1Attribute::Handlers(3pm)Perl Programmers Reference GuideAttribute::Handlers(3pm)
2
3
4

NAME

6       Attribute::Handlers - Simpler definition of attribute handlers
7

VERSION

9       This document describes version 0.99 of Attribute::Handlers.
10

SYNOPSIS

12           package MyClass;
13           require 5.006;
14           use Attribute::Handlers;
15           no warnings 'redefine';
16
17
18           sub Good : ATTR(SCALAR) {
19               my ($package, $symbol, $referent, $attr, $data) = @_;
20
21               # Invoked for any scalar variable with a :Good attribute,
22               # provided the variable was declared in MyClass (or
23               # a derived class) or typed to MyClass.
24
25               # Do whatever to $referent here (executed in CHECK phase).
26               ...
27           }
28
29           sub Bad : ATTR(SCALAR) {
30               # Invoked for any scalar variable with a :Bad attribute,
31               # provided the variable was declared in MyClass (or
32               # a derived class) or typed to MyClass.
33               ...
34           }
35
36           sub Good : ATTR(ARRAY) {
37               # Invoked for any array variable with a :Good attribute,
38               # provided the variable was declared in MyClass (or
39               # a derived class) or typed to MyClass.
40               ...
41           }
42
43           sub Good : ATTR(HASH) {
44               # Invoked for any hash variable with a :Good attribute,
45               # provided the variable was declared in MyClass (or
46               # a derived class) or typed to MyClass.
47               ...
48           }
49
50           sub Ugly : ATTR(CODE) {
51               # Invoked for any subroutine declared in MyClass (or a
52               # derived class) with an :Ugly attribute.
53               ...
54           }
55
56           sub Omni : ATTR {
57               # Invoked for any scalar, array, hash, or subroutine
58               # with an :Omni attribute, provided the variable or
59               # subroutine was declared in MyClass (or a derived class)
60               # or the variable was typed to MyClass.
61               # Use ref($_[2]) to determine what kind of referent it was.
62               ...
63           }
64
65
66           use Attribute::Handlers autotie => { Cycle => Tie::Cycle };
67
68           my $next : Cycle(['A'..'Z']);
69

DESCRIPTION

71       This module, when inherited by a package, allows that package's class
72       to define attribute handler subroutines for specific attributes.
73       Variables and subroutines subsequently defined in that package, or in
74       packages derived from that package may be given attributes with the
75       same names as the attribute handler subroutines, which will then be
76       called in one of the compilation phases (i.e. in a "BEGIN", "CHECK",
77       "INIT", or "END" block). ("UNITCHECK" blocks don't correspond to a
78       global compilation phase, so they can't be specified here.)
79
80       To create a handler, define it as a subroutine with the same name as
81       the desired attribute, and declare the subroutine itself with the
82       attribute ":ATTR". For example:
83
84           package LoudDecl;
85           use Attribute::Handlers;
86
87           sub Loud :ATTR {
88               my ($package, $symbol, $referent, $attr, $data, $phase,
89                   $filename, $linenum) = @_;
90               print STDERR
91                   ref($referent), " ",
92                   *{$symbol}{NAME}, " ",
93                   "($referent) ", "was just declared ",
94                   "and ascribed the ${attr} attribute ",
95                   "with data ($data)\n",
96                   "in phase $phase\n",
97                   "in file $filename at line $linenum\n";
98           }
99
100       This creates a handler for the attribute ":Loud" in the class LoudDecl.
101       Thereafter, any subroutine declared with a ":Loud" attribute in the
102       class LoudDecl:
103
104           package LoudDecl;
105
106           sub foo: Loud {...}
107
108       causes the above handler to be invoked, and passed:
109
110       [0] the name of the package into which it was declared;
111
112       [1] a reference to the symbol table entry (typeglob) containing the
113           subroutine;
114
115       [2] a reference to the subroutine;
116
117       [3] the name of the attribute;
118
119       [4] any data associated with that attribute;
120
121       [5] the name of the phase in which the handler is being invoked;
122
123       [6] the filename in which the handler is being invoked;
124
125       [7] the line number in this file.
126
127       Likewise, declaring any variables with the ":Loud" attribute within the
128       package:
129
130           package LoudDecl;
131
132           my $foo :Loud;
133           my @foo :Loud;
134           my %foo :Loud;
135
136       will cause the handler to be called with a similar argument list
137       (except, of course, that $_[2] will be a reference to the variable).
138
139       The package name argument will typically be the name of the class into
140       which the subroutine was declared, but it may also be the name of a
141       derived class (since handlers are inherited).
142
143       If a lexical variable is given an attribute, there is no symbol table
144       to which it belongs, so the symbol table argument ($_[1]) is set to the
145       string 'LEXICAL' in that case. Likewise, ascribing an attribute to an
146       anonymous subroutine results in a symbol table argument of 'ANON'.
147
148       The data argument passes in the value (if any) associated with the
149       attribute. For example, if &foo had been declared:
150
151               sub foo :Loud("turn it up to 11, man!") {...}
152
153       then a reference to an array containing the string "turn it up to 11,
154       man!" would be passed as the last argument.
155
156       Attribute::Handlers makes strenuous efforts to convert the data
157       argument ($_[4]) to a usable form before passing it to the handler (but
158       see "Non-interpretive attribute handlers").  If those efforts succeed,
159       the interpreted data is passed in an array reference; if they fail, the
160       raw data is passed as a string.  For example, all of these:
161
162           sub foo :Loud(till=>ears=>are=>bleeding) {...}
163           sub foo :Loud(qw/till ears are bleeding/) {...}
164           sub foo :Loud(qw/till, ears, are, bleeding/) {...}
165           sub foo :Loud(till,ears,are,bleeding) {...}
166
167       causes it to pass "['till','ears','are','bleeding']" as the handler's
168       data argument. While:
169
170           sub foo :Loud(['till','ears','are','bleeding']) {...}
171
172       causes it to pass "[ ['till','ears','are','bleeding'] ]"; the array
173       reference specified in the data being passed inside the standard array
174       reference indicating successful interpretation.
175
176       However, if the data can't be parsed as valid Perl, then it is passed
177       as an uninterpreted string. For example:
178
179           sub foo :Loud(my,ears,are,bleeding) {...}
180           sub foo :Loud(qw/my ears are bleeding) {...}
181
182       cause the strings 'my,ears,are,bleeding' and 'qw/my ears are bleeding'
183       respectively to be passed as the data argument.
184
185       If no value is associated with the attribute, "undef" is passed.
186
187   Typed lexicals
188       Regardless of the package in which it is declared, if a lexical
189       variable is ascribed an attribute, the handler that is invoked is the
190       one belonging to the package to which it is typed. For example, the
191       following declarations:
192
193           package OtherClass;
194
195           my LoudDecl $loudobj : Loud;
196           my LoudDecl @loudobjs : Loud;
197           my LoudDecl %loudobjex : Loud;
198
199       causes the LoudDecl::Loud handler to be invoked (even if OtherClass
200       also defines a handler for ":Loud" attributes).
201
202   Type-specific attribute handlers
203       If an attribute handler is declared and the ":ATTR" specifier is given
204       the name of a built-in type ("SCALAR", "ARRAY", "HASH", or "CODE"), the
205       handler is only applied to declarations of that type. For example, the
206       following definition:
207
208           package LoudDecl;
209
210           sub RealLoud :ATTR(SCALAR) { print "Yeeeeow!" }
211
212       creates an attribute handler that applies only to scalars:
213
214           package Painful;
215           use base LoudDecl;
216
217           my $metal : RealLoud;           # invokes &LoudDecl::RealLoud
218           my @metal : RealLoud;           # error: unknown attribute
219           my %metal : RealLoud;           # error: unknown attribute
220           sub metal : RealLoud {...}      # error: unknown attribute
221
222       You can, of course, declare separate handlers for these types as well
223       (but you'll need to specify "no warnings 'redefine'" to do it quietly):
224
225           package LoudDecl;
226           use Attribute::Handlers;
227           no warnings 'redefine';
228
229           sub RealLoud :ATTR(SCALAR) { print "Yeeeeow!" }
230           sub RealLoud :ATTR(ARRAY) { print "Urrrrrrrrrr!" }
231           sub RealLoud :ATTR(HASH) { print "Arrrrrgggghhhhhh!" }
232           sub RealLoud :ATTR(CODE) { croak "Real loud sub torpedoed" }
233
234       You can also explicitly indicate that a single handler is meant to be
235       used for all types of referents like so:
236
237           package LoudDecl;
238           use Attribute::Handlers;
239
240           sub SeriousLoud :ATTR(ANY) { warn "Hearing loss imminent" }
241
242       (I.e. "ATTR(ANY)" is a synonym for ":ATTR").
243
244   Non-interpretive attribute handlers
245       Occasionally the strenuous efforts Attribute::Handlers makes to convert
246       the data argument ($_[4]) to a usable form before passing it to the
247       handler get in the way.
248
249       You can turn off that eagerness-to-help by declaring an attribute
250       handler with the keyword "RAWDATA". For example:
251
252           sub Raw          : ATTR(RAWDATA) {...}
253           sub Nekkid       : ATTR(SCALAR,RAWDATA) {...}
254           sub Au::Naturale : ATTR(RAWDATA,ANY) {...}
255
256       Then the handler makes absolutely no attempt to interpret the data it
257       receives and simply passes it as a string:
258
259           my $power : Raw(1..100);        # handlers receives "1..100"
260
261   Phase-specific attribute handlers
262       By default, attribute handlers are called at the end of the compilation
263       phase (in a "CHECK" block). This seems to be optimal in most cases
264       because most things that can be defined are defined by that point but
265       nothing has been executed.
266
267       However, it is possible to set up attribute handlers that are called at
268       other points in the program's compilation or execution, by explicitly
269       stating the phase (or phases) in which you wish the attribute handler
270       to be called. For example:
271
272           sub Early    :ATTR(SCALAR,BEGIN) {...}
273           sub Normal   :ATTR(SCALAR,CHECK) {...}
274           sub Late     :ATTR(SCALAR,INIT) {...}
275           sub Final    :ATTR(SCALAR,END) {...}
276           sub Bookends :ATTR(SCALAR,BEGIN,END) {...}
277
278       As the last example indicates, a handler may be set up to be (re)called
279       in two or more phases. The phase name is passed as the handler's final
280       argument.
281
282       Note that attribute handlers that are scheduled for the "BEGIN" phase
283       are handled as soon as the attribute is detected (i.e. before any
284       subsequently defined "BEGIN" blocks are executed).
285
286   Attributes as "tie" interfaces
287       Attributes make an excellent and intuitive interface through which to
288       tie variables. For example:
289
290           use Attribute::Handlers;
291           use Tie::Cycle;
292
293           sub UNIVERSAL::Cycle : ATTR(SCALAR) {
294               my ($package, $symbol, $referent, $attr, $data, $phase) = @_;
295               $data = [ $data ] unless ref $data eq 'ARRAY';
296               tie $$referent, 'Tie::Cycle', $data;
297           }
298
299           # and thereafter...
300
301           package main;
302
303           my $next : Cycle('A'..'Z');     # $next is now a tied variable
304
305           while (<>) {
306               print $next;
307           }
308
309       Note that, because the "Cycle" attribute receives its arguments in the
310       $data variable, if the attribute is given a list of arguments, $data
311       will consist of a single array reference; otherwise, it will consist of
312       the single argument directly. Since Tie::Cycle requires its cycling
313       values to be passed as an array reference, this means that we need to
314       wrap non-array-reference arguments in an array constructor:
315
316           $data = [ $data ] unless ref $data eq 'ARRAY';
317
318       Typically, however, things are the other way around: the tieable class
319       expects its arguments as a flattened list, so the attribute looks like:
320
321           sub UNIVERSAL::Cycle : ATTR(SCALAR) {
322               my ($package, $symbol, $referent, $attr, $data, $phase) = @_;
323               my @data = ref $data eq 'ARRAY' ? @$data : $data;
324               tie $$referent, 'Tie::Whatever', @data;
325           }
326
327       This software pattern is so widely applicable that Attribute::Handlers
328       provides a way to automate it: specifying 'autotie' in the "use
329       Attribute::Handlers" statement. So, the cycling example, could also be
330       written:
331
332           use Attribute::Handlers autotie => { Cycle => 'Tie::Cycle' };
333
334           # and thereafter...
335
336           package main;
337
338           my $next : Cycle(['A'..'Z']);     # $next is now a tied variable
339
340           while (<>) {
341               print $next;
342           }
343
344       Note that we now have to pass the cycling values as an array reference,
345       since the "autotie" mechanism passes "tie" a list of arguments as a
346       list (as in the Tie::Whatever example), not as an array reference (as
347       in the original Tie::Cycle example at the start of this section).
348
349       The argument after 'autotie' is a reference to a hash in which each key
350       is the name of an attribute to be created, and each value is the class
351       to which variables ascribed that attribute should be tied.
352
353       Note that there is no longer any need to import the Tie::Cycle module
354       -- Attribute::Handlers takes care of that automagically. You can even
355       pass arguments to the module's "import" subroutine, by appending them
356       to the class name. For example:
357
358           use Attribute::Handlers
359                autotie => { Dir => 'Tie::Dir qw(DIR_UNLINK)' };
360
361       If the attribute name is unqualified, the attribute is installed in the
362       current package. Otherwise it is installed in the qualifier's package:
363
364           package Here;
365
366           use Attribute::Handlers autotie => {
367                Other::Good => Tie::SecureHash, # tie attr installed in Other::
368                        Bad => Tie::Taxes,      # tie attr installed in Here::
369            UNIVERSAL::Ugly => Software::Patent # tie attr installed everywhere
370           };
371
372       Autoties are most commonly used in the module to which they actually
373       tie, and need to export their attributes to any module that calls them.
374       To facilitate this, Attribute::Handlers recognizes a special "pseudo-
375       class" -- "__CALLER__", which may be specified as the qualifier of an
376       attribute:
377
378           package Tie::Me::Kangaroo:Down::Sport;
379
380           use Attribute::Handlers autotie =>
381                { '__CALLER__::Roo' => __PACKAGE__ };
382
383       This causes Attribute::Handlers to define the "Roo" attribute in the
384       package that imports the Tie::Me::Kangaroo:Down::Sport module.
385
386       Note that it is important to quote the __CALLER__::Roo identifier
387       because a bug in perl 5.8 will refuse to parse it and cause an unknown
388       error.
389
390       Passing the tied object to "tie"
391
392       Occasionally it is important to pass a reference to the object being
393       tied to the TIESCALAR, TIEHASH, etc. that ties it.
394
395       The "autotie" mechanism supports this too. The following code:
396
397           use Attribute::Handlers autotieref => { Selfish => Tie::Selfish };
398           my $var : Selfish(@args);
399
400       has the same effect as:
401
402           tie my $var, 'Tie::Selfish', @args;
403
404       But when "autotieref" is used instead of "autotie":
405
406           use Attribute::Handlers autotieref => { Selfish => Tie::Selfish };
407           my $var : Selfish(@args);
408
409       the effect is to pass the "tie" call an extra reference to the variable
410       being tied:
411
412           tie my $var, 'Tie::Selfish', \$var, @args;
413

EXAMPLES

415       If the class shown in "SYNOPSIS" were placed in the MyClass.pm module,
416       then the following code:
417
418           package main;
419           use MyClass;
420
421           my MyClass $slr :Good :Bad(1**1-1) :Omni(-vorous);
422
423           package SomeOtherClass;
424           use base MyClass;
425
426           sub tent { 'acle' }
427
428           sub fn :Ugly(sister) :Omni('po',tent()) {...}
429           my @arr :Good :Omni(s/cie/nt/);
430           my %hsh :Good(q/bye/) :Omni(q/bus/);
431
432       would cause the following handlers to be invoked:
433
434           # my MyClass $slr :Good :Bad(1**1-1) :Omni(-vorous);
435
436           MyClass::Good:ATTR(SCALAR)( 'MyClass',          # class
437                                       'LEXICAL',          # no typeglob
438                                       \$slr,              # referent
439                                       'Good',             # attr name
440                                       undef               # no attr data
441                                       'CHECK',            # compiler phase
442                                     );
443
444           MyClass::Bad:ATTR(SCALAR)( 'MyClass',           # class
445                                      'LEXICAL',           # no typeglob
446                                      \$slr,               # referent
447                                      'Bad',               # attr name
448                                      0                    # eval'd attr data
449                                      'CHECK',             # compiler phase
450                                    );
451
452           MyClass::Omni:ATTR(SCALAR)( 'MyClass',          # class
453                                       'LEXICAL',          # no typeglob
454                                       \$slr,              # referent
455                                       'Omni',             # attr name
456                                       '-vorous'           # eval'd attr data
457                                       'CHECK',            # compiler phase
458                                     );
459
460
461           # sub fn :Ugly(sister) :Omni('po',tent()) {...}
462
463           MyClass::UGLY:ATTR(CODE)( 'SomeOtherClass',     # class
464                                     \*SomeOtherClass::fn, # typeglob
465                                     \&SomeOtherClass::fn, # referent
466                                     'Ugly',               # attr name
467                                     'sister'              # eval'd attr data
468                                     'CHECK',              # compiler phase
469                                   );
470
471           MyClass::Omni:ATTR(CODE)( 'SomeOtherClass',     # class
472                                     \*SomeOtherClass::fn, # typeglob
473                                     \&SomeOtherClass::fn, # referent
474                                     'Omni',               # attr name
475                                     ['po','acle']         # eval'd attr data
476                                     'CHECK',              # compiler phase
477                                   );
478
479
480           # my @arr :Good :Omni(s/cie/nt/);
481
482           MyClass::Good:ATTR(ARRAY)( 'SomeOtherClass',    # class
483                                      'LEXICAL',           # no typeglob
484                                      \@arr,               # referent
485                                      'Good',              # attr name
486                                      undef                # no attr data
487                                      'CHECK',             # compiler phase
488                                    );
489
490           MyClass::Omni:ATTR(ARRAY)( 'SomeOtherClass',    # class
491                                      'LEXICAL',           # no typeglob
492                                      \@arr,               # referent
493                                      'Omni',              # attr name
494                                      ""                   # eval'd attr data
495                                      'CHECK',             # compiler phase
496                                    );
497
498
499           # my %hsh :Good(q/bye) :Omni(q/bus/);
500
501           MyClass::Good:ATTR(HASH)( 'SomeOtherClass',     # class
502                                     'LEXICAL',            # no typeglob
503                                     \%hsh,                # referent
504                                     'Good',               # attr name
505                                     'q/bye'               # raw attr data
506                                     'CHECK',              # compiler phase
507                                   );
508
509           MyClass::Omni:ATTR(HASH)( 'SomeOtherClass',     # class
510                                     'LEXICAL',            # no typeglob
511                                     \%hsh,                # referent
512                                     'Omni',               # attr name
513                                     'bus'                 # eval'd attr data
514                                     'CHECK',              # compiler phase
515                                   );
516
517       Installing handlers into UNIVERSAL, makes them...err..universal.  For
518       example:
519
520           package Descriptions;
521           use Attribute::Handlers;
522
523           my %name;
524           sub name { return $name{$_[2]}||*{$_[1]}{NAME} }
525
526           sub UNIVERSAL::Name :ATTR {
527               $name{$_[2]} = $_[4];
528           }
529
530           sub UNIVERSAL::Purpose :ATTR {
531               print STDERR "Purpose of ", &name, " is $_[4]\n";
532           }
533
534           sub UNIVERSAL::Unit :ATTR {
535               print STDERR &name, " measured in $_[4]\n";
536           }
537
538       Let's you write:
539
540           use Descriptions;
541
542           my $capacity : Name(capacity)
543                        : Purpose(to store max storage capacity for files)
544                        : Unit(Gb);
545
546
547           package Other;
548
549           sub foo : Purpose(to foo all data before barring it) { }
550
551           # etc.
552

UTILITY FUNCTIONS

554       This module offers a single utility function, "findsym()".
555
556       findsym
557               my $symbol = Attribute::Handlers::findsym($package, $referent);
558
559           The function looks in the symbol table of $package for the typeglob
560           for $referent, which is a reference to a variable or subroutine
561           (SCALAR, ARRAY, HASH, or CODE). If it finds the typeglob, it
562           returns it. Otherwise, it returns undef. Note that "findsym"
563           memoizes the typeglobs it has previously successfully found, so
564           subsequent calls with the same arguments should be much faster.
565

DIAGNOSTICS

567       "Bad attribute type: ATTR(%s)"
568           An attribute handler was specified with an ":ATTR(ref_type)", but
569           the type of referent it was defined to handle wasn't one of the
570           five permitted: "SCALAR", "ARRAY", "HASH", "CODE", or "ANY".
571
572       "Attribute handler %s doesn't handle %s attributes"
573           A handler for attributes of the specified name was defined, but not
574           for the specified type of declaration. Typically encountered when
575           trying to apply a "VAR" attribute handler to a subroutine, or a
576           "SCALAR" attribute handler to some other type of variable.
577
578       "Declaration of %s attribute in package %s may clash with future
579       reserved word"
580           A handler for an attributes with an all-lowercase name was
581           declared. An attribute with an all-lowercase name might have a
582           meaning to Perl itself some day, even though most don't yet. Use a
583           mixed-case attribute name, instead.
584
585       "Can't have two ATTR specifiers on one subroutine"
586           You just can't, okay?  Instead, put all the specifications together
587           with commas between them in a single "ATTR(specification)".
588
589       "Can't autotie a %s"
590           You can only declare autoties for types "SCALAR", "ARRAY", and
591           "HASH". They're the only things (apart from typeglobs -- which are
592           not declarable) that Perl can tie.
593
594       "Internal error: %s symbol went missing"
595           Something is rotten in the state of the program. An attributed
596           subroutine ceased to exist between the point it was declared and
597           the point at which its attribute handler(s) would have been called.
598
599       "Won't be able to apply END handler"
600           You have defined an END handler for an attribute that is being
601           applied to a lexical variable.  Since the variable may not be
602           available during END this won't happen.
603

AUTHOR

605       Damian Conway (damian@conway.org). The maintainer of this module is now
606       Rafael Garcia-Suarez (rgarciasuarez@gmail.com).
607
608       Maintainer of the CPAN release is Steffen Mueller (smueller@cpan.org).
609       Contact him with technical difficulties with respect to the packaging
610       of the CPAN module.
611

BUGS

613       There are undoubtedly serious bugs lurking somewhere in code this funky
614       :-) Bug reports and other feedback are most welcome.
615
617                Copyright (c) 2001-2014, Damian Conway. All Rights Reserved.
618              This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed
619                  and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself.
620
621
622
623perl v5.26.3                      2018-03-01          Attribute::Handlers(3pm)
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