NAME
signatures - subroutine signatures with no source filter
SYNOPSIS
use signatures;
sub foo ($bar, $baz) {
return $bar + $baz;
}
DESCRIPTION
With this module, we can specify subroutine signatures and have variables automatically defined within the subroutine.
For example, you can write
sub square ($num) {
return $num * $num;
}
and it will be automatically turned into the following at compile time:
sub square {
my ($num) = @_;
return $num * $num;
}
Note that, although the syntax is very similar, the signatures provided by this module are not to be confused with the prototypes described in perlsub. All this module does is extracting items of @_ and assigning them to the variables in the parameter list. No argument validation is done at runtime.
The signature definition needs to be on a single line only.
If you want to combine sub signatures with regular prototypes a proto
attribute exists:
sub foo ($bar, $baz) : proto($$) { ... }
METHODS
If you want subroutine signatures doing something that this module doesn't provide, like argument validation, typechecking and similar, you can subclass it and override the following methods.
proto_unwrap ($prototype)
Turns the extracted $prototype
into code.
The default implementation returns my (${prototype}) = @_;
or an empty string, if no prototype is given.
inject ($offset, $code)
Inserts a $code
string into the line perl currently parses at the given $offset
. This is only called by the callback
method.
callback ($offset, $prototype)
This gets called as soon as a sub definition with a prototype is encountered. Arguments are the $offset
within the current line perl is parsing and extracted $prototype
.
The default implementation calls proto_unwrap
with the prototype and passes the returned value and the offset to inject
.
BUGS
- prototypes aren't checked for validity yet
-
You won't get a warning for invalid prototypes using the
proto
attribute, like you normally would with warnings enabled. - you shouldn't alter $SIG{__WARN__} at compile time
-
After this module is loaded you shouldn't make any changes to
$SIG{__WARN__}
during compile time. Changing it before the module is loaded or at runtime is fine.
SEE ALSO
AUTHOR
Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>
THANKS
Moritz Lenz and Steffen Schwigon for documentation review and improvement.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (c) 2008 Florian Ragwitz
This module is free software.
You may distribute it under the same license as Perl itself.