1Importer(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Importer(3)
2
3
4
6 Importer - Alternative but compatible interface to modules that export
7 symbols.
8
10 This module acts as a layer between Exporter and modules which consume
11 exports. It is feature-compatible with Exporter, plus some much needed
12 extras. You can use this to import symbols from any exporter that
13 follows Exporters specification. The exporter modules themselves do not
14 need to use or inherit from the Exporter module, they just need to set
15 @EXPORT and/or other variables.
16
18 # Import defaults
19 use Importer 'Some::Module';
20
21 # Import a list
22 use Importer 'Another::Module' => qw/foo bar baz/;
23
24 # Import a specific version:
25 use Importer 'That::Module' => '1.00';
26
27 # Require a sepcific version of Importer
28 use Importer 0.001, 'Foo::Bar' => qw/a b c/;
29
30 foo()
31 bar()
32 baz()
33
34 # Remove all subroutines imported by Importer
35 no Importer;
36
37 # Import symbols into variables
38 my $croak = Importer->get_one(Carp => qw/croak/);
39 $croak->("This will croak");
40
41 my $CARP = Importer->get(Carp => qw/croak confess cluck/);
42 $CARP->{croak}->("This will croak");
43 $CARP->{cluck}->("This will cluck");
44 $CARP->{confess}->("This will confess");
45
47 There was recently a discussion on p5p about adding features to
48 Exporter. This conversation raised some significant concerns, those
49 are listed here, in addition to others.
50
51 The burden is on export consumers to specify a version of Exporter
52 Adding a feature to Exporter means that any consumer module that
53 relies on the new features must depend on a specific version of
54 Exporter. This seems somewhat backwards since Exporter is used by
55 the module you are importing from.
56
57 Exporter.pm is really old/crazy code
58 Not much more to say here. It is very old, it is very crazy, and if
59 you break it you break EVERYTHING.
60
61 Using a modules import() for exporting makes it hard to give it other
62 purposes
63 It is not unusual for a module to want to export symbols and
64 provide import behaviors. It is also not unusual for a consumer to
65 only want 1 or the other. Using this module you can import symbols
66 without also getting the "import()" side effects.
67
68 In addition, moving forward, modules can specify exports and have a
69 custom "import()" without conflating the two. A module can tell you
70 to use Importer to get the symbols, and to use the module directly
71 for behaviors. A module could also use Importer within its own
72 "import()" method without the need to subclass Exporter, or bring
73 in its "import()" method.
74
75 There are other exporter modules on cpan
76 This module normally assumes an exporter uses Exporter, so it looks
77 for the variables and methods Exporter expects. However, other
78 exporters on cpan can override this using the "IMPORTER_MENU()"
79 hook.
80
82 This module aims for 100% compatibility with every feature of Exporter,
83 plus added features such as import renaming.
84
85 If you find something that works differently, or not at all when
86 compared to Exporter please report it as a bug, unless it is noted as
87 an intentional feature (like import renaming).
88
90 use Importer $IMPORTER_VERSION, $FROM_MODULE, $FROM_MODULE_VERSION, \&SET_SYMBOL, @SYMBOLS;
91
92 $IMPORTER_VERSION (optional)
93 If you provide a numeric argument as the first argument it will be
94 treated as a version number. Importer will do a version check to
95 make sure it is at least at the requested version.
96
97 $FROM_MODULE (required)
98 This is the only required argument. This is the name of the module
99 to import symbols from.
100
101 $FROM_MODULE_VERSION (optional)
102 Any numeric argument following the $FROM_MODULE will be treated as
103 a version check against $FROM_MODULE.
104
105 \&SET_SYMBOL (optional)
106 Normally Importer will put the exports into your namespace. This is
107 usually done via a more complex form of "*name = $ref". If you do
108 NOT want this to happen then you can provide a custom sub to handle
109 the assignment.
110
111 This is an example that uses this feature to put all the exports
112 into a lexical hash instead of modifying the namespace (This is how
113 the "get()" method is implemented).
114
115 my %CARP;
116 use Importer Carp => sub {
117 my ($name, $ref) = @_;
118 $CARP{$name} = $ref;
119 };
120
121 $CARP{cluck}->("This will cluck");
122 $CARP{croak}->("This will croak");
123
124 The first two arguments to the custom sub are the name (no sigil),
125 and the reference. The additional arguments are key/value pairs:
126
127 sub set_symbol {
128 my ($name, $ref, %info) = @_;
129 }
130
131 $info{from}
132 Package the symbol comes from.
133
134 $info{into}
135 Package to which the symbol should be added.
136
137 $info{sig}
138 The sigil that should be used.
139
140 $info{spec}
141 Extra details.
142
143 $info{symbol}
144 The original symbol name (with sigil) from the original
145 package.
146
147 @SYMBOLS (optional)
148 Symbols you wish to import. If no symbols are specified then the
149 defaults will be used. You may also specify tags using the ':'
150 prefix.
151
153 TAGS
154 You can define/import subsets of symbols using predefined tags.
155
156 use Importer 'Some::Thing' => ':tag';
157
158 Importer will automatically populate the ":DEFAULT" tag for you.
159 Importer will also give you an ":ALL" tag with ALL exports so long as
160 the exporter does not define a ":ALL" tag already.
161
162 /PATTERN/ or qr/PATTERN/
163 You can import all symbols that match a pattern. The pattern can be
164 supplied a string starting and ending with '/', or you can provide a
165 "qr/../" reference.
166
167 use Importer 'Some::Thing' => '/oo/';
168
169 use Importer 'Some::Thing' => qr/oo/;
170
171 EXCLUDING SYMBOLS
172 You can exclude symbols by prefixing them with '!'.
173
174 use Importer 'Some::Thing'
175 '!foo', # Exclude one specific symbol
176 '!/pattern/', # Exclude all matching symbols
177 '!' => qr/oo/, # Exclude all that match the following arg
178 '!:tag'; # Exclude all in tag
179
180 RENAMING SYMBOLS AT IMPORT
181 This is a new feature, Exporter does not support this on its own.
182
183 You can rename symbols at import time using a specification hash
184 following the import name:
185
186 use Importer 'Some::Thing' => (
187 foo => { -as => 'my_foo' },
188 );
189
190 You can also add a prefix and/or postfix:
191
192 use Importer 'Some::Thing' => (
193 foo => { -prefix => 'my_' },
194 );
195
196 Using this syntax to set prefix and/or postfix also works on tags and
197 patterns that are specified for import, in which case the
198 prefix/postfix is applied to all symbols from the tag/patterm.
199
200 CUSTOM EXPORT ASSIGNMENT
201 This lets you provide an alternative to the "*name = $ref" export
202 assignment. See the list of parameters to "import()"
203
204 UNIMPORTING
205 See "UNIMPORT PARAMETERS".
206
207 ANONYMOUS EXPORTS
208 See "%EXPORT_ANON".
209
210 GENERATED EXPORTS
211 See "%EXPORT_GEN".
212
214 no Importer; # Remove all subs brought in with Importer
215
216 no Importer qw/foo bar/; # Remove only the specified subs
217
218 Only subs can be unimported.
219
220 You can only unimport subs imported using Importer.
221
223 @EXPORT
224 This is used exactly the way Exporter uses it.
225
226 List of symbols to export. Sigil is optional for subs. Symbols listed
227 here are exported by default. If possible you should put symbols in
228 @EXPORT_OK instead.
229
230 our @EXPORT = qw/foo bar &baz $BAT/;
231
232 @EXPORT_OK
233 This is used exactly the way Exporter uses it.
234
235 List of symbols that can be imported. Sigil is optional for subs.
236 Symbols listed here are not exported by default. This is preferred over
237 @EXPORT.
238
239 our @EXPORT_OK = qw/foo bar &baz $BAT/;
240
241 %EXPORT_TAGS
242 This module supports tags exactly the way Exporter does.
243
244 use Importer 'Some::Thing' => ':DEFAULT';
245
246 use Importer 'Other::Thing' => ':some_tag';
247
248 Tags can be specified this way:
249
250 our %EXPORT_TAGS = (
251 oos => [qw/foo boo zoo/],
252 ees => [qw/fee bee zee/],
253 );
254
255 @EXPORT_FAIL
256 This is used exactly the way Exporter uses it.
257
258 Use this to list subs that are not available on all platforms. If
259 someone tries to import one of these, Importer will hit your
260 "$from->export_fail(@items)" callback to try to resolve the issue. See
261 Exporter for documentation of this feature.
262
263 our @EXPORT_FAIL = qw/maybe_bad/;
264
265 %EXPORT_ANON
266 This is new to this module, Exporter does not support it.
267
268 This allows you to export symbols that are not actually in your package
269 symbol table. The keys should be the symbol names, the values are the
270 references for the symbols.
271
272 our %EXPORT_ANON = (
273 '&foo' => sub { 'foo' }
274 '$foo' => \$foo,
275 ...
276 );
277
278 %EXPORT_GEN
279 This is new to this module, Exporter does not support it.
280
281 This allows you to export symbols that are generated on export. The key
282 should be the name of a symbol. The value should be a coderef that
283 produces a reference that will be exported.
284
285 When the generators are called they will receive 2 arguments, the
286 package the symbol is being exported into, and the symbol being
287 imported (name may or may not include sigil for subs).
288
289 our %EXPORT_GEN = (
290 '&foo' => sub {
291 my $from_package = shift;
292 my ($into_package, $symbol_name) = @_;
293 ...
294 return sub { ... };
295 },
296 ...
297 );
298
299 %EXPORT_MAGIC
300 This is new to this module. Exporter does not support it.
301
302 This allows you to define custom actions to run AFTER an export has
303 been injected into the consumers namespace. This is a good place to
304 enable parser hooks like with Devel::Declare. These will NOT be run if
305 a consumer uses a custom assignment callback.
306
307 our %EXPORT_MAGIC = (
308 foo => sub {
309 my $from = shift; # Should be the package doing the exporting
310 my %args = @_;
311
312 my $into = $args{into}; # Package symbol was exported into
313 my $orig_name = $args{orig_name}; # Original name of the export (in the exporter)
314 my $new_name = $args{new_name}; # Name the symbol was imported as
315 my $ref = $args{ref}; # The reference to the symbol
316
317 ...; # whatever you want, return is ignored.
318 },
319 );
320
322 Importer->import($from)
323 Importer->import($from, $version)
324 Importer->import($from, @imports)
325 Importer->import($from, $from_version, @imports)
326 Importer->import($importer_version, $from, ...)
327 This is the magic behind "use Importer ...".
328
329 Importer->import_into($from, $into, @imports)
330 Importer->import_into($from, $level, @imports)
331 You can use this to import symbols from $from into $into. $into may
332 either be a package name, or a caller level to get the name from.
333
334 Importer->unimport()
335 Importer->unimport(@sub_name)
336 This is the magic behind "no Importer ...".
337
338 Importer->unimport_from($from, @sub_names)
339 Importer->unimport_from($level, @sub_names)
340 This lets you remove imported symbols from $from. $from my be a
341 package name, or a caller level.
342
343 my $exports = Importer->get($from, @imports)
344 This returns hashref of "{ $name => $ref }" for all the specified
345 imports.
346
347 $from should be the package from which to get the exports.
348
349 my @export_refs = Importer->get_list($from, @imports)
350 This returns a list of references for each import specified. Only
351 the export references are returned, the names are not.
352
353 $from should be the package from which to get the exports.
354
355 $export_ref = Importer->get_one($from, $import)
356 This returns a single reference to a single export. If you provide
357 multiple imports then only the LAST one will be used.
358
359 $from should be the package from which to get the exports.
360
362 If you want your module to work with Importer, but you use something
363 other than Exporter to define your exports, you can make it work be
364 defining the "IMPORTER_MENU" method in your package. As well other
365 exporters can be updated to support Importer by putting this sub in
366 your package. IMPORTER_MENU() must be defined in your package, not a
367 base class!
368
369 sub IMPORTER_MENU {
370 my $class = shift;
371 my ($into, $caller) = @_;
372
373 return (
374 export => \@EXPORT, # Default exports
375 export_ok => \@EXPORT_OK, # Other allowed exports
376 export_tags => \%EXPORT_TAGS, # Define tags
377 export_fail => \@EXPORT_FAIL, # For subs that may not always be available
378 export_anon => \%EXPORT_ANON, # Anonymous symbols to export
379 export_magic => \%EXPORT_MAGIC, # Magic to apply after a symbol is exported
380
381 generate => \&GENERATE, # Sub to generate dynamic exports
382 # OR
383 export_gen => \%EXPORT_GEN, # Hash of builders, key is symbol
384 # name, value is sub that generates
385 # the symbol ref.
386 );
387 }
388
389 sub GENERATE {
390 my ($symbol) = @_;
391
392 ...
393
394 return $ref;
395 }
396
397 All exports must be listed in either @EXPORT or @EXPORT_OK, or be keys
398 in %EXPORT_GEN or %EXPORT_ANON to be allowed. 'export_tags',
399 'export_fail', 'export_anon', 'export_gen', and 'generate' are
400 optional. You cannot combine 'generate' and 'export_gen'.
401
402 Note: If your GENERATE sub needs the $class, $into, or $caller then
403 your "IMPORTER_MENU()" method will need to build an anonymous sub that
404 closes over them:
405
406 sub IMPORTER_MENU {
407 my $class = shift;
408 my ($into, $caller) = @_;
409
410 return (
411 ...
412 generate => sub { $class->GENERATE($into, $caller, @_) },
413 );
414 }
415
417 use Importer;
418
419 my $imp = Importer->new(from => 'Some::Exporter');
420
421 $imp->do_import('Destination::Package');
422 $imp->do_import('Another::Destination', @symbols);
423
424 Or, maybe more useful:
425
426 my $imp = Importer->new(from => 'Carp');
427 my $croak = $imp->get_one('croak');
428 $croak->("This will croak");
429
430 OBJECT CONSTRUCTION
431 $imp = Importer->new(from => 'Some::Exporter')
432 $imp = Importer->new(from => 'Some::Exporter', caller => [$package,
433 $file, $line])
434 This is how you create a new Importer instance. "from =>
435 'Some::Exporter'" is the only required argument. You may also
436 specify the "caller => [...]" arrayref, which will be used only
437 for error reporting. If you do not specify a caller then Importer
438 will attempt to find the caller dynamically every time it needs it
439 (this is slow and expensive, but necessary if you intend to re-use
440 the object.)
441
442 OBJECT METHODS
443 $imp->do_import($into)
444 $imp->do_import($into, @symbols)
445 This will import from the objects "from" package into the $into
446 package. You can provide a list of @symbols, or you can leave it
447 empty for the defaults.
448
449 $imp->do_unimport()
450 $imp->do_unimport(@symbols)
451 This will remove imported symbols from the objects "from" package.
452 If you specify a list of @symbols then only the specified symbols
453 will be removed, otherwise all symbols imported using Importer will
454 be removed.
455
456 Note: Please be aware of the difference between "do_import()" and
457 "do_unimport()". For import 'from' us used as the origin, in
458 unimport it is used as the target. This means you cannot re-use an
459 instance to import and then unimport.
460
461 ($into, $versions, $exclude, $symbols, $set) =
462 $imp->parse_args('Dest::Package')
463 ($into, $versions, $exclude, $symbols, $set) =
464 $imp->parse_args('Dest::Package', @symbols)
465 This parses arguments. The first argument must be the destination
466 package. Other arguments can be a mix of symbol names, tags,
467 patterns, version numbers, and exclusions.
468
469 $caller_ref = $imp->get_caller()
470 This will find the caller. This is mainly used for error reporting.
471 IF the object was constructed with a caller then that is what is
472 returned, otherwise this will scan the stack looking for the first
473 call that does not originate from a package that ISA Importer.
474
475 $imp->carp($warning)
476 Warn at the callers level.
477
478 $imp->croak($exception)
479 Die at the callers level.
480
481 $from_package = $imp->from()
482 Get the "from" package that was specified at construction.
483
484 $file = $imp->from_file()
485 Get the filename for the "from" package.
486
487 $imp->load_from()
488 This will load the "from" package if it has not been loaded
489 already. This uses some magic to ensure errors in the load process
490 are reported to the "caller".
491
492 $menu_hr = $imp->menu($into)
493 Get the export menu built from, or provided by the "from" package.
494 This is cached after the first time it is called. Use
495 "$imp->reload_menu()" to refresh it.
496
497 The menu structure looks like this:
498
499 $menu = {
500 # every valid export has a key in the lookup hashref, value is always
501 # 1, key always includes the sigil
502 lookup => {'&symbol_a' => 1, '$symbol_b' => 1, ...},
503
504 # most exports are listed here, symbol name with sigil is key, value is
505 # a reference to the symbol. If a symbol is missing it may be generated.
506 exports => {'&symbol_a' => \&symbol_a, '$symbol_b' => \$symbol_b, ...},
507
508 # Hashref of tags, tag name (without ':' prefix) is key, value is an
509 # arrayref of symbol names, subs may have a sigil, but are not required
510 # to.
511 tags => { DEFAULT => [...], foo => [...], ... },
512
513 # Magic to apply
514 magic => { foo => sub { ... }, ... },
515
516 # This is a hashref just like 'lookup'. Keys are symbols which may not
517 # always be available. If there are no symbols in this category then
518 # the value of the 'fail' key will be undef instead of a hashref.
519 fail => { '&iffy_symbol' => 1, '\&only_on_linux' => 1 },
520 # OR fail => undef,
521
522 # If present, this subroutine knows how to generate references for the
523 # symbols listed in 'lookup', but missing from 'exports'. References
524 # this returns are NEVER cached.
525 generate => sub { my $sym_name = shift; ...; return $symbol_ref },
526 };
527
528 $imp->reload_menu($into)
529 This will reload the export menu from the "from" package.
530
531 my $exports = $imp->get(@imports)
532 This returns hashref of "{ $name => $ref }" for all the specified
533 imports.
534
535 my @export_refs = $imp->get_list(@imports)
536 This returns a list of references for each import specified. Only
537 the export references are returned, the names are not.
538
539 $export_ref = $imp->get_one($import)
540 This returns a single reference to a single export. If you provide
541 multiple imports then only the LAST one will be used.
542
544 These can be imported:
545
546 use Importer 'Importer' => qw/import optimal_import/;
547
548 $bool = optimal_import($from, $into, \@caller, @imports)
549 This function will attempt to import @imports from the $from
550 package into the $into package. @caller needs to have a package
551 name, filename, and line number. If this function fails then no
552 exporting will actually happen.
553
554 If the import is successful this will return true.
555
556 If the import is unsuccessful this will return false, and no
557 modifications to the symbol table will occur.
558
559 $class->import(@imports)
560 If you write class intended to be used with Importer, but also need
561 to provide a legacy "import()" method for direct consumers of your
562 class, you can import this "import()" method.
563
564 package My::Exporter;
565
566 # This will give you 'import()' much like 'use base "Exporter";'
567 use Importer 'Importer' => qw/import/;
568
569 ...
570
572 The source code repository for Importer can be found at
573 <http://github.com/exodist/Importer>.
574
576 Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>
577
579 Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>
580
582 Copyright 2015 Chad Granum <exodist7@gmail.com>.
583
584 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
585 under the same terms as Perl itself.
586
587 See <http://dev.perl.org/licenses/>
588
589
590
591perl v5.34.0 2022-01-21 Importer(3)