NAME
Venus - OO Library
ABSTRACT
OO Standard Library for Perl 5
VERSION
0.09
SYNOPSIS
package main;
use Venus qw(
catch
error
raise
);
# error handling
my ($error, $result) = catch {
error;
};
# boolean keywords
if ($result and $result eq false) {
true;
}
# raise exceptions
if (false) {
raise 'MyApp::Error';
}
# and much more!
true ne false;
DESCRIPTION
This library provides an object-orientation framework and extendible standard library for Perl 5, built on top of Moo with classes which wrap most native Perl data types. Venus has a simple modular architecture, robust library of classes and methods, supports pure-Perl autoboxing, advanced exception handling, "true" and "false" keywords, package introspection, command-line options parsing, and more. This package will always automatically exports true
and false
keyword functions (unless existing routines of the same name already exist in the calling package), otherwise exports keyword functions as requested at import. This library requires Perl 5.18+
.
FUNCTIONS
This package provides the following functions:
catch
catch(CodeRef $block) (Error, Any)
The catch function executes the code block trapping errors and returning the caught exception in scalar context, and also returning the result as a second argument in list context.
Since 0.01
- catch example 2
-
package main; use Venus 'catch'; my ($error, $result) = catch {error}; $error; # Venus::Error
error
error(Maybe[HashRef] $args) (Error)
The error function throws a Venus::Error exception object using the exception object arguments provided.
Since 0.01
- error example 2
-
package main; use Venus 'error'; my $error = error { message => 'Something failed!', };
false
false() (Bool)
The false function returns a falsy boolean value which is designed to be practically indistinguishable from the conventional numerical 0
value.
Since 0.01
raise
raise(Str $class | Tuple[Str, Str] $class, Maybe[HashRef] $args) (Error)
The raise function generates and throws a named exception object derived from Venus::Error, or provided base class, using the exception object arguments provided.
Since 0.01
- raise example 2
-
package main; use Venus 'raise'; my $error = raise ['MyApp::Error', 'Venus::Error'];
- raise example 3
-
package main; use Venus 'raise'; my $error = raise ['MyApp::Error', 'Venus::Error'], { message => 'Something failed!', };
true
true() (Bool)
The true function returns a truthy boolean value which is designed to be practically indistinguishable from the conventional numerical 1
value.
Since 0.01
FEATURES
This package provides the following features:
- standard-library
-
This library provides a Perl object-oriented standard library with value classes and consistently named methods.
example 1
package main; use Venus::Array; my $array = Venus::Array->new([1..4]); # $array->all(sub{ $_ > 0 }); # $array->any(sub{ $_ > 0 }); # $array->each(sub{ $_ > 0 }); # $array->grep(sub{ $_ > 0 }); # $array->map(sub{ $_ > 0 }); # $array->none(sub{ $_ < 0 }); # $array->one(sub{ $_ == 0 }); # $array->random; use Venus::Hash; my $hash = Venus::Hash->new({1..8}); # $hash->all(sub{ $_ > 0 }); # $hash->any(sub{ $_ > 0 }); # $hash->each(sub{ $_ > 0 }); # $hash->grep(sub{ $_ > 0 }); # $hash->map(sub{ $_ > 0 }); # $hash->none(sub{ $_ < 0 }); # $hash->one(sub{ $_ == 0 }); # $hash->random; $array->count == $hash->count;
- value-classes
-
This library provides value classes which wrap native Perl data types and provides methods for operating their values.
example 1
package main; use Venus::Array; my $array = Venus::Array->new;
example 2
package main; use Venus::Boolean; my $boolean = Venus::Boolean->new;
example 3
package main; use Venus::Code; my $code = Venus::Code->new;
example 4
package main; use Venus::Float; my $float = Venus::Float->new;
example 5
package main; use Venus::Hash; my $hash = Venus::Hash->new;
example 6
package main; use Venus::Number; my $number = Venus::Number->new;
example 7
package main; use Venus::Regexp; my $regexp = Venus::Regexp->new;
example 8
package main; use Venus::Scalar; my $scalar = Venus::Scalar->new;
example 9
package main; use Venus::String; my $string = Venus::String->new;
example 10
package main; use Venus::Undef; my $undef = Venus::Undef->new;
- builtin-autoboxing
-
This library provides opt-in pure Perl autoboxing allowing you to chain methods calls across objects and values.
example 1
package main; use Venus::String; my $string = Venus::String->new('hello, world'); $string->box->split(', ')->join(' ')->titlecase->unbox->get; # Hello World
- utility-classes
-
This library provides serveral essential utility classes for performing common programming tasks.
example 1
package main; use Venus::Args; my $args = Venus::Args->new;
example 2
package main; use Venus::Box; my $box = Venus::Box->new;
example 3
package main; use Venus::Data; my $docs = Venus::Data->new->docs;
example 4
package main; use Venus::Date; my $date = Venus::Date->new;
example 5
package main; use Venus::Error; my $error = Venus::Error->new;
example 6
package main; use Venus::Json; my $json = Venus::Json->new;
example 7
package main; use Venus::Name; my $name = Venus::Name->new;
example 8
package main; use Venus::Opts; my $opts = Venus::Opts->new;
example 9
package main; use Venus::Path; my $path = Venus::Path->new;
example 10
package main; use Venus::Data; my $text = Venus::Data->new->text;
example 11
package main; use Venus::Space; my $space = Venus::Space->new;
example 12
package main; use Venus::Throw; my $throw = Venus::Throw->new;
example 13
package main; use Venus::Try; my $try = Venus::Try->new;
example 14
package main; use Venus::Type; my $type = Venus::Type->new;
example 15
package main; use Venus::Vars; my $vars = Venus::Vars->new;
example 16
package main; use Venus::Match; my $match = Venus::Match->new;
example 17
package main; use Venus::Process; my $process = Venus::Process->new;
example 18
package main; use Venus::Template; my $template = Venus::Template->new;
example 19
package main; use Venus::Yaml; my $yaml = Venus::Yaml->new;
- package-reflection
-
This library provides a package reflection class, Venus::Space, which can be used to perform meta-programming on package spaces.
example 1
package main; use Venus::Space; my $space = Venus::Space->new('Venus'); $space->do('tryload')->routines;
- exception-handling
-
This library provides a framework for raising, i.e. generating and throwing, exception objects and catching them.
example 1
package MyApp; use Venus::Class; with 'Venus::Role::Throwable'; with 'Venus::Role::Catchable'; sub execute { my ($self) = @_; $self->throw->error; } package main; my $myapp = MyApp->new; my $error = $myapp->catch('execute'); # $error->isa('MyApp::Error');
- composable-standards
-
This library provides a library of composable roles which can be used to extend core behaviors to custom objects.
example 1
package MyApp; use Venus::Class; with 'Venus::Role::Dumpable'; with 'Venus::Role::Stashable'; package main; my $myapp = MyApp->new; $myapp->stash(greeting => 'hello world'); $myapp->dump('stash'); # '{"greeting" => "hello world"}'
- pluggable-library
-
This library provides a mechanism for extending the standard library, i.e. value classes, using plugins which can be automatically discovered and invoked. (no monkey-patching necessary)
example 1
package Venus::String::Plugin::Base64; sub new { return bless {}; } sub execute { my ($self, $string, @args) = @_; require MIME::Base64; return MIME::Base64::encode_base64($string->value); } package main; use Venus::String; my $string = Venus::String->new('hello, world'); $string->base64;
- template-system
-
This library provides a minimalistic templating system.
example 1
package main; use Venus::Template; my $template = Venus::Template->new(q( {{ if user.name }} Welcome, {{ user.name }}! {{ else user.name }} Welcome, friend! {{ end user.name }} )); $template->render;
AUTHORS
Cpanery, cpanery@cpan.org