NAME

Perl::Critic::Policy::Community::IndirectObjectNotation - Don't call methods indirectly

DESCRIPTION

Perl allows a form of method call where the method name is first, followed by the invocant (class or object to call the method on), then the argument list. This is an unfortunate legacy syntax that should no longer be used. See "Indirect Object Syntax" in perlobj and "REFERENCES" in indirect for more information.

my $obj = new My::Class @args;   # not ok
my $obj = My::Class->new(@args); # ok

It is difficult to detect indirect object notation by static analysis, so this policy only forbids the new method call by default, as it is highly unlikely to be the name of a standard subroutine call. Consider using the indirect pragma to cause the code to warn or die when indirect object notation is used.

This policy is a subclass of the Perl::Critic core policy Perl::Critic::Policy::Objects::ProhibitIndirectSyntax, and performs the same function but in the community theme.

AFFILIATION

This policy is part of Perl::Critic::Community.

CONFIGURATION

This policy can be configured, in the same way as its parent policy Perl::Critic::Policy::Objects::ProhibitIndirectSyntax, to attempt to forbid additional method names from being called indirectly. Be aware this may lead to false positives as it is difficult to detect indirect object notation by static analysis. The new subroutine is always forbidden in addition to these.

[Community::IndirectObjectNotation]
forbid = create destroy

AUTHOR

Dan Book, dbook@cpan.org

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright 2015, Dan Book.

This library is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License version 2.0.

SEE ALSO

Perl::Critic, indirect