; |
112 | |
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113 | causes variables, subroutines, formats, and file and directory handles |
114 | accessible via the identifier C<richard> also to be accessible via the |
115 | identifier C<dick>. If you want to alias only a particular variable or |
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116 | subroutine, assign a reference instead: |
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117 | |
118 | *dick = \$richard; |
119 | |
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120 | Which makes $richard and $dick the same variable, but leaves |
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121 | @richard and @dick as separate arrays. Tricky, eh? |
122 | |
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123 | There is one subtle difference between the following statements: |
124 | |
125 | *foo = *bar; |
126 | *foo = \$bar; |
127 | |
128 | C<*foo = *bar> makes the typeglobs themselves synonymous while |
129 | C<*foo = \$bar> makes the SCALAR portions of two distinct typeglobs |
130 | refer to the same scalar value. This means that the following code: |
131 | |
132 | $bar = 1; |
133 | *foo = \$bar; # Make $foo an alias for $bar |
134 | |
135 | { |
136 | local $bar = 2; # Restrict changes to block |
137 | print $foo; # Prints '1'! |
138 | } |
139 | |
140 | Would print '1', because C<$foo> holds a reference to the I<original> |
141 | C<$bar> -- the one that was stuffed away by C<local()> and which will be |
142 | restored when the block ends. Because variables are accessed through the |
143 | typeglob, you can use C<*foo = *bar> to create an alias which can be |
144 | localized. (But be aware that this means you can't have a separate |
145 | C<@foo> and C<@bar>, etc.) |
146 | |
147 | What makes all of this important is that the Exporter module uses glob |
148 | aliasing as the import/export mechanism. Whether or not you can properly |
149 | localize a variable that has been exported from a module depends on how |
150 | it was exported: |
151 | |
152 | @EXPORT = qw($FOO); # Usual form, can't be localized |
153 | @EXPORT = qw(*FOO); # Can be localized |
154 | |
155 | You can work around the first case by using the fully qualified name |
156 | (C<$Package::FOO>) where you need a local value, or by overriding it |
157 | by saying C<*FOO = *Package::FOO> in your script. |
158 | |
159 | The C<*x = \$y> mechanism may be used to pass and return cheap references |
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160 | into or from subroutines if you don't want to copy the whole |
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161 | thing. It only works when assigning to dynamic variables, not |
162 | lexicals. |
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163 | |
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164 | %some_hash = (); # can't be my() |
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165 | *some_hash = fn( \%another_hash ); |
166 | sub fn { |
167 | local *hashsym = shift; |
168 | # now use %hashsym normally, and you |
169 | # will affect the caller's %another_hash |
170 | my %nhash = (); # do what you want |
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171 | return \%nhash; |
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172 | } |
173 | |
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174 | On return, the reference will overwrite the hash slot in the |
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175 | symbol table specified by the *some_hash typeglob. This |
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176 | is a somewhat tricky way of passing around references cheaply |
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177 | when you don't want to have to remember to dereference variables |
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178 | explicitly. |
179 | |
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180 | Another use of symbol tables is for making "constant" scalars. |
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181 | |
182 | *PI = \3.14159265358979; |
183 | |
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184 | Now you cannot alter C<$PI>, which is probably a good thing all in all. |
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185 | This isn't the same as a constant subroutine, which is subject to |
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186 | optimization at compile-time. A constant subroutine is one prototyped |
187 | to take no arguments and to return a constant expression. See |
188 | L<perlsub> for details on these. The C<use constant> pragma is a |
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189 | convenient shorthand for these. |
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190 | |
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191 | You can say C<*foo{PACKAGE}> and C<*foo{NAME}> to find out what name and |
192 | package the *foo symbol table entry comes from. This may be useful |
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193 | in a subroutine that gets passed typeglobs as arguments: |
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194 | |
195 | sub identify_typeglob { |
196 | my $glob = shift; |
197 | print 'You gave me ', *{$glob}{PACKAGE}, '::', *{$glob}{NAME}, "\n"; |
198 | } |
199 | identify_typeglob *foo; |
200 | identify_typeglob *bar::baz; |
201 | |
202 | This prints |
203 | |
204 | You gave me main::foo |
205 | You gave me bar::baz |
206 | |
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207 | The C<*foo{THING}> notation can also be used to obtain references to the |
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208 | individual elements of *foo. See L<perlref>. |
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209 | |
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210 | Subroutine definitions (and declarations, for that matter) need |
211 | not necessarily be situated in the package whose symbol table they |
212 | occupy. You can define a subroutine outside its package by |
213 | explicitly qualifying the name of the subroutine: |
214 | |
215 | package main; |
216 | sub Some_package::foo { ... } # &foo defined in Some_package |
217 | |
218 | This is just a shorthand for a typeglob assignment at compile time: |
219 | |
220 | BEGIN { *Some_package::foo = sub { ... } } |
221 | |
222 | and is I<not> the same as writing: |
223 | |
224 | { |
225 | package Some_package; |
226 | sub foo { ... } |
227 | } |
228 | |
229 | In the first two versions, the body of the subroutine is |
230 | lexically in the main package, I<not> in Some_package. So |
231 | something like this: |
232 | |
233 | package main; |
234 | |
235 | $Some_package::name = "fred"; |
236 | $main::name = "barney"; |
237 | |
238 | sub Some_package::foo { |
239 | print "in ", __PACKAGE__, ": \$name is '$name'\n"; |
240 | } |
241 | |
242 | Some_package::foo(); |
243 | |
244 | prints: |
245 | |
246 | in main: $name is 'barney' |
247 | |
248 | rather than: |
249 | |
250 | in Some_package: $name is 'fred' |
251 | |
252 | This also has implications for the use of the SUPER:: qualifier |
253 | (see L<perlobj>). |
254 | |
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255 | =head2 Package Constructors and Destructors |
256 | |
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257 | Four special subroutines act as package constructors and destructors. |
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258 | These are the C<BEGIN>, C<CHECK>, C<INIT>, and C<END> routines. The |
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259 | C<sub> is optional for these routines. |
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260 | |
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261 | A C<BEGIN> subroutine is executed as soon as possible, that is, the moment |
262 | it is completely defined, even before the rest of the containing file |
263 | is parsed. You may have multiple C<BEGIN> blocks within a file--they |
264 | will execute in order of definition. Because a C<BEGIN> block executes |
265 | immediately, it can pull in definitions of subroutines and such from other |
266 | files in time to be visible to the rest of the file. Once a C<BEGIN> |
267 | has run, it is immediately undefined and any code it used is returned to |
268 | Perl's memory pool. This means you can't ever explicitly call a C<BEGIN>. |
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269 | |
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270 | An C<END> subroutine is executed as late as possible, that is, after |
271 | perl has finished running the program and just before the interpreter |
272 | is being exited, even if it is exiting as a result of a die() function. |
273 | (But not if it's polymorphing into another program via C<exec>, or |
274 | being blown out of the water by a signal--you have to trap that yourself |
275 | (if you can).) You may have multiple C<END> blocks within a file--they |
276 | will execute in reverse order of definition; that is: last in, first |
277 | out (LIFO). C<END> blocks are not executed when you run perl with the |
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278 | C<-c> switch, or if compilation fails. |
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279 | |
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280 | Inside an C<END> subroutine, C<$?> contains the value that the program is |
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281 | going to pass to C<exit()>. You can modify C<$?> to change the exit |
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282 | value of the program. Beware of changing C<$?> by accident (e.g. by |
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283 | running something via C<system>). |
284 | |
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285 | Similar to C<BEGIN> blocks, C<INIT> blocks are run just before the |
286 | Perl runtime begins execution, in "first in, first out" (FIFO) order. |
287 | For example, the code generators documented in L<perlcc> make use of |
288 | C<INIT> blocks to initialize and resolve pointers to XSUBs. |
289 | |
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290 | Similar to C<END> blocks, C<CHECK> blocks are run just after the |
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291 | Perl compile phase ends and before the run time begins, in |
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292 | LIFO order. C<CHECK> blocks are again useful in the Perl compiler |
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293 | suite to save the compiled state of the program. |
294 | |
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295 | When you use the B<-n> and B<-p> switches to Perl, C<BEGIN> and |
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296 | C<END> work just as they do in B<awk>, as a degenerate case. |
297 | Both C<BEGIN> and C<CHECK> blocks are run when you use the B<-c> |
298 | switch for a compile-only syntax check, although your main code |
299 | is not. |
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300 | |
301 | =head2 Perl Classes |
302 | |
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303 | There is no special class syntax in Perl, but a package may act |
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304 | as a class if it provides subroutines to act as methods. Such a |
305 | package may also derive some of its methods from another class (package) |
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306 | by listing the other package name(s) in its global @ISA array (which |
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307 | must be a package global, not a lexical). |
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308 | |
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309 | For more on this, see L<perltoot> and L<perlobj>. |
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310 | |
311 | =head2 Perl Modules |
312 | |
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313 | A module is just a set of related functions in a library file, i.e., |
314 | a Perl package with the same name as the file. It is specifically |
315 | designed to be reusable by other modules or programs. It may do this |
316 | by providing a mechanism for exporting some of its symbols into the |
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317 | symbol table of any package using it. Or it may function as a class |
318 | definition and make its semantics available implicitly through |
319 | method calls on the class and its objects, without explicitly |
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320 | exporting anything. Or it can do a little of both. |
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321 | |
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322 | For example, to start a traditional, non-OO module called Some::Module, |
323 | create a file called F<Some/Module.pm> and start with this template: |
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324 | |
325 | package Some::Module; # assumes Some/Module.pm |
326 | |
327 | use strict; |
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328 | use warnings; |
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329 | |
330 | BEGIN { |
331 | use Exporter (); |
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332 | our ($VERSION, @ISA, @EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK, %EXPORT_TAGS); |
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333 | |
334 | # set the version for version checking |
335 | $VERSION = 1.00; |
336 | # if using RCS/CVS, this may be preferred |
337 | $VERSION = do { my @r = (q$Revision: 2.21 $ =~ /\d+/g); sprintf "%d."."%02d" x $#r, @r }; # must be all one line, for MakeMaker |
338 | |
339 | @ISA = qw(Exporter); |
340 | @EXPORT = qw(&func1 &func2 &func4); |
341 | %EXPORT_TAGS = ( ); # eg: TAG => [ qw!name1 name2! ], |
342 | |
343 | # your exported package globals go here, |
344 | # as well as any optionally exported functions |
345 | @EXPORT_OK = qw($Var1 %Hashit &func3); |
346 | } |
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347 | our @EXPORT_OK; |
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348 | |
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349 | # exported package globals go here |
350 | our $Var1; |
351 | our %Hashit; |
352 | |
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353 | # non-exported package globals go here |
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354 | our @more; |
355 | our $stuff; |
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356 | |
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357 | # initialize package globals, first exported ones |
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358 | $Var1 = ''; |
359 | %Hashit = (); |
360 | |
361 | # then the others (which are still accessible as $Some::Module::stuff) |
362 | $stuff = ''; |
363 | @more = (); |
364 | |
365 | # all file-scoped lexicals must be created before |
366 | # the functions below that use them. |
367 | |
368 | # file-private lexicals go here |
369 | my $priv_var = ''; |
370 | my %secret_hash = (); |
371 | |
372 | # here's a file-private function as a closure, |
373 | # callable as &$priv_func; it cannot be prototyped. |
374 | my $priv_func = sub { |
375 | # stuff goes here. |
376 | }; |
377 | |
378 | # make all your functions, whether exported or not; |
379 | # remember to put something interesting in the {} stubs |
380 | sub func1 {} # no prototype |
381 | sub func2() {} # proto'd void |
382 | sub func3($$) {} # proto'd to 2 scalars |
383 | |
384 | # this one isn't exported, but could be called! |
385 | sub func4(\%) {} # proto'd to 1 hash ref |
386 | |
387 | END { } # module clean-up code here (global destructor) |
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388 | |
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389 | ## YOUR CODE GOES HERE |
390 | |
391 | 1; # don't forget to return a true value from the file |
392 | |
393 | Then go on to declare and use your variables in functions without |
394 | any qualifications. See L<Exporter> and the L<perlmodlib> for |
395 | details on mechanics and style issues in module creation. |
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396 | |
397 | Perl modules are included into your program by saying |
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398 | |
399 | use Module; |
400 | |
401 | or |
402 | |
403 | use Module LIST; |
404 | |
405 | This is exactly equivalent to |
406 | |
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407 | BEGIN { require Module; import Module; } |
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408 | |
409 | or |
410 | |
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411 | BEGIN { require Module; import Module LIST; } |
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412 | |
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413 | As a special case |
414 | |
415 | use Module (); |
416 | |
417 | is exactly equivalent to |
418 | |
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419 | BEGIN { require Module; } |
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420 | |
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421 | All Perl module files have the extension F<.pm>. The C<use> operator |
422 | assumes this so you don't have to spell out "F<Module.pm>" in quotes. |
423 | This also helps to differentiate new modules from old F<.pl> and |
424 | F<.ph> files. Module names are also capitalized unless they're |
425 | functioning as pragmas; pragmas are in effect compiler directives, |
426 | and are sometimes called "pragmatic modules" (or even "pragmata" |
427 | if you're a classicist). |
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428 | |
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429 | The two statements: |
430 | |
431 | require SomeModule; |
432 | require "SomeModule.pm"; |
433 | |
434 | differ from each other in two ways. In the first case, any double |
435 | colons in the module name, such as C<Some::Module>, are translated |
436 | into your system's directory separator, usually "/". The second |
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437 | case does not, and would have to be specified literally. The other |
438 | difference is that seeing the first C<require> clues in the compiler |
439 | that uses of indirect object notation involving "SomeModule", as |
440 | in C<$ob = purge SomeModule>, are method calls, not function calls. |
441 | (Yes, this really can make a difference.) |
442 | |
443 | Because the C<use> statement implies a C<BEGIN> block, the importing |
444 | of semantics happens as soon as the C<use> statement is compiled, |
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445 | before the rest of the file is compiled. This is how it is able |
446 | to function as a pragma mechanism, and also how modules are able to |
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447 | declare subroutines that are then visible as list or unary operators for |
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448 | the rest of the current file. This will not work if you use C<require> |
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449 | instead of C<use>. With C<require> you can get into this problem: |
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450 | |
451 | require Cwd; # make Cwd:: accessible |
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452 | $here = Cwd::getcwd(); |
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453 | |
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454 | use Cwd; # import names from Cwd:: |
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455 | $here = getcwd(); |
456 | |
457 | require Cwd; # make Cwd:: accessible |
458 | $here = getcwd(); # oops! no main::getcwd() |
459 | |
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460 | In general, C<use Module ()> is recommended over C<require Module>, |
461 | because it determines module availability at compile time, not in the |
462 | middle of your program's execution. An exception would be if two modules |
463 | each tried to C<use> each other, and each also called a function from |
464 | that other module. In that case, it's easy to use C<require>s instead. |
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465 | |
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466 | Perl packages may be nested inside other package names, so we can have |
467 | package names containing C<::>. But if we used that package name |
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468 | directly as a filename it would make for unwieldy or impossible |
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469 | filenames on some systems. Therefore, if a module's name is, say, |
470 | C<Text::Soundex>, then its definition is actually found in the library |
471 | file F<Text/Soundex.pm>. |
472 | |
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473 | Perl modules always have a F<.pm> file, but there may also be |
474 | dynamically linked executables (often ending in F<.so>) or autoloaded |
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475 | subroutine definitions (often ending in F<.al>) associated with the |
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476 | module. If so, these will be entirely transparent to the user of |
477 | the module. It is the responsibility of the F<.pm> file to load |
478 | (or arrange to autoload) any additional functionality. For example, |
479 | although the POSIX module happens to do both dynamic loading and |
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480 | autoloading, the user can say just C<use POSIX> to get it all. |
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481 | |
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482 | =head2 Making your module threadsafe |
483 | |
484 | Perl has since 5.6.0 support for a new type of threads called |
485 | interpreter threads. These threads can be used explicitly and implicitly. |
486 | |
487 | Ithreads work by cloning the data tree so that no data is shared |
488 | between different threads. These threads can be used using the threads |
489 | module or by doing fork() on win32 (fake fork() support). When a thread is |
490 | cloned all perl data is cloned, however non perl data cannot be cloned. |
491 | Perl after 5.7.2 has support for the C<CLONE> keyword. C<CLONE> will be |
492 | executed once for every package that has it defined (or inherits it). |
493 | It will be called in the context of the new thread, so all modifications |
494 | are made in the new area. |
495 | |
496 | If you want to CLONE all objects you will need to keep track of them per |
497 | package. This is simply done using a hash and Scalar::Util::weaken(). |
498 | |
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499 | =head1 SEE ALSO |
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500 | |
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501 | See L<perlmodlib> for general style issues related to building Perl |
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502 | modules and classes, as well as descriptions of the standard library |
503 | and CPAN, L<Exporter> for how Perl's standard import/export mechanism |
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504 | works, L<perltoot> and L<perltooc> for an in-depth tutorial on |
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505 | creating classes, L<perlobj> for a hard-core reference document on |
506 | objects, L<perlsub> for an explanation of functions and scoping, |
507 | and L<perlxstut> and L<perlguts> for more information on writing |
508 | extension modules. |