NAME
PerlX::Window - sliding windows on a string or array
SYNOPSIS
use feature qw(say);
use PerlX::Window;
my $string = "Foobar";
while (defined window $string, 3)
{
say $window; # says "Foo"
# says "oob"
# says "oba"
# says "bar"
}
DESCRIPTION
This module provides a sliding window over a long string or array. It exports two functions window
and window_pos
, and two variables $window
and @window
.
window $string, $length
-
Calling this function returns the current window onto the string, and increments the stored position. The window returned is an lvalue which means you can assign to it (like
substr
).Once the string has been exhausted, it returns
undef
(or in list context, the empty list), and resets the stored position for the string. window @array, $length
-
Like the string version, but instead of operating on a substring of a string, operates on a slice of an array.
window_pos $string
-
Returns the position of the most recent window onto the string; a zero-indexed integer.
window_pos @array
-
Returns the position of the most recent window onto the array; a zero-indexed integer.
window_pos
-
Called with no arguments, defaults to the string or array from the most recent call to
window
. $window
-
An alias to the current window onto the string that has most recently had
window
called upon it.$window
is implemented using Variable::Magic if installed, and a tie otherwise. @window
-
An alias to the current window onto the array that has most recently had
window
called upon it.You may not assign to this in list context, nor perform
pop
,push
,shift
,unshift
, orslice
operations on it, nor any other operation that would change the length of the array. You may however assign to indexes within the array:$window[0] = "Fee" if $window[0] eq "Foo";
@window
is implemented using a tie.
CAVEATS
window
is prototyped (\[$@]$)
which means that the first argument must be a literal scalar or array variable, and window
will actually fetch a reference to that variable. This means the following are not the same:
my $tmp = "Foobar";
say $window
while window $tmp, 3;
say $window
while window my $tmp = "Foobar", 3;
The second example says "Foo" infinitely because $tmp
is redefined in each loop, so is a separate variable as far as window
is concerned.
This module currently requires Perl 5.16, though I believe that backporting it to Perl 5.8 is feasible.
BUGS
Please report any bugs to http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=PerlX-Window.
SEE ALSO
Data::Iterator::SlidingWindow.
AUTHOR
Toby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE
This software is copyright (c) 2014 by Toby Inkster.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTIES
THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.