Bumping version to 0.006020
[p5sagit/Devel-Declare.git] / lib / Devel / Declare.pm
CommitLineData
94caac6e 1package Devel::Declare;
919504e3 2# ABSTRACT: (DEPRECATED) Adding keywords to perl, in perl
94caac6e 3
4use strict;
5use warnings;
6use 5.008001;
7
ef514ff4 8our $VERSION = '0.006020';
0ba8c7aa 9
10use constant DECLARE_NAME => 1;
11use constant DECLARE_PROTO => 2;
53e3ab32 12use constant DECLARE_NONE => 4;
15d0d014 13use constant DECLARE_PACKAGE => 8+1; # name implicit
0ba8c7aa 14
86c3de80 15use vars qw(%declarators %declarator_handlers @ISA);
94caac6e 16use base qw(DynaLoader);
323ae557 17use Scalar::Util 'set_prototype';
39801454 18use B::Hooks::OP::Check 0.19;
94caac6e 19
20bootstrap Devel::Declare;
21
86c3de80 22@ISA = ();
23
8ec78a85 24initialize();
25
94caac6e 26sub import {
0ba8c7aa 27 my ($class, %args) = @_;
94caac6e 28 my $target = caller;
0ba8c7aa 29 if (@_ == 1) { # "use Devel::Declare;"
30 no strict 'refs';
15d0d014 31 foreach my $name (qw(NAME PROTO NONE PACKAGE)) {
53e3ab32 32 *{"${target}::DECLARE_${name}"} = *{"DECLARE_${name}"};
0ba8c7aa 33 }
34 } else {
35 $class->setup_for($target => \%args);
36 }
94caac6e 37}
38
39sub unimport {
40 my ($class) = @_;
41 my $target = caller;
42 $class->teardown_for($target);
43}
44
45sub setup_for {
46 my ($class, $target, $args) = @_;
47 setup();
0ba8c7aa 48 foreach my $key (keys %$args) {
49 my $info = $args->{$key};
50 my ($flags, $sub);
51 if (ref($info) eq 'ARRAY') {
52 ($flags, $sub) = @$info;
53 } elsif (ref($info) eq 'CODE') {
54 $flags = DECLARE_NAME;
55 $sub = $info;
840ebcbb 56 } elsif (ref($info) eq 'HASH') {
57 $flags = 1;
58 $sub = $info;
0ba8c7aa 59 } else {
840ebcbb 60 die "Info for sub ${key} must be [ \$flags, \$sub ] or \$sub or handler hashref";
0ba8c7aa 61 }
62 $declarators{$target}{$key} = $flags;
63 $declarator_handlers{$target}{$key} = $sub;
64 }
94caac6e 65}
66
67sub teardown_for {
68 my ($class, $target) = @_;
69 delete $declarators{$target};
0ba8c7aa 70 delete $declarator_handlers{$target};
94caac6e 71}
72
94caac6e 73my $temp_name;
0ba8c7aa 74my $temp_save;
94caac6e 75
76sub init_declare {
0f070758 77 my ($usepack, $use, $inpack, $name, $proto, $traits) = @_;
53e3ab32 78 my ($name_h, $XX_h, $extra_code)
9026391e 79 = $declarator_handlers{$usepack}{$use}->(
0f070758 80 $usepack, $use, $inpack, $name, $proto, defined(wantarray), $traits
53e3ab32 81 );
15d0d014 82 ($temp_name, $temp_save) = ([], []);
0ba8c7aa 83 if ($name) {
9026391e 84 $name = "${inpack}::${name}" unless $name =~ /::/;
840ebcbb 85 shadow_sub($name, $name_h);
0ba8c7aa 86 }
87 if ($XX_h) {
840ebcbb 88 shadow_sub("${inpack}::X", $XX_h);
0ba8c7aa 89 }
53e3ab32 90 if (defined wantarray) {
91 return $extra_code || '0;';
92 } else {
93 return;
94 }
94caac6e 95}
96
840ebcbb 97sub shadow_sub {
98 my ($name, $cr) = @_;
99 push(@$temp_name, $name);
100 no strict 'refs';
101 my ($pack, $pname) = ($name =~ m/(.+)::([^:]+)/);
102 push(@$temp_save, $pack->can($pname));
840ebcbb 103 no warnings 'redefine';
104 no warnings 'prototype';
105 *{$name} = $cr;
106 set_in_declare(~~@{$temp_name||[]});
107}
108
94caac6e 109sub done_declare {
110 no strict 'refs';
86c3de80 111 my $name = shift(@{$temp_name||[]});
0ba8c7aa 112 die "done_declare called with no temp_name stack" unless defined($name);
86c3de80 113 my $saved = shift(@$temp_save);
15d0d014 114 $name =~ s/(.*):://;
115 my $temp_pack = $1;
0ba8c7aa 116 delete ${"${temp_pack}::"}{$name};
117 if ($saved) {
118 no warnings 'prototype';
119 *{"${temp_pack}::${name}"} = $saved;
120 }
840ebcbb 121 set_in_declare(~~@{$temp_name||[]});
94caac6e 122}
123
323ae557 124sub build_sub_installer {
125 my ($class, $pack, $name, $proto) = @_;
126 return eval "
127 package ${pack};
128 my \$body;
129 sub ${name} (${proto}) :lvalue {\n"
003ac394 130 .' if (wantarray) {
c5912dc7 131 goto &$body;
003ac394 132 }
133 my $ret = $body->(@_);
86c3de80 134 return $ret;
323ae557 135 };
136 sub { ($body) = @_; };';
137}
138
139sub setup_declarators {
140 my ($class, $pack, $to_setup) = @_;
86c3de80 141 die "${class}->setup_declarators(\$pack, \\\%to_setup)"
142 unless defined($pack) && ref($to_setup) eq 'HASH';
143 my %setup_for_args;
323ae557 144 foreach my $name (keys %$to_setup) {
145 my $info = $to_setup->{$name};
146 my $flags = $info->{flags} || DECLARE_NAME;
147 my $run = $info->{run};
148 my $compile = $info->{compile};
149 my $proto = $info->{proto} || '&';
150 my $sub_proto = $proto;
151 # make all args optional to enable lvalue for DECLARE_NONE
152 $sub_proto =~ s/;//; $sub_proto = ';'.$sub_proto;
86c3de80 153 #my $installer = $class->build_sub_installer($pack, $name, $proto);
154 my $installer = $class->build_sub_installer($pack, $name, '@');
86c3de80 155 $installer->(sub :lvalue {
003ac394 156#{ no warnings 'uninitialized'; warn 'INST: '.join(', ', @_)."\n"; }
c5534496 157 if (@_) {
158 if (ref $_[0] eq 'HASH') {
159 shift;
003ac394 160 if (wantarray) {
161 my @ret = $run->(undef, undef, @_);
162 return @ret;
163 }
c5534496 164 my $r = $run->(undef, undef, @_);
165 return $r;
166 } else {
003ac394 167 return @_[1..$#_];
c5534496 168 }
86c3de80 169 }
170 return my $sv;
171 });
172 $setup_for_args{$name} = [
173 $flags,
174 sub {
0f070758 175 my ($usepack, $use, $inpack, $name, $proto, $shift_hashref, $traits) = @_;
176 my $extra_code = $compile->($name, $proto, $traits);
003ac394 177 my $main_handler = sub { shift if $shift_hashref;
c5534496 178 ("DONE", $run->($name, $proto, @_));
003ac394 179 };
86c3de80 180 my ($name_h, $XX);
181 if (defined $proto) {
182 $name_h = sub :lvalue { return my $sv; };
183 $XX = $main_handler;
c5534496 184 } elsif (defined $name && length $name) {
86c3de80 185 $name_h = $main_handler;
186 }
003ac394 187 $extra_code ||= '';
188 $extra_code = '}, sub {'.$extra_code;
86c3de80 189 return ($name_h, $XX, $extra_code);
190 }
191 ];
323ae557 192 }
86c3de80 193 $class->setup_for($pack, \%setup_for_args);
194}
195
196sub install_declarator {
197 my ($class, $target_pack, $target_name, $flags, $filter, $handler) = @_;
198 $class->setup_declarators($target_pack, {
199 $target_name => {
200 flags => $flags,
201 compile => $filter,
202 run => $handler,
203 }
204 });
323ae557 205}
206
04a8a223 207sub linestr_callback_rv2cv {
208 my ($name, $offset) = @_;
209 $offset += toke_move_past_token($offset);
210 my $pack = get_curstash_name();
211 my $flags = $declarators{$pack}{$name};
212 my ($found_name, $found_proto);
04a8a223 213 if ($flags & DECLARE_NAME) {
214 $offset += toke_skipspace($offset);
215 my $linestr = get_linestr();
216 if (substr($linestr, $offset, 2) eq '::') {
217 substr($linestr, $offset, 2) = '';
218 set_linestr($linestr);
219 }
220 if (my $len = toke_scan_word($offset, $flags & DECLARE_PACKAGE)) {
221 $found_name = substr($linestr, $offset, $len);
222 $offset += $len;
04a8a223 223 }
224 }
225 if ($flags & DECLARE_PROTO) {
226 $offset += toke_skipspace($offset);
227 my $linestr = get_linestr();
228 if (substr($linestr, $offset, 1) eq '(') {
229 my $length = toke_scan_str($offset);
230 $found_proto = get_lex_stuff();
231 clear_lex_stuff();
232 my $replace =
233 ($found_name ? ' ' : '=')
234 .'X'.(' ' x length($found_proto));
235 $linestr = get_linestr();
236 substr($linestr, $offset, $length) = $replace;
237 set_linestr($linestr);
238 $offset += $length;
04a8a223 239 }
240 }
241 my @args = ($pack, $name, $pack, $found_name, $found_proto);
04a8a223 242 $offset += toke_skipspace($offset);
243 my $linestr = get_linestr();
244 if (substr($linestr, $offset, 1) eq '{') {
245 my $ret = init_declare(@args);
246 $offset++;
247 if (defined $ret && length $ret) {
248 substr($linestr, $offset, 0) = $ret;
249 set_linestr($linestr);
250 }
251 } else {
252 init_declare(@args);
253 }
254 #warn "linestr now ${linestr}";
255}
256
569ac469 257sub linestr_callback_const {
04a8a223 258 my ($name, $offset) = @_;
259 my $pack = get_curstash_name();
260 my $flags = $declarators{$pack}{$name};
261 if ($flags & DECLARE_NAME) {
262 $offset += toke_move_past_token($offset);
263 $offset += toke_skipspace($offset);
264 if (toke_scan_word($offset, $flags & DECLARE_PACKAGE)) {
265 my $linestr = get_linestr();
266 substr($linestr, $offset, 0) = '::';
267 set_linestr($linestr);
268 }
269 }
569ac469 270}
271
272sub linestr_callback {
273 my $type = shift;
840ebcbb 274 my $name = $_[0];
275 my $pack = get_curstash_name();
276 my $handlers = $declarator_handlers{$pack}{$name};
277 if (ref $handlers eq 'CODE') {
278 my $meth = "linestr_callback_${type}";
279 __PACKAGE__->can($meth)->(@_);
280 } elsif (ref $handlers eq 'HASH') {
281 if ($handlers->{$type}) {
282 $handlers->{$type}->(@_);
283 }
284 } else {
285 die "PANIC: unknown thing in handlers for $pack $name: $handlers";
286 }
569ac469 287}
288
94caac6e 289=head1 NAME
290
7e31b6e3 291Devel::Declare - Adding keywords to perl, in perl
94caac6e 292
293=head1 SYNOPSIS
294
1795217c 295 use Method::Signatures;
296 # or ...
297 use MooseX::Declare;
298 # etc.
299
300 # Use some new and exciting syntax like:
301 method hello (Str :$who, Int :$age where { $_ > 0 }) {
302 $self->say("Hello ${who}, I am ${age} years old!");
303 }
304
305=head1 DESCRIPTION
306
307L<Devel::Declare> can install subroutines called declarators which locally take
308over Perl's parser, allowing the creation of new syntax.
309
310This document describes how to create a simple declarator.
311
1adc7e7c 312=head1 WARNING
313
314=for comment mst wrote this warning for MooseX::Declare, and ether adapted it for here:
315
316B<Warning:> Devel::Declare is a giant bag of crack
317originally implemented by mst with the goal of upsetting the perl core
318developers so much by its very existence that they implemented proper
319keyword handling in the core.
320
321As of perl5 version 14, this goal has been achieved, and modules such
322as L<Devel::CallParser>, L<Function::Parameters>, and L<Keyword::Simple> provide
323mechanisms to mangle perl syntax that don't require hallucinogenic
324drugs to interpret the error messages they produce.
325
326If you are using something that uses Devel::Declare, please for the love
327of kittens use something else:
328
329=over 4
330
331=item *
332
333Instead of L<TryCatch>, use L<Try::Tiny>
334
335=item *
336
337Instead of L<Method::Signatures>, use
338L<real subroutine signatures|perlsub/Signatures> (requires perl 5.22) or L<Moops>
339
340=back
341
1795217c 342=head1 USAGE
343
344We'll demonstrate the usage of C<Devel::Declare> with a motivating example: a new
345C<method> keyword, which acts like the builtin C<sub>, but automatically unpacks
346C<$self> and the other arguments.
347
348 package My::Methods;
349 use Devel::Declare;
350
351=head2 Creating a declarator with C<setup_for>
352
353You will typically create
354
355 sub import {
356 my $class = shift;
357 my $caller = caller;
358
359 Devel::Declare->setup_for(
360 $caller,
361 { method => { const => \&parser } }
362 );
363 no strict 'refs';
364 *{$caller.'::method'} = sub (&) {};
365 }
366
367Starting from the end of this import routine, you'll see that we're creating a
368subroutine called C<method> in the caller's namespace. Yes, that's just a normal
369subroutine, and it does nothing at all (yet!) Note the prototype C<(&)> which means
370that the caller would call it like so:
371
372 method {
373 my ($self, $arg1, $arg2) = @_;
374 ...
375 }
376
377However we want to be able to call it like this
378
379 method foo ($arg1, $arg2) {
380 ...
381 }
382
383That's why we call C<setup_for> above, to register the declarator 'method' with a custom
384parser, as per the next section. It acts on an optype, usually C<'const'> as above.
385(Other valid values are C<'check'> and C<'rv2cv'>).
386
387For a simpler way to install new methods, see also L<Devel::Declare::MethodInstaller::Simple>
388
389=head2 Writing a parser subroutine
390
391This subroutine is called at I<compilation> time, and allows you to read the custom
392syntaxes that we want (in a syntax that may or may not be valid core Perl 5) and
393munge it so that the result will be parsed by the C<perl> compiler.
394
395For this example, we're defining some globals for convenience:
396
2ee34f20 397 our ($Declarator, $Offset);
1795217c 398
399Then we define a parser subroutine to handle our declarator. We'll look at this in
400a few chunks.
401
402 sub parser {
403 local ($Declarator, $Offset) = @_;
404
405C<Devel::Declare> provides some very low level utility methods to parse character
406strings. We'll define some useful higher level routines below for convenience,
407and we can use these to parse the various elements in our new syntax.
408
409Notice how our parser subroutine is invoked at compile time,
410when the C<perl> parser is pointed just I<before> the declarator name.
411
412 skip_declarator; # step past 'method'
413 my $name = strip_name; # strip out the name 'foo', if present
414 my $proto = strip_proto; # strip out the prototype '($arg1, $arg2)', if present
415
416Now we can prepare some code to 'inject' into the new subroutine. For example we
417might want the method as above to have C<my ($self, $arg1, $arg2) = @_> injected at
418the beginning of it. We also do some clever stuff with scopes that we'll look
419at shortly.
420
421 my $inject = make_proto_unwrap($proto);
422 if (defined $name) {
423 $inject = scope_injector_call().$inject;
424 }
425 inject_if_block($inject);
426
427We've now managed to change C<method ($arg1, $arg2) { ... }> into C<method {
428injected_code; ... }>. This will compile... but we've lost the name of the
429method!
430
431In a cute (or horrifying, depending on your perspective) trick, we temporarily
432change the definition of the subroutine C<method> itself, to specialise it with
433the C<$name> we stripped, so that it assigns the code block to that name.
434
435Even though the I<next> time C<method> is compiled, it will be
436redefined again, C<perl> caches these definitions in its parse
437tree, so we'll always get the right one!
438
439Note that we also handle the case where there was no name, allowing
440an anonymous method analogous to an anonymous subroutine.
441
442 if (defined $name) {
443 $name = join('::', Devel::Declare::get_curstash_name(), $name)
444 unless ($name =~ /::/);
445 shadow(sub (&) { no strict 'refs'; *{$name} = shift; });
446 } else {
447 shadow(sub (&) { shift });
448 }
449 }
450
451
452=head2 Parser utilities in detail
453
454For simplicity, we're using global variables like C<$Offset> in these examples.
455You may prefer to look at L<Devel::Declare::Context::Simple>, which
456encapsulates the context much more cleanly.
457
458=head3 C<skip_declarator>
459
460This simple parser just moves across a 'token'. The common case is
461to skip the declarator, i.e. to move to the end of the string
462'method' and before the prototype and code block.
463
2ee34f20 464 sub skip_declarator {
465 $Offset += Devel::Declare::toke_move_past_token($Offset);
466 }
1795217c 467
468=head4 C<toke_move_past_token>
469
470This builtin parser simply moves past a 'token' (matching C</[a-zA-Z_]\w*/>)
471It takes an offset into the source document, and skips past the token.
472It returns the number of characters skipped.
473
474=head3 C<strip_name>
475
476This parser skips any whitespace, then scans the next word (again matching a
477'token'). We can then analyse the current line, and manipulate it (using pure
478Perl). In this case we take the name of the method out, and return it.
479
2ee34f20 480 sub strip_name {
481 skipspace;
482 if (my $len = Devel::Declare::toke_scan_word($Offset, 1)) {
483 my $linestr = Devel::Declare::get_linestr();
484 my $name = substr($linestr, $Offset, $len);
485 substr($linestr, $Offset, $len) = '';
486 Devel::Declare::set_linestr($linestr);
487 return $name;
488 }
489 return;
490 }
1795217c 491
492=head4 C<toke_scan_word>
493
494This builtin parser, given an offset into the source document,
495matches a 'token' as above but does not skip. It returns the
496length of the token matched, if any.
497
498=head4 C<get_linestr>
499
500This builtin returns the full text of the current line of the source document.
501
502=head4 C<set_linestr>
503
504This builtin sets the full text of the current line of the source document.
2627a85c 505Beware that injecting a newline into the middle of the line is likely
506to fail in surprising ways. Generally, Perl's parser can rely on the
507`current line' actually being only a single line. Use other kinds of
508whitespace instead, in the code that you inject.
1795217c 509
510=head3 C<skipspace>
511
512This parser skips whitsepace.
513
514 sub skipspace {
515 $Offset += Devel::Declare::toke_skipspace($Offset);
516 }
517
518=head4 C<toke_skipspace>
519
520This builtin parser, given an offset into the source document,
521skips over any whitespace, and returns the number of characters
522skipped.
523
524=head3 C<strip_proto>
525
526This is a more complex parser that checks if it's found something that
527starts with C<'('> and returns everything till the matching C<')'>.
528
2ee34f20 529 sub strip_proto {
530 skipspace;
1795217c 531
2ee34f20 532 my $linestr = Devel::Declare::get_linestr();
533 if (substr($linestr, $Offset, 1) eq '(') {
534 my $length = Devel::Declare::toke_scan_str($Offset);
535 my $proto = Devel::Declare::get_lex_stuff();
536 Devel::Declare::clear_lex_stuff();
537 $linestr = Devel::Declare::get_linestr();
538 substr($linestr, $Offset, $length) = '';
539 Devel::Declare::set_linestr($linestr);
540 return $proto;
541 }
542 return;
543 }
1795217c 544
545=head4 C<toke_scan_str>
546
547This builtin parser uses Perl's own parsing routines to match a "stringlike"
548expression. Handily, this includes bracketed expressions (just think about
549things like C<q(this is a quote)>).
550
551Also it Does The Right Thing with nested delimiters (like C<q(this (is (a) quote))>).
552
78bb475d 553It returns the effective length of the expression matched. Really, what
554it returns is the difference in position between where the string started,
555within the buffer, and where it finished. If the string extended across
556multiple lines then the contents of the buffer may have been completely
557replaced by the new lines, so this position difference is not the same
558thing as the actual length of the expression matched. However, because
559moving backward in the buffer causes problems, the function arranges
560for the effective length to always be positive, padding the start of
561the buffer if necessary.
562
563Use C<get_lex_stuff> to get the actual matched text, the content of
564the string. Because of the behaviour around multiline strings, you
565can't reliably get this from the buffer. In fact, after the function
566returns, you can't rely on any content of the buffer preceding the end
567of the string.
1795217c 568
8449c31f 569If the string being scanned is not well formed (has no closing delimiter),
570C<toke_scan_str> returns C<undef>. In this case you cannot rely on the
571contents of the buffer.
572
1795217c 573=head4 C<get_lex_stuff>
574
575This builtin returns what was matched by C<toke_scan_str>. To avoid segfaults,
576you should call C<clear_lex_stuff> immediately afterwards.
577
578=head2 Munging the subroutine
579
580Let's look at what we need to do in detail.
581
582=head3 C<make_proto_unwrap>
583
584We may have defined our method in different ways, which will result
585in a different value for our prototype, as parsed above. For example:
586
587 method foo { # undefined
588 method foo () { # ''
589 method foo ($arg1) { # '$arg1'
590
591We deal with them as follows, and return the appropriate C<my ($self, ...) = @_;>
592string.
593
2ee34f20 594 sub make_proto_unwrap {
595 my ($proto) = @_;
596 my $inject = 'my ($self';
597 if (defined $proto) {
598 $inject .= ", $proto" if length($proto);
599 $inject .= ') = @_; ';
600 } else {
601 $inject .= ') = shift;';
602 }
603 return $inject;
604 }
1795217c 605
606=head3 C<inject_if_block>
607
608Now we need to inject it after the opening C<'{'> of the method body.
609We can do this with the building blocks we defined above like C<skipspace>
610and C<get_linestr>.
611
2ee34f20 612 sub inject_if_block {
613 my $inject = shift;
614 skipspace;
615 my $linestr = Devel::Declare::get_linestr;
616 if (substr($linestr, $Offset, 1) eq '{') {
617 substr($linestr, $Offset+1, 0) = $inject;
618 Devel::Declare::set_linestr($linestr);
619 }
620 }
94caac6e 621
1795217c 622=head3 C<scope_injector_call>
623
624We want to be able to handle both named and anonymous methods. i.e.
625
626 method foo () { ... }
627 my $meth = method () { ... };
628
629These will then get rewritten as
630
631 method { ... }
632 my $meth = method { ... };
633
634where 'method' is a subroutine that takes a code block. Spot the problem?
635The first one doesn't have a semicolon at the end of it! Unlike 'sub' which
636is a builtin, this is just a normal statement, so we need to terminate it.
6c1cecd4 637Luckily, using C<B::Hooks::EndOfScope>, we can do this!
1795217c 638
6c1cecd4 639 use B::Hooks::EndOfScope;
1795217c 640
641We'll add this to what gets 'injected' at the beginning of the method source.
642
643 sub scope_injector_call {
644 return ' BEGIN { MethodHandlers::inject_scope }; ';
2ee34f20 645 }
1795217c 646
5bcdf810 647So at the beginning of every method, we are passing a callback that will get invoked
1795217c 648at the I<end> of the method's compilation... i.e. exactly then the closing C<'}'>
649is compiled.
650
651 sub inject_scope {
6c1cecd4 652 on_scope_end {
1795217c 653 my $linestr = Devel::Declare::get_linestr;
654 my $offset = Devel::Declare::get_linestr_offset;
655 substr($linestr, $offset, 0) = ';';
656 Devel::Declare::set_linestr($linestr);
6c1cecd4 657 };
2ee34f20 658 }
94caac6e 659
1795217c 660=head2 Shadowing each method.
661
662=head3 C<shadow>
94caac6e 663
1795217c 664We override the current definition of 'method' using C<shadow>.
94caac6e 665
1795217c 666 sub shadow {
667 my $pack = Devel::Declare::get_curstash_name;
668 Devel::Declare::shadow_sub("${pack}::${Declarator}", $_[0]);
2ee34f20 669 }
94caac6e 670
1795217c 671For a named method we invoked like this:
672
673 shadow(sub (&) { no strict 'refs'; *{$name} = shift; });
674
675So in the case of a C<method foo { ... }>, this call would redefine C<method>
676to be a subroutine that exports 'sub foo' as the (munged) contents of C<{...}>.
677
678The case of an anonymous method is also cute:
679
680 shadow(sub (&) { shift });
681
682This means that
683
684 my $meth = method () { ... };
685
686is rewritten with C<method> taking the codeblock, and returning it as is to become
687the value of C<$meth>.
688
689=head4 C<get_curstash_name>
690
691This returns the package name I<currently being compiled>.
692
693=head4 C<shadow_sub>
694
695Handles the details of redefining the subroutine.
696
697=head1 SEE ALSO
698
699One of the best ways to learn C<Devel::Declare> is still to look at
700modules that use it:
701
702L<http://cpants.perl.org/dist/used_by/Devel-Declare>.
94caac6e 703
dcf29eb6 704=head1 AUTHORS
94caac6e 705
502ba90e 706Matt S Trout - E<lt>mst@shadowcat.co.ukE<gt> - original author
94caac6e 707
02f5a508 708Company: http://www.shadowcat.co.uk/
94caac6e 709Blog: http://chainsawblues.vox.com/
710
1795217c 711Florian Ragwitz E<lt>rafl@debian.orgE<gt> - maintainer
712
0df492b9 713osfameron E<lt>osfameron@cpan.orgE<gt> - first draft of documentation
dcf29eb6 714
107322d1 715=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
716
09addf7a 717This library is free software under the same terms as perl itself
718
107322d1 719Copyright (c) 2007, 2008, 2009 Matt S Trout
720
721Copyright (c) 2008, 2009 Florian Ragwitz
94caac6e 722
09addf7a 723stolen_chunk_of_toke.c based on toke.c from the perl core, which is
724
725Copyright (C) 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999,
7262000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, by Larry Wall and others
94caac6e 727
728=cut
729
7301;