1Class::Container(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Class::Container(3)
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6 Class::Container - Glues object frameworks together transparently
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9 version 0.13
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12 package Car;
13 use Class::Container;
14 @ISA = qw(Class::Container);
15
16 __PACKAGE__->valid_params
17 (
18 paint => {default => 'burgundy'},
19 style => {default => 'coupe'},
20 windshield => {isa => 'Glass'},
21 radio => {isa => 'Audio::Device'},
22 );
23
24 __PACKAGE__->contained_objects
25 (
26 windshield => 'Glass::Shatterproof',
27 wheel => { class => 'Vehicle::Wheel',
28 delayed => 1 },
29 radio => 'Audio::MP3',
30 );
31
32 sub new {
33 my $package = shift;
34
35 # 'windshield' and 'radio' objects are created automatically by
36 # SUPER::new()
37 my $self = $package->SUPER::new(@_);
38
39 $self->{right_wheel} = $self->create_delayed_object('wheel');
40 ... do any more initialization here ...
41 return $self;
42 }
43
45 This class facilitates building frameworks of several classes that
46 inter-operate. It was first designed and built for "HTML::Mason", in
47 which the Compiler, Lexer, Interpreter, Resolver, Component, Buffer,
48 and several other objects must create each other transparently, passing
49 the appropriate parameters to the right class, possibly substituting
50 other subclasses for any of these objects.
51
52 The main features of "Class::Container" are:
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54 • Explicit declaration of containment relationships (aggregation,
55 factory creation, etc.)
56
57 • Declaration of constructor parameters accepted by each member in a
58 class framework
59
60 • Transparent passing of constructor parameters to the class that
61 needs them
62
63 • Ability to create one (automatic) or many (manual) contained
64 objects automatically and transparently
65
66 Scenario
67 Suppose you've got a class called "Parent", which contains an object of
68 the class "Child", which in turn contains an object of the class
69 "GrandChild". Each class creates the object that it contains. Each
70 class also accepts a set of named parameters in its new() method.
71 Without using "Class::Container", "Parent" will have to know all the
72 parameters that "Child" takes, and "Child" will have to know all the
73 parameters that "GrandChild" takes. And some of the parameters
74 accepted by "Parent" will really control aspects of "Child" or
75 "GrandChild". Likewise, some of the parameters accepted by "Child"
76 will really control aspects of "GrandChild". So, what happens when you
77 decide you want to use a "GrandDaughter" class instead of the generic
78 "GrandChild"? "Parent" and "Child" must be modified accordingly, so
79 that any additional parameters taken by "GrandDaughter" can be
80 accommodated. This is a pain - the kind of pain that object-oriented
81 programming was supposed to shield us from.
82
83 Now, how can "Class::Container" help? Using "Class::Container", each
84 class ("Parent", "Child", and "GrandChild") will declare what arguments
85 they take, and declare their relationships to the other classes
86 ("Parent" creates/contains a "Child", and "Child" creates/contains a
87 "GrandChild"). Then, when you create a "Parent" object, you can pass
88 "Parent->new()" all the parameters for all three classes, and they will
89 trickle down to the right places. Furthermore, "Parent" and "Child"
90 won't have to know anything about the parameters of its contained
91 objects. And finally, if you replace "GrandChild" with
92 "GrandDaughter", no changes to "Parent" or "Child" will likely be
93 necessary.
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96 new()
97 Any class that inherits from "Class::Container" should also inherit its
98 new() method. You can do this simply by omitting it in your class, or
99 by calling SUPER::new(@_) as indicated in the SYNOPSIS. The new()
100 method ensures that the proper parameters and objects are passed to the
101 proper constructor methods.
102
103 At the moment, the only possible constructor method is new(). If you
104 need to create other constructor methods, they should call new()
105 internally.
106
107 __PACKAGE__->contained_objects()
108 This class method is used to register what other objects, if any, a
109 given class creates. It is called with a hash whose keys are the
110 parameter names that the contained class's constructor accepts, and
111 whose values are the default class to create an object of.
112
113 For example, consider the "HTML::Mason::Compiler" class, which uses the
114 following code:
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116 __PACKAGE__->contained_objects( lexer => 'HTML::Mason::Lexer' );
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118 This defines the relationship between the "HTML::Mason::Compiler" class
119 and the class it creates to go in its "lexer" slot. The
120 "HTML::Mason::Compiler" class "has a" "lexer". The
121 "HTML::Mason::Compiler->new()" method will accept a "lexer" parameter
122 and, if no such parameter is given, an object of the
123 "HTML::Mason::Lexer" class should be constructed.
124
125 We implement a bit of magic here, so that if
126 "HTML::Mason::Compiler->new()" is called with a "lexer_class"
127 parameter, it will load the indicated class (presumably a subclass of
128 "HTML::Mason::Lexer"), instantiate a new object of that class, and use
129 it for the Compiler's "lexer" object. We're also smart enough to
130 notice if parameters given to "HTML::Mason::Compiler->new()" actually
131 should go to the "lexer" contained object, and it will make sure that
132 they get passed along.
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134 Furthermore, an object may be declared as "delayed", which means that
135 an object won't be created when its containing class is constructed.
136 Instead, these objects will be created "on demand", potentially more
137 than once. The constructors will still enjoy the automatic passing of
138 parameters to the correct class. See the create_delayed_object() for
139 more.
140
141 To declare an object as "delayed", call this method like this:
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143 __PACKAGE__->contained_objects( train => { class => 'Big::Train',
144 delayed => 1 } );
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146 __PACKAGE__->valid_params(...)
147 Specifies the parameters accepted by this class's new() method as a set
148 of key/value pairs. Any parameters accepted by a superclass/subclass
149 will also be accepted, as well as any parameters accepted by contained
150 objects. This method is a get/set accessor method, so it returns a
151 reference to a hash of these key/value pairs. As a special case, if
152 you wish to set the valid params to an empty set and you previously set
153 it to a non-empty set, you may call "__PACKAGE__->valid_params(undef)".
154
155 valid_params() is called with a hash that contains parameter names as
156 its keys and validation specifications as values. This validation
157 specification is largely the same as that used by the
158 "Params::Validate" module, because we use "Params::Validate"
159 internally.
160
161 As an example, consider the following situation:
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163 use Class::Container;
164 use Params::Validate qw(:types);
165 __PACKAGE__->valid_params
166 (
167 allow_globals => { type => ARRAYREF, parse => 'list', default => [] },
168 default_escape_flags => { type => SCALAR, parse => 'string', default => '' },
169 lexer => { isa => 'HTML::Mason::Lexer' },
170 preprocess => { type => CODEREF, parse => 'code', optional => 1 },
171 postprocess_perl => { type => CODEREF, parse => 'code', optional => 1 },
172 postprocess_text => { type => CODEREF, parse => 'code', optional => 1 },
173 );
174
175 __PACKAGE__->contained_objects( lexer => 'HTML::Mason::Lexer' );
176
177 The "type", "default", and "optional" parameters are part of the
178 validation specification used by "Params::Validate". The various
179 constants used, "ARRAYREF", "SCALAR", etc. are all exported by
180 "Params::Validate". This means that any of these six parameter names,
181 plus the "lexer_class" parameter (because of the contained_objects()
182 specification given earlier), are valid arguments to the Compiler's
183 new() method.
184
185 Note that there are also some "parse" attributes declared. These have
186 nothing to do with "Class::Container" or "Params::Validate" - any extra
187 entries like this are simply ignored, so you are free to put extra
188 information in the specifications as long as it doesn't overlap with
189 what "Class::Container" or "Params::Validate" are looking for.
190
191 $self->create_delayed_object()
192 If a contained object was declared with "delayed => 1", use this method
193 to create an instance of the object. Note that this is an object
194 method, not a class method:
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196 my $foo = $self->create_delayed_object('foo', ...); # YES!
197 my $foo = __PACKAGE__->create_delayed_object('foo', ...); # NO!
198
199 The first argument should be a key passed to the contained_objects()
200 method. Any additional arguments will be passed to the new() method of
201 the object being created, overriding any parameters previously passed
202 to the container class constructor. (Could I possibly be more
203 alliterative? Veni, vedi, vici.)
204
205 $self->delayed_object_params($name, [params])
206 Allows you to adjust the parameters that will be used to create any
207 delayed objects in the future. The first argument specifies the "name"
208 of the object, and any additional arguments are key-value pairs that
209 will become parameters to the delayed object.
210
211 When called with only a $name argument and no list of parameters to
212 set, returns a hash reference containing the parameters that will be
213 passed when creating objects of this type.
214
215 $self->delayed_object_class($name)
216 Returns the class that will be used when creating delayed objects of
217 the given name. Use this sparingly - in most situations you shouldn't
218 care what the class is.
219
220 __PACKAGE__->decorates()
221 Version 0.09 of Class::Container added [as yet experimental] support
222 for so-called "decorator" relationships, using the term as defined in
223 Design Patterns by Gamma, et al. (the Gang of Four book). To declare a
224 class as a decorator of another class, simply set @ISA to the class
225 which will be decorated, and call the decorator class's decorates()
226 method.
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228 Internally, this will ensure that objects are instantiated as
229 decorators. This means that you can mix & match extra add-on
230 functionality classes much more easily.
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232 In the current implementation, if only a single decoration is used on
233 an object, it will be instantiated as a simple subclass, thus avoiding
234 a layer of indirection.
235
236 $self->validation_spec()
237 Returns a hash reference suitable for passing to the "Params::Validate"
238 "validate" function. Does not include any arguments that can be passed
239 to contained objects.
240
241 $class->allowed_params(\%args)
242 Returns a hash reference of every parameter this class will accept,
243 including parameters it will pass on to its own contained objects. The
244 keys are the parameter names, and the values are their corresponding
245 specifications from their valid_params() definitions. If a parameter
246 is used by both the current object and one of its contained objects,
247 the specification returned will be from the container class, not the
248 contained.
249
250 Because the parameters accepted by new() can vary based on the
251 parameters passed to new(), you can pass any parameters to the
252 allowed_params() method too, ensuring that the hash you get back is
253 accurate.
254
255 $self->container()
256 Returns the object that created you. This is remembered by storing a
257 reference to that object, so we use the "Scalar::Utils" weakref()
258 function to avoid persistent circular references that would cause
259 memory leaks. If you don't have "Scalar::Utils" installed, we don't
260 make these references in the first place, and calling container() will
261 result in a fatal error.
262
263 If you weren't created by another object via "Class::Container",
264 container() returns "undef".
265
266 In most cases you shouldn't care what object created you, so use this
267 method sparingly.
268
269 $object->show_containers
270 $package->show_containers
271 This method returns a string meant to describe the containment
272 relationships among classes. You should not depend on the specific
273 formatting of the string, because I may change things in a future
274 release to make it prettier.
275
276 For example, the HTML::Mason code returns the following when you do
277 "$interp->show_containers":
278
279 HTML::Mason::Interp=HASH(0x238944)
280 resolver -> HTML::Mason::Resolver::File
281 compiler -> HTML::Mason::Compiler::ToObject
282 lexer -> HTML::Mason::Lexer
283 request -> HTML::Mason::Request (delayed)
284 buffer -> HTML::Mason::Buffer (delayed)
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286 Currently, containment is shown by indentation, so the Interp object
287 contains a resolver and a compiler, and a delayed request (or several
288 delayed requests). The compiler contains a lexer, and each request
289 contains a delayed buffer (or several delayed buffers).
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291 $object->dump_parameters
292 Returns a hash reference containing a set of parameters that should be
293 sufficient to re-create the given object using its class's new()
294 method. This is done by fetching the current value for each declared
295 parameter (i.e. looking in $object for hash entries of the same name),
296 then recursing through all contained objects and doing the same.
297
298 A few words of caution here. First, the dumped parameters represent
299 the current state of the object, not the state when it was originally
300 created.
301
302 Second, a class's declared parameters may not correspond exactly to its
303 data members, so it might not be possible to recover the former from
304 the latter. If it's possible but requires some manual fudging, you can
305 override this method in your class, something like so:
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307 sub dump_parameters {
308 my $self = shift;
309 my $dump = $self->SUPER::dump_parameters();
310
311 # Perform fudgery
312 $dump->{incoming} = $self->{_private};
313 delete $dump->{superfluous};
314 return $dump;
315 }
316
318 Params::Validate
319
321 Originally by Ken Williams <ken@mathforum.org> and Dave Rolsky
322 <autarch@urth.org> for the HTML::Mason project. Important feedback
323 contributed by Jonathan Swartz <swartz@pobox.com>. Extended by Ken
324 Williams for the AI::Categorizer project.
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326 Currently maintained by Ken Williams.
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329 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
330 under the same terms as Perl itself.
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334perl v5.36.0 2023-01-20 Class::Container(3)