1Class::Forward(3)     User Contributed Perl Documentation    Class::Forward(3)
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NAME

6       Class::Forward - Namespace Dispatch and Resolution
7

VERSION

9       version 0.100006
10

SYNOPSIS

12           use Class::Forward;
13
14           # create a resolution object
15           my $res = Class::Forward->new(namespace => 'MyApp');
16
17           # returns MyApp::Data
18           say $res->forward('data');
19
20           # returns a MyApp::Data instance
21           my $data  = $res->forward('data.new');
22
23           # returns the string /my_app/data
24           my $string = $res->reverse('data.new');
25
26           # returns MyApp::Data
27           say $res->forward($string);
28

DESCRIPTION

30       Class::Forward is designed to resolve Perl namespaces from shorthand
31       (which is simply a file-path-like specification). Class::Forward can
32       also be used to dispatch method calls using said shorthand. See the
33       following exported functions for examples on how this can be used.
34

EXPORTS

36   clsf
37       The exported function clsf is responsible for resolving your shorthand.
38       The following is an example of how it functions:
39
40           package App::Store;
41
42           use CGI;
43           use Class::Forward;
44
45           clsf;                             # returns App::Store
46           clsf './user';                    # returns App::Store::User
47           clsf './user.new', name => 'N30'; # return a new App::Store::User object
48           clsf './user_profile.new';        # ... App::Store::UserProfile object
49           clsf '../user';                   # returns App::User
50           clsf '//';                        # returns App; (top of the calling class)
51           clsf '//.new';                    # returns a new App object
52           clsf '//view';                    # ... returns App::View
53           clsf '//view.new';                # ... returns a new App::View object
54           clsf '//view.new.render';         # ... dispatches methods in succession
55           clsf 'cgi';                       # returns App::Store::Cgi
56           clsf '/cgi';                      # returns Cgi (or CGI if already loaded)
57
58           1;
59
60       The clsf function takes two arguments, the shorthand to be translated,
61       and an optional list of arguments to be passed to the last method
62       appended to the shorthand.
63
64   clsr
65       The exported function clsr is responsible for resolving your shorthand.
66       The following is an example of how it functions:
67
68           package App::Store;
69
70           use CGI;
71           use Class::Forward;
72
73           clsr;                             # returns /app/store
74           clsr './user';                    # returns /app/store/user
75           clsr './user.new', name => 'N30'; # returns /app/store/user
76           clsr './user_profile';            # returns /app/store/user_profile
77           clsr '../user';                   # returns /app/user
78           clsr '//';                        # returns /app
79           clsr '//.new';                    # returns /app
80           clsr '//view';                    # returns /app/view
81           clsr '//view.new';                # returns /app/view
82           clsr '//view.new.render';         # returns /app/view
83           clsr 'cgi';                       # returns /app/store/cgi
84           clsr '/cgi';                      # returns /cgi
85
86           1;
87
88       The clsr function takes three arguments, the shorthand to be translated
89       (required), the offset (optional level of namespace nodes to omit left-
90       to-right), and the delimiter to be used to generate the resulting path
91       (defaults to forward-slash).
92

METHODS

94   new
95       The new method is used to instantiate a new instance.
96
97   namespace
98       The namespace method is used to get/set the root namespace used as an
99       anchor for all resolution requests.
100
101           my $namespace = $self->namespace('MyApp');
102
103   forward
104       The forward (or forward_lookup) method is used to resolve Perl
105       namespaces from path-like shorthand.
106
107           say $self->forward('example');
108           # given a default namespace of MyApp
109           # prints MyApp::Example
110
111   reverse
112       The reverse method (or reverse_lookup) is used to generate path-like
113       shorthand from Perl namespaces.
114
115           say $self->reverse('Simple::Example');
116           # given a default namespace of MyApp
117           # prints /my_app/simple/example
118
119           say $self->reverse('Simple::Example', 1);
120           # given a default namespace of MyApp
121           # prints simple/example
122
123           say $self->reverse('Simple::Example', 1, '_');
124           # given a default namespace of MyApp
125           # prints simple_example
126

SEE ALSO

128       Class::Forward was designed to provide shorthand and easy access to
129       class namespaces in an environment where you're dealing with a
130       multitude of long well-named classes. In that vein, it provides an
131       alternative to modules like aliased, aliased::factory, as, and the
132       like, and also modules like Namespace::Dispatch which are similar
133       enough to be mentioned but really address a completely different issue.
134

AUTHOR

136       Al Newkirk <anewkirk@ana.io>
137
139       This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Al Newkirk.
140
141       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
142       the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
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146perl v5.32.0                      2020-07-28                 Class::Forward(3)
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