NAME
Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti - Object-oriented access to hash with multi-valued simple (non-reference) elements
VERSION
Version 1.13
SYNOPSIS
use Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti;
# create object and set intial values
my $avp=new Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti
pets=>'Spot',hobbies=>'chess',hobbies=>'cooking';
# access or change hash elements via methods
my $pets=$avp->pets; # ['Spot']
my @pets=$avp->pets; # ('Spot')
my $hobbies=$avp->hobbies; # ['chess','cooking']
my @hobbies=$avp->hobbies; # ('chess','cooking')
$avp->hobbies('go','rowing'); # new values added to existing ones
my $hobbies=$avp->hobbies; # ['chess','cooking','go','rowing']
$avp->family({kids=>'Joey'}); # illegal - reference
# you can also use standard hash notation and functions
my($pets,$hobbies)= @$avp{qw(pets hobbies)};
# get 2 elements in one statement
$avp->{pets}='Felix'; # set pets to ['Spot','Felix']
my @keys=keys %$avp; # ('pets','hobbies')
my @values=values %$avp; # (['Spot','Felix'],
# ['chess','cooking','go','rowing'])
while(my($key,$value)=each %$avp) {
print "$key => @$value\n"; # prints each element as usual
}
delete $avp->{hobbies}; # no more hobbies
# CAUTION: hash notation doesn't respect array context!
$avp->{hobbies}=('go','rowing'); # sets hobbies to last value only
my @hobbies=$avp->{hobbies}; # @hobbies is (['rowing'])
# alias $avp to regular hash for more concise hash notation
use Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti qw(autohash_alias);
my %hash;
autohash_alias($avp,%hash);
# access or change hash elements without using ->
$hash{hobbies}=['chess','cooking']; # append values to hobbies
my $pets=$hash{pets}; # ['Spot','Felix']
my $hobbies=$hash{hobbies}; # ['rowing','chess','cooking']
# another way to do the same thing
my($pets,$hobbies)=@hash{qw(pets hobbies)};
# set 'unique' in tied object to eliminate duplicates
use Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti qw(autohash_tied);
autohash_tied($avp)->unique(1);
$avp->hobbies('cooking','baking'); # duplicate 'cooking' not added
my @hobbies=$avp->hobbies; # ('rowing','chess','cooking','baking')
DESCRIPTION
This is a subclass of Hash::AutoHash which wraps a tied hash whose elements contain multiple simple values like numbers and strings, not references. Hash::AutoHash::Record uses this class to represent attribute-value pairs parsed from text files. It is conceptually a subclass of Hash::AutoHash::MultiValued whose elements contain values of all kinds.
Like Hash::AutoHash itself, this class lets you get or set hash elements using hash notation or by invoking a method with the same name as the key. See SYNOPSIS for examples.
Also like Hash::AutoHash, this class provides a full plate of functions for performing hash operations on Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti objects. These are useful if you want to avoid hash notation all together.
And also like Hash::AutoHash, you can alias the object to a regular hash for more concise hash notation. See SYNOPSIS for examples. Admittedly, this is a minor convenience, but the reduction in verbosity can be useful in some cases.
As in Hash::AutoHash, the namespace is "clean"; any method invoked on an object is interpreted as a request to access or change an element of the underlying hash. The software accomplishes this by providing all its capabilities through class methods (these are methods, such as 'new', that are invoked on the class rather than on individual objects), functions that must be imported into the caller's namespace, and methods invoked on the tied object implementing the hash.
CAUTION: As of version 1.12, it is not possible to use method notation for keys with the same names as methods inherited from UNIVERSAL (the base class of everything). These are 'can', 'isa', 'DOES', and 'VERSION'. The reason is that as of Perl 5.9.3, calling UNIVERSAL methods as functions is deprecated and developers are encouraged to use method form instead. Previous versions of AutoHash are incompatible with CPAN modules that adopt this style.
Duplicate elimination and filtering
By default, hash elements may contain duplicate values.
my $avp=new Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti hobbies=>'go',hobbies=>'go';
my @hobbies=$avp->hobbies; # ('go','go')
You can change this behavior by setting 'unique' in the tied object implementing the hash to a true value.
autohash_tied($avp)->unique(1);
my @hobbies=$avp->hobbies; # now ('go')
'unique' can be set to a boolean, as in the example, or to a subroutine (technically, a CODE ref). The subroutine should operate on two values and return true if the values are considered to be equal, and false otherwise.
By default, 'unique' is sub {my($a,$b)=@_; $a eq $b}. The following example shows how to set 'unique' to a subroutine that does case-insensitive duplicate removal.
my $avp=new Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti hobbies=>['GO','go'];
autohash_tied($avp)->unique(sub {my($a,$b)=@_; lc($a) eq lc($b)});
my @hobbies=$avp->hobbies; # @hobbies is ('GO')
When 'unique' is given a true value, duplicate removal occurs immediately by running all existing elements through the duplicate-removal process. Thereafter, duplicate checking occurs on every update.
In many cases, it works fine and is more efficient to perform duplicate removal on-demand rather than on every update. You can accomplish this by setting 'filter' in the tied object implementing the hash to a true value. By default, the filter function is 'uniq' from List::MoreUtils. You can change this by setting 'filter' to a subroutine reference which takes a list of values as input and returns a list of values as output. Though motivated by duplicate removal, the 'filter' function can transform the list in any way you choose.
The following contrived example shows sets 'filter' to a subroutine that performs case-independent duplicate removal and sorts the resulting values.
sub uniq_nocase_sort {
my %uniq;
my @values_lc=map { lc($_) } @_;
@uniq{@values_lc}=@_;
sort values %uniq;
}
my $avp=new Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti hobbies=>['GO','go','dance'];
autohash_tied($avp)->filter(\&uniq_nocase_sort);
my @hobbies=$avp->hobbies; # @hobbies is ('dance','go')
You can do the same thing more concisely with this cryptic one-liner.
autohash_tied($avp)->filter(sub {my %u; @u{map {lc $_} @_}=@_; sort values %u});
Filtering occurs when you run the 'filter' method. It does not occur on every update.
new
Title : new
Usage : $avp=new Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti
pets=>'Spot',hobbies=>'chess',hobbies=>'cooking'
-- OR --
$avp=new Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti
[pets=>'Spot',hobbies=>'chess',hobbies=>'cooking']
-- OR --
$avp=new Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti
{pets=>'Spot',hobbies=>['chess','cooking']}
Function: Create Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object and set elements.
Returns : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object
Args : Optional list of key=>value pairs which are used to set elements of
the object. Args can also be passed as ARRAY or HASH
Notes : Be aware when passing args as HASH that Perl does NOT preserve
duplicate keys.
unique
This method must be invoked on the tied object implementing the hash.
Title : unique
Usage : $unique=tied(%$avp)->unique
-- OR --
tied(%$avp)->unique($boolean)
-- OR --
tied(%$avp)->unique(\&function)
-- OR --
$unique=autohash_tied($avp)->unique
-- OR --
autohash_tied($avp)->unique($boolean)
-- OR --
autohash_tied($avp)->unique(\&function)
Function: Get or set option that controls duplicate elimination.
Form 1 gets the current value of the control.
Form 2. If the argument is true, duplicate-removal is turned on using
'eq' to determine which values are equal.
If the argument is false, duplicate-removal is turned off.
Form 3 turns on duplicate removal using the given function.
Forms 4-6 are functionally equivalent to the first three but use the
autohash_tied function to get the tied object instead of Perl's
built-in tied function.
Note the '%' in front of $record in the first three forms and its
absence in the next three forms.
Returns : value of the control
Args : Forms 2&5. Usually a boolean value, but can be any value which is not
a CODE reference.
Forms 3&6. CODE reference for a function that takes two values and
returns true or false.
Notes : When unique is given a true value (including a CODE ref in forms 3&6)
duplicate removal occurs immediately by running all existing elements
through the duplicate-removal process. Thereafter, duplicate checking
occurs on every update.
filter
This method must be invoked on the tied object implementing the hash.
Title : filter
Usage : $filter=tied(%$avp)->filter
-- OR --
tied(%$avp)->filter($boolean)
-- OR --
tied(%$avp)->filter(\&function)
-- OR --
$filter=autohash_tied($avp)->filter
-- OR --
autohash_tied($avp)->filter($boolean)
-- OR --
autohash_tied($avp)->filter(\&function)
Function: Set function used for filtering and perform filtering if true.
Form 1 filters elements using filter function previously set.
Form 2. If true, sets the filter function to its default, which is
'uniq' from L<List::MoreUtils> and performs filtering.
If false, turns filtering off.
Form 3 sets the filter function to the given function and performs
filtering.
Forms 4-6 are functionally equivalent to the first three but use the
autohash_tied function to get the tied object instead of Perl's
built-in tied function.
Note the '%' in front of $record in the first three forms and its
absence in the last three forms.
Returns : value of the control
Args : Forms 2&5. Usually a boolean value, but can be any value which is not
a CODE reference.
Forms 3&6. CODE reference for a function that takes a list and
returns a list. The input list is passed in @_.
Notes : When filter is given a true value (including a CODE ref in forms 3&6)
filtering occurs immediately by running all existing elements through
the filter function.
Functions inherited from Hash::AutoHash
The following functions are inherited from Hash::AutoHash and operate exactly as there. You must import them into your namespace before use.
use Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti
qw(autohash_alias autohash_tied autohash_get autohash_set
autohash_clear autohash_delete autohash_each autohash_exists
autohash_keys autohash_values
autohash_count autohash_empty autohash_notempty)
autohash_alias
Aliasing a Hash::AutoHash object to a regular hash avoids the need to dereference the variable when using hash notation. As a convenience, the autoahash_alias functions can link in either direction depending on whether the given object exists.
Title : autohash_alias
Usage : autohash_alias($avp,%hash)
Function: Link $avp to %hash such that they will have exactly the same value.
Args : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object and hash
Returns : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object
autohash_tied
You can access the object implementing the tied hash using Perl's built-in tied function or the autohash_tied function inherited from Hash::AutoHash. Advantages of autohash_tied are (1) it operates directly on the Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object without requiring a leading '%', and (2) it provide an arguably simpler syntax for invoking methods on the tied object.
Title : autohash_tied
Usage : $tied=autohash_tied($avp)
-- OR --
$tied=autohash_tied(%hash)
-- OR --
$result=autohash_tied($avp,'some_method',@parameters)
-- OR --
$result=autohash_tied(%hash,'some_method',@parameters)
Function: The first two forms return the object implementing the tied hash. The
latter two forms invoke a method on the tied object.
In forms 1 and 3, the first argument is the
Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object.
In forms 2 and 4, the first argument is a hash to which a
Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object has been aliased
Returns : In forms 1 and 2, object implementing tied hash or undef.
In forms 3 and 4, result of invoking method (which can be anything or
nothing), or undef.
Args : Form 1. Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object
Form 2. hash to which Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object is aliased
Form 3. Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object, method name, optional
list of parameters for method
Form 4. hash to which Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object is aliased,
method name, optional list of parameters for method
autohash_get
Title : autohash_get
Usage : ($pets,$hobbies)=autohash_get($avp,qw(pets hobbies))
Function: Get values for multiple keys.
Args : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object and list of keys
Returns : list of argument values
autohash_set
Title : autohash_set
Usage : autohash_set($avp,pets=>'Felix',kids=>'Joe')
-- OR --
autohash_set($avp,['pets','kids'],['Felix','Joe'])
Function: Set multiple arguments in existing object.
Args : Form 1. Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object and list of key=>value pairs
Form 2. Hash::AutoHash::MultiValue object, ARRAY of keys, ARRAY of
values
Returns : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object
Functions for hash-like operations
The remaining functions provide hash-like operations on Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti objects. These are useful if you want to avoid hash notation all together.
autohash_clear
Title : autohash_clear
Usage : autohash_clear($avp)
Function: Delete entire contents of $avp
Args : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object
Returns : nothing
autohash_delete
Title : autohash_delete
Usage : autohash_delete($avp,@keys)
Function: Delete keys and their values from $avp.
Args : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object, list of keys
Returns : nothing
autohash_exists
Title : autohash_exists
Usage : if (autohash_exists($avp,$key)) { ... }
Function: Test whether key is present in $avp.
Args : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object, key
Returns : boolean
autohash_each
Title : autohash_each
Usage : while (my($key,$value)=autohash_each($avp)) { ... }
-- OR --
while (my $key=autohash_each($avp)) { ... }
Function: Iterate over all key=>value pairs or all keys present in $avp
Args : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object
Returns : list context: next key=>value pair in $avp or empty list at end
scalar context: next key in $avp or undef at end
autohash_keys
Title : autohash_keys
Usage : @keys=autohash_keys($avp)
Function: Get all keys that are present in $avp
Args : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object
Returns : list of keys
autohash_values
Title : autohash_values
Usage : @values=autohash_values($avp)
Function: Get the values of all keys that are present in $avp
Args : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object
Returns : list of values
autohash_count
Title : autohash_count
Usage : $count=autohash_count($avp)
Function: Get the number keys that are present in $avp
Args : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object
Returns : number
autohash_empty
Title : autohash_empty
Usage : if (autohash_empty($avp)) { ... }
Function: Test whether $avp is empty
Args : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object
Returns : boolean
autohash_notempty
Title : autohash_notempty
Usage : if (autohash_notempty($avp)) { ... }
Function: Test whether $avp is not empty. Complement of autohash_empty
Args : Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti object
Returns : boolean
SEE ALSO
perltie and Tie::Hash present background on tied hashes.
Hash::AutoHash provides the object wrapping machinery. The documentation of that class includes a detailed list of caveats and cautions. Hash::AutoHash::Args, Hash::AutoHash::MultiValued, Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsSingle, Hash::AutoHash::Record are other subclasses of Hash::AutoHash.
Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsSingle is similar but requires each attribute to have a single value. Hash::AutoHash::MultiValued is similar, but permits values to be non-simple, ie, references. Most of the implementation comes from the tied hash class of Hash::AutoHash::MultiValued.
Hash::AutoHash::Record uses this class to represent attribute-value pairs parsed from text files.
AUTHOR
Nat Goodman, <natg at shore.net>
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-hash-autohash-avpairsmulti at rt.cpan.org
, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Hash-AutoHash-AVPairsMulti. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.
SUPPORT
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc Hash::AutoHash::AVPairsMulti
You can also look for information at:
RT: CPAN's request tracker
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Hash-AutoHash-AVPairsMulti
AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
CPAN Ratings
Search CPAN
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2009 Nat Goodman.
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.