SYNOPSIS
use Dispatch::Class qw(
class_case
dispatch
);
# analyze the class of an object
my $analyze = class_case(
'Some::Class' => 1,
'Other::Class' => 2,
'UNIVERSAL' => "???",
);
my $foo = $analyze->(Other::Class->new); # 2
my $bar = $analyze->(IO::Handle->new); # "???"
my $baz = $analyze->(["not an object"]); # undef
# build a dispatcher
my $dispatch = dispatch(
'Dog::Tiny' => sub { ... }, # handle objects of the class Dog::Tiny
'Dog' => sub { ... },
'Mammal' => sub { ... },
'Tree' => sub { ... },
'ARRAY' => sub { ... }, # handle array refs
':str' => sub { ... }, # handle non-reference strings
'*' => sub { ... }, # handle any value
);
# call the appropriate handler, passing $obj as an argument
my $result = $dispatch->($obj);
DESCRIPTION
This module offers a (mostly) simple way to check the class of an object and handle specific cases specially.Functions
The following functions are available and can be imported on request:- "class_case"
-
"class_case" takes a list of "KEY, VALUE" pairs and returns a code reference
that (when called on an object) will analyze the object's class according to
the rules described below and return the corresponding VALUE of the first
matching KEY.
Example:
my $subref = class_case( KEY1 => VALUE1, KEY2 => VALUE2, ... ); my $value = $subref->($some_object);
This will check the class of $some_object against "KEY1", "KEY2", ... in order and return the corresponding "VALUEn" of the first match. If no key matches, an empty list/undef is returned in list/scalar context, respectively.
The following things can be used as keys:
-
- "*"
- This will match any value. No actual check is performed.
- ":str"
- This special key will match any non-reference.
- "SCALAR", "ARRAY", "HASH", ...
- These values match references of the specified type even if they aren't objects (i.e. not "bless"ed). That is, for unblessed references the string returned by "ref" is compared with "eq".
- CLASS
-
Any other string is interpreted as a class name and matches if the input value
is an object for which "$obj->isa($CLASS)" is true. To match any kind of
object (blessed value), use the key 'UNIVERSAL'.
Starting with Perl 5.10.0 Perl supports checking for roles with "DOES", so "Dispatch::Class" actually uses "$obj->DOES($CLASS)" instead of "isa". This still returns true for normal base classes but it also accepts roles that have been composed into the object's class.
-
- "dispatch"
-
This works like "class_case" above, but the VALUEs must be code references
and get invoked automatically:
sub dispatch { my $analyze = class_case @_; sub { my ($obj) = @_; my $handler = $analyze->($obj) or return; $handler->($obj) } }
That is, the matching object is passed on to the matched VALUEs and the return value of the inner sub is whatever the handler returns (or the empty list/undef if no KEY matches).
This module uses "Exporter::Tiny", so you can rename the imported functions at "use" time.
AUTHOR
Lukas Mai, "<l.mai at web.de>"COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2013, 2014 Lukas Mai.This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either: the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; or the Artistic License.
See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information.