1Sub::Exporter::TutorialU(s3e)r Contributed Perl DocumentaStuibo:n:Exporter::Tutorial(3)
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NAME

6       Sub::Exporter::Tutorial - a friendly guide to exporting with
7       Sub::Exporter
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VERSION

10         $Id: /my/cs/projects/Sub-Exporter/trunk/lib/Sub/Exporter/Tutorial.pod 31962 2007-07-04T02:29:46.946587Z rjbs  $
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DESCRIPTION

13       What's an Exporter?
14
15       When you "use" a module, first it is required, then its "import" method
16       is called.  The Perl documentation tells us that the following two
17       lines are equivalent:
18
19         use Module LIST;
20
21         BEGIN { require Module; Module->import(LIST); }
22
23       The import method is the module's exporter.
24
25       The Basics of Sub::Exporter
26
27       Sub::Exporter builds a custom exporter which can then be installed into
28       your module.  It builds this method based on configuration passed to
29       its "setup_exporter" method.
30
31       A very basic use case might look like this:
32
33         package Addition;
34         use Sub::Exporter;
35         Sub::Exporter::setup_exporter({ exports => [ qw(plus) ]});
36
37         sub plus { my ($x, $y) = @_; return $x + $y; }
38
39       This would mean that when someone used your Addition module, they could
40       have its "plus" routine imported into their package:
41
42         use Addition qw(plus);
43
44         my $z = plus(2, 2); # this works, because now plus is in the main package
45
46       That syntax to set up the exporter, above, is a little verbose, so for
47       the simple case of just naming some exports, you can write this:
48
49         use Sub::Exporter -setup => { exports => [ qw(plus) ] };
50
51       ...which is the same as the original example -- except that now the
52       exporter is built and installed at compile time.  Well, that and you
53       typed less.
54
55       Using Export Groups
56
57       You can specify whole groups of things that should be exportable
58       together.  These are called groups.  Exporter calls these tags.  To
59       specify groups, you just pass a "groups" key in your exporter configu‐
60       ration:
61
62         package Food;
63         use Sub::Exporter -setup => {
64           exports => [ qw(apple banana beef fluff lox rabbit) ],
65           groups  => {
66             fauna  => [ qw(beef lox rabbit) ],
67             flora  => [ qw(apple banana) ],
68           }
69         };
70
71       Now, to import all that delicious foreign meat, your consumer needs
72       only to write:
73
74         use Food qw(:fauna);
75         use Food qw(-fauna);
76
77       Either one of the above is acceptable.  A colon is more traditional,
78       but barewords with a leading colon can't be enquoted by a fat arrow.
79       We'll see why that matters later on.
80
81       Groups can contain other groups.  If you include a group name (with the
82       leading dash or colon) in a group definition, it will be expanded
83       recursively when the exporter is called.  The exporter will not recurse
84       into the same group twice while expanding groups.
85
86       There are two special groups:  "all" and "default".  The "all" group is
87       defined by default, and contains all exportable subs.  You can redefine
88       it, if you want to export only a subset when all exports are requested.
89       The "default" group is the set of routines to export when nothing spe‐
90       cific is requested.  By default, there is no "default" group.
91
92       Renaming Your Imports
93
94       Sometimes you want to import something, but you don't like the name as
95       which it's imported.  Sub::Exporter can rename your imports for you.
96       If you wanted to import "lox" from the Food package, but you don't like
97       the name, you could write this:
98
99         use Food lox => { -as => 'salmon' };
100
101       Now you'd get the "lox" routine, but it would be called salmon in your
102       package.  You can also rename entire groups by using the "prefix"
103       option:
104
105         use Food -fauna => { -prefix => 'cute_little_' };
106
107       Now you can call your "cute_little_rabbit" routine.  (You can also call
108       "cute_little_beef", but that hardly seems as enticing.)
109
110       When you define groups, you can include renaming.
111
112         use Sub::Exporter -setup => {
113           exports => [ qw(apple banana beef fluff lox rabbit) ],
114           groups  => {
115             fauna  => [ qw(beef lox), rabbit => { -as => 'coney' } ],
116           }
117         };
118
119       A prefix on a group like that does the right thing.  This is when it's
120       useful to use a dash instead of a colon to indicate a group: you can
121       put a fat arrow between the group and its arguments, then.
122
123         use Food -fauna => { -prefix => 'lovely_' };
124
125         eat( lovely_coney ); # this works
126
127       Prefixes also apply recursively.  That means that this code works:
128
129         use Sub::Exporter -setup => {
130           exports => [ qw(apple banana beef fluff lox rabbit) ],
131           groups  => {
132             fauna   => [ qw(beef lox), rabbit => { -as => 'coney' } ],
133             allowed => [ -fauna => { -prefix => 'willing_' }, 'banana' ],
134           }
135         };
136
137         ...
138
139         use Food -allowed => { -prefix => 'any_' };
140
141         $dinner = any_willing_coney; # yum!
142
143       Groups can also be passed a "-suffix" argument.
144
145       Finally, if the "-as" argument to an exported routine is a reference to
146       a scalar, a reference to the routine will be placed in that scalar.
147
148       Building Subroutines to Order
149
150       Sometimes, you want to export things that you don't have on hand.  You
151       might want to offer customized routines built to the specification of
152       your consumer; that's just good business!  With Sub::Exporter, this is
153       easy.
154
155       To offer subroutines to order, you need to provide a generator when you
156       set up your exporter.  A generator is just a routine that returns a new
157       routine.  perlref is talking about these when it discusses closures and
158       function templates. The canonical example of a generator builds a
159       unique incrementor; here's how you'd do that with Sub::Exporter;
160
161         package Package::Counter;
162         use Sub::Exporter -setup => {
163           exports => [ counter => sub { my $i = 0; sub { $i++ } } ],
164           groups  => { default => [ qw(counter) ] },
165         };
166
167       Now anyone can use your Package::Counter module and he'll receive a
168       "counter" in his package.  It will count up by one, and will never
169       interfere with anyone else's counter.
170
171       This isn't very useful, though, unless the consumer can explain what he
172       wants.  This is done, in part, by supplying arguments when importing.
173       The following example shows how a generator can take and use arguments:
174
175         package Package::Counter;
176
177         sub _build_counter {
178           my ($class, $arg) = @_;
179           $arg ⎪⎪= {};
180           my $i = $arg->{start} ⎪⎪ 0;
181           return sub { $i++ };
182         }
183
184         use Sub::Exporter -setup => {
185           exports => [ counter => \'_build_counter' ],
186           groups  => { default => [ qw(counter) ] },
187         };
188
189       Now, the consumer can (if he wants) specify a starting value for his
190       counter:
191
192         use Package::Counter counter => { start => 10 };
193
194       Arguments to a group are passed along to the generators of routines in
195       that group, but Sub::Exporter arguments -- anything beginning with a
196       dash -- are never passed in.  When groups are nested, the arguments are
197       merged as the groups are expanded.
198
199       Notice, too, that in the example above, we gave a reference to a method
200       name rather than a method implementation.  By giving the name rather
201       than the subroutine, we make it possible for subclasses of our "Pack‐
202       age::Counter" module to replace the "_build_counter" method.
203
204       When a generator is called, it is passed four parameters:
205
206       * the class on which the exporter was called
207       * the name of the export being generated (not the name it's being
208       installed as)
209       * the arguments supplied for the routine
210       * the collection of generic arguments
211
212       The third item is the last major feature that hasn't been covered.
213
214       Argument Collectors
215
216       Sometimes you will want to accept arguments once that can then be
217       available to any subroutine that you're going to export.  To do this,
218       you specify collectors, like this:
219
220         use Menu::Airline
221         use Sub::Exporter -setup => {
222           exports =>  ... ,
223           groups  =>  ... ,
224           collectors => [ qw(allergies ethics) ],
225         };
226
227       Collectors look like normal exports in the import call, but they don't
228       do anything but collect data which can later be passed to generators.
229       If the module was used like this:
230
231         use Menu::Airline allergies => [ qw(peanuts) ], ethics => [ qw(vegan) ];
232
233       ...the consumer would get a salad.  Also, all the generators would be
234       passed, as their third argument, something like this:
235
236         { allerges => [ qw(peanuts) ], ethics => [ qw(vegan) ] }
237
238       Generators may have arguments in their definition, as well.  These must
239       be code refs that perform validation of the collected values.  They are
240       passed the collection value and may return true or false.  If they
241       return false, the exporter will throw an exception.
242
243       Generating Many Routines in One Scope
244
245       Sometimes it's useful to have multiple routines generated in one scope.
246       This way they can share lexical data which is otherwise unavailable.
247       To do this, you can supply a generator for a group which returns a
248       hashref of names and code references.  This generator is passed all the
249       usual data, and the group may receive the usual "-prefix" or "-suffix"
250       arguments.
251

AUTHOR

253       Ricardo SIGNES, "<rjbs@cpan.org>"
254

SEE ALSO

256       * Sub::Exporter for complete documentation and references to other
257       exporters.
258
260       Copyright 2007 Ricardo SIGNES.  This program is free software;  you can
261       redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
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265perl v5.8.8                       2007-07-05        Sub::Exporter::Tutorial(3)
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