Class::MakeMethods::Standard - Make common object accessors
package MyObject; use Class::MakeMethods::Standard::Hash ( new => 'new', scalar => [ 'foo', 'bar' ], array => 'my_list', hash => 'my_index', );
This document describes the various subclasses of Class::MakeMethods included under the Standard::* namespace, and the method types each one provides.
The Standard subclasses provide a parameterized set of method-generation implementations.
Subroutines are generated as closures bound to a hash containing the method name and (optionally) additional parameters.
When you use a subclass of this package, the method declarations you provide as arguments cause subroutines to be generated and installed in your module. You can also omit the arguments to use and instead make methods at runtime by passing the declarations to a subsequent call to make().
use
make()
You may include any number of declarations in each call to use or make(). If methods with the same name already exist, earlier calls to use or make() win over later ones, but within each call, later declarations superceed earlier ones.
You can install methods in a different package by passing -target_class => package as your first arguments to use or make.
-target_class => package
make
See "USAGE" in Class::MakeMethods for more details.
The following types of Simple declarations are supported:
generator_type => 'method_name'
generator_type => 'name_1 name_2...'
generator_type => [ 'name_1', 'name_2', ...]
For a list of the supported values of generator_type, see "SUBCLASS CATALOG" below, or the documentation for each subclass.
For each method name you provide, a subroutine of the indicated type will be generated and installed under that name in your module.
Method names should start with a letter, followed by zero or more letters, numbers, or underscores.
The Standard syntax also provides several ways to optionally associate a hash of additional parameters with a given method name.
generator_type => [ 'name_1' => { param=>value... }, ... ]
A hash of parameters to use just for this method name.
(Note: to prevent confusion with self-contained definition hashes, described below, parameter hashes following a method name must not contain the key 'name'.)
'name'
generator_type => [ [ 'name_1', 'name_2', ... ] => { param=>value... } ]
Each of these method names gets a copy of the same set of parameters.
generator_type => [ { 'name'=>'name_1', param=>value... }, ... ]
By including the reserved parameter 'name', you create a self-contained declaration with that name and any associated hash values.
Simple declarations, as shown in the prior section, are treated as if they had an empty parameter hash.
Methods for objects based on blessed hashes. See Class::MakeMethods::Standard::Hash for details.
new: create and copy instances
scalar: get and set scalar values in each instance
array: get and set values stored in an array refered to in each instance
hash: get and set values in a hash refered to in each instance
object: access an object refered to by each instance
Methods for manipulating positional values in arrays. See Class::MakeMethods::Standard::Array for details.
Methods for manipulating global data. See Class::MakeMethods::Standard::Global for details.
scalar: get and set global scalar
array: get and set values stored in a global array
hash: get and set values in a global hash
object: global access to an object ref
Methods for manipulating data which may be overridden per class or instance. Uses external data storage, so it works with objects of any underlying data type. See Class::MakeMethods::Standard::Inheritable for details.
scalar: get and set scalar values for each instance or class
See Class::MakeMethods for an overview of the method-generation framework this is based on.
See Class::MakeMethods::ReadMe for distribution, installation, version and support information.
To install Class::MakeMethods, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm Class::MakeMethods
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install Class::MakeMethods
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.