1accessors::classic(3) User Contributed Perl Documentationaccessors::classic(3)
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6 accessors::classic - create 'classic' read/write accessor methods in
7 caller's package.
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10 package Foo;
11 use accessors::classic qw( foo bar baz );
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13 my $obj = bless {}, 'Foo';
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15 # always return the current value, even on set:
16 $obj->foo( 'hello ' ) if $obj->bar( 'world' ) eq 'world';
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18 print $obj->foo, $obj->bar, $obj->baz( "!\n" );
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21 The accessors::classic pragma lets you create simple classic Perl
22 accessors at compile-time.
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24 The generated methods look like this:
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26 sub foo {
27 my $self = shift;
28 $self->{foo} = shift if (@_);
29 return $self->{foo};
30 }
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32 They always return the current value.
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34 Note that there is no dash ("-") prepended to the property name as
35 there are in accessors. This is for backwards compatability.
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38 There is little-to-no performace hit when using generated accessors; in
39 fact there is usually a performance gain.
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41 · typically 5-15% faster than hard-coded accessors (like the above
42 example).
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44 · typically 1-15% slower than optimized accessors (less readable).
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46 · typically a small performance hit at startup (accessors are created
47 at compile-time).
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49 · uses the same anonymous sub to reduce memory consumption (sometimes
50 by 80%).
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52 See the benchmark tests included with this distribution for more
53 details.
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56 Classes using blessed scalarrefs, arrayrefs, etc. are not supported for
57 sake of simplicity. Only hashrefs are supported.
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60 Steve Purkis <spurkis@cpan.org>
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63 accessors, accessors::rw, accessors::ro, accessors::chained, base
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67perl v5.32.0 2020-07-28 accessors::classic(3)