X-Git-Url: http://git.shadowcat.co.uk/gitweb/gitweb.cgi?a=blobdiff_plain;f=lib%2Ffields.pm;h=cca778f905d971f26afccd20400db45af4c74c10;hb=d0c833c6b6d161774fa9ee0c74b6748675c48591;hp=8e2d6398bb12aba10a74ff6ac3d762abf784e40a;hpb=458fb5819c1ac395635ee1129f0f694cb0128ffd;p=p5sagit%2Fp5-mst-13.2.git diff --git a/lib/fields.pm b/lib/fields.pm index 8e2d639..cca778f 100644 --- a/lib/fields.pm +++ b/lib/fields.pm @@ -1,18 +1,319 @@ package fields; +require 5.005; +use strict; +no strict 'refs'; +unless( eval q{require warnings::register; warnings::register->import} ) { + *warnings::warnif = sub { + require Carp; + Carp::carp(@_); + } +} +use vars qw(%attr $VERSION); + +$VERSION = '2.03'; + +# constant.pm is slow +sub PUBLIC () { 2**0 } +sub PRIVATE () { 2**1 } +sub INHERITED () { 2**2 } +sub PROTECTED () { 2**3 } + + +# The %attr hash holds the attributes of the currently assigned fields +# per class. The hash is indexed by class names and the hash value is +# an array reference. The first element in the array is the lowest field +# number not belonging to a base class. The remaining elements' indices +# are the field numbers. The values are integer bit masks, or undef +# in the case of base class private fields (which occupy a slot but are +# otherwise irrelevant to the class). + sub import { my $class = shift; - my ($package) = caller; + return unless @_; + my $package = caller(0); + # avoid possible typo warnings + %{"$package\::FIELDS"} = () unless %{"$package\::FIELDS"}; my $fields = \%{"$package\::FIELDS"}; - my $i = $fields->{__MAX__}; + my $fattr = ($attr{$package} ||= [1]); + my $next = @$fattr; + + # Quiet pseudo-hash deprecation warning for uses of fields::new. + bless \%{"$package\::FIELDS"}, 'pseudohash'; + + if ($next > $fattr->[0] + and ($fields->{$_[0]} || 0) >= $fattr->[0]) + { + # There are already fields not belonging to base classes. + # Looks like a possible module reload... + $next = $fattr->[0]; + } foreach my $f (@_) { - if (defined($fields->{$f})) { + my $fno = $fields->{$f}; + + # Allow the module to be reloaded so long as field positions + # have not changed. + if ($fno and $fno != $next) { require Carp; - Carp::croak("Field name $f already in use"); + if ($fno < $fattr->[0]) { + if ($] < 5.006001) { + warn("Hides field '$f' in base class") if $^W; + } else { + warnings::warnif("Hides field '$f' in base class") ; + } + } else { + Carp::croak("Field name '$f' already in use"); + } + } + $fields->{$f} = $next; + $fattr->[$next] = ($f =~ /^_/) ? PRIVATE : PUBLIC; + $next += 1; + } + if (@$fattr > $next) { + # Well, we gave them the benefit of the doubt by guessing the + # module was reloaded, but they appear to be declaring fields + # in more than one place. We can't be sure (without some extra + # bookkeeping) that the rest of the fields will be declared or + # have the same positions, so punt. + require Carp; + Carp::croak ("Reloaded module must declare all fields at once"); + } +} + +sub inherit { + require base; + goto &base::inherit_fields; +} + +sub _dump # sometimes useful for debugging +{ + for my $pkg (sort keys %attr) { + print "\n$pkg"; + if (@{"$pkg\::ISA"}) { + print " (", join(", ", @{"$pkg\::ISA"}), ")"; + } + print "\n"; + my $fields = \%{"$pkg\::FIELDS"}; + for my $f (sort {$fields->{$a} <=> $fields->{$b}} keys %$fields) { + my $no = $fields->{$f}; + print " $no: $f"; + my $fattr = $attr{$pkg}[$no]; + if (defined $fattr) { + my @a; + push(@a, "public") if $fattr & PUBLIC; + push(@a, "private") if $fattr & PRIVATE; + push(@a, "inherited") if $fattr & INHERITED; + print "\t(", join(", ", @a), ")"; + } + print "\n"; } - $fields->{$f} = ++$i; } - $fields->{__MAX__} = $i; +} + +if ($] < 5.009) { + *new = sub { + my $class = shift; + $class = ref $class if ref $class; + return bless [\%{$class . "::FIELDS"}], $class; + } +} else { + *new = sub { + my $class = shift; + $class = ref $class if ref $class; + require Hash::Util; + my $self = bless {}, $class; + + # The lock_keys() prototype won't work since we require Hash::Util :( + &Hash::Util::lock_keys(\%$self, keys %{$class.'::FIELDS'}); + return $self; + } +} + +sub phash { + die "Pseudo-hashes have been removed from Perl" if $] >= 5.009; + my $h; + my $v; + if (@_) { + if (ref $_[0] eq 'ARRAY') { + my $a = shift; + @$h{@$a} = 1 .. @$a; + if (@_) { + $v = shift; + unless (! @_ and ref $v eq 'ARRAY') { + require Carp; + Carp::croak ("Expected at most two array refs\n"); + } + } + } + else { + if (@_ % 2) { + require Carp; + Carp::croak ("Odd number of elements initializing pseudo-hash\n"); + } + my $i = 0; + @$h{grep ++$i % 2, @_} = 1 .. @_ / 2; + $i = 0; + $v = [grep $i++ % 2, @_]; + } + } + else { + $h = {}; + $v = []; + } + [ $h, @$v ]; + } 1; + +__END__ + +=head1 NAME + +fields - compile-time class fields + +=head1 SYNOPSIS + + { + package Foo; + use fields qw(foo bar _Foo_private); + sub new { + my Foo $self = shift; + unless (ref $self) { + $self = fields::new($self); + $self->{_Foo_private} = "this is Foo's secret"; + } + $self->{foo} = 10; + $self->{bar} = 20; + return $self; + } + } + + my $var = Foo->new; + $var->{foo} = 42; + + # this will generate an error + $var->{zap} = 42; + + # subclassing + { + package Bar; + use base 'Foo'; + use fields qw(baz _Bar_private); # not shared with Foo + sub new { + my $class = shift; + my $self = fields::new($class); + $self->SUPER::new(); # init base fields + $self->{baz} = 10; # init own fields + $self->{_Bar_private} = "this is Bar's secret"; + return $self; + } + } + +=head1 DESCRIPTION + +The C pragma enables compile-time verified class fields. + +NOTE: The current implementation keeps the declared fields in the %FIELDS +hash of the calling package, but this may change in future versions. +Do B update the %FIELDS hash directly, because it must be created +at compile-time for it to be fully useful, as is done by this pragma. + +B + +If a typed lexical variable holding a reference is used to access a +hash element and a package with the same name as the type has +declared class fields using this pragma, then the operation is +turned into an array access at compile time. + + +The related C pragma will combine fields from base classes and any +fields declared using the C pragma. This enables field +inheritance to work properly. + +Field names that start with an underscore character are made private to +the class and are not visible to subclasses. Inherited fields can be +overridden but will generate a warning if used together with the C<-w> +switch. + +B + +The effect of all this is that you can have objects with named +fields which are as compact and as fast arrays to access. This only +works as long as the objects are accessed through properly typed +variables. If the objects are not typed, access is only checked at +run time. + + +The following functions are supported: + +=over 4 + +=item new + +B< perl before 5.9.0: > fields::new() creates and blesses a +pseudo-hash comprised of the fields declared using the C +pragma into the specified class. + +B< perl 5.9.0 and higher: > fields::new() creates and blesses a +restricted-hash comprised of the fields declared using the C +pragma into the specified class. + +This function is usable with or without pseudo-hashes. It is the +recommended way to construct a fields-based object. + +This makes it possible to write a constructor like this: + + package Critter::Sounds; + use fields qw(cat dog bird); + + sub new { + my $self = shift; + $self = fields::new($self) unless ref $self; + $self->{cat} = 'meow'; # scalar element + @$self{'dog','bird'} = ('bark','tweet'); # slice + return $self; + } + +=item phash + +B< before perl 5.9.0: > + +fields::phash() can be used to create and initialize a plain (unblessed) +pseudo-hash. This function should always be used instead of creating +pseudo-hashes directly. + +If the first argument is a reference to an array, the pseudo-hash will +be created with keys from that array. If a second argument is supplied, +it must also be a reference to an array whose elements will be used as +the values. If the second array contains less elements than the first, +the trailing elements of the pseudo-hash will not be initialized. +This makes it particularly useful for creating a pseudo-hash from +subroutine arguments: + + sub dogtag { + my $tag = fields::phash([qw(name rank ser_num)], [@_]); + } + +fields::phash() also accepts a list of key-value pairs that will +be used to construct the pseudo hash. Examples: + + my $tag = fields::phash(name => "Joe", + rank => "captain", + ser_num => 42); + + my $pseudohash = fields::phash(%args); + +B< perl 5.9.0 and higher: > + +Pseudo-hashes have been removed from Perl as of 5.10. Consider using +restricted hashes or fields::new() instead. Using fields::phash() +will cause an error. + +=back + +=head1 SEE ALSO + +L + +=cut