NAME
Scope::Upper - Act on upper scopes.
VERSION
Version 0.09
SYNOPSIS
package X;
use Scope::Upper qw/reap localize localize_elem localize_delete :words/;
sub desc { shift->{desc} }
sub set_tag {
my ($desc) = @_;
# First localize $x so that it gets destroyed last
localize '$x' => bless({ desc => $desc }, __PACKAGE__) => UP; # one scope up
reap sub {
my $pkg = caller;
my $x = do { no strict 'refs'; ${$pkg.'::x'} }; # Get the $x in the scope
print $x->desc . ": done\n";
} => SCOPE 1; # same as UP here
localize_elem '%SIG', '__WARN__' => sub {
my $pkg = caller;
my $x = do { no strict 'refs'; ${$pkg.'::x'} }; # Get the $x in the scope
CORE::warn($x->desc . ': ' . join('', @_));
} => UP CALLER 0; # same as UP here
# delete last @ARGV element
localize_delete '@ARGV', -1 => UP SUB HERE; # same as UP here
}
package Y;
{
X::set_tag('pie');
# $x is now a X object, and @ARGV has one element less
warn 'what'; # warns "pie: what at ..."
...
} # "pie: done" is printed
package Z;
use Scope::Upper qw/unwind want_at :words/;
sub try (&) {
my @result = shift->();
my $cx = SUB UP SUB;
unwind +(want_at($cx) ? @result : scalar @result) => $cx;
}
...
sub zap {
try {
return @things; # returns to try() and then outside zap()
# not reached
}
# not reached
}
my @what = zap(); # @what contains @things
DESCRIPTION
This module lets you defer actions at run-time that will take place when the control flow returns into an upper scope. Currently, you can:
hook an upper scope end with "reap" ;
localize variables, array/hash values or deletions of elements in higher contexts with respectively "localize", "localize_elem" and "localize_delete" ;
return values immediately to an upper level with "unwind", and know which context was in use then with "want_at".
FUNCTIONS
In all those functions, $context
refers to the target scope.
You have to use one or a combination of "WORDS" to build the $context
passed to these functions. This is needed in order to ensure that the module still works when your program is ran in the debugger. The only thing you can assume is that it is an absolute indicator of the frame, which means that you can safely store it at some point and use it when needed, and it will still denote the original scope.
reap $callback, $context
Add a destructor that calls $callback
(in void context) when the upper scope represented by $context
ends.
localize $what, $value, $context
A local
delayed to the time of first return into the upper scope denoted by $context
. $what
can be :
A glob, in which case
$value
can either be a glob or a reference. "localize" follows then the same syntax aslocal *x = $value
. For example, if$value
is a scalar reference, then theSCALAR
slot of the glob will be set to$$value
- just likelocal *x = \1
sets$x
to1
.A string beginning with a sigil, representing the symbol to localize and to assign to. If the sigil is
'$'
, "localize" follows the same syntax aslocal $x = $value
, i.e.$value
isn't dereferenced. For example,localize '$x', \'foo' => HERE;
will set
$x
to a reference to the string'foo'
. Other sigils ('@'
,'%'
,'&'
and'*'
) require$value
to be a reference of the corresponding type.When the symbol is given by a string, it is resolved when the actual localization takes place and not when
localize
is called. This means thatsub tag { localize '$x', $_[0] => UP }
will localize in the caller's namespace.
localize_elem $what, $key, $value, $context
Similar to "localize" but for array and hash elements. If $what
is a glob, the slot to fill is determined from which type of reference $value
is ; otherwise it's inferred from the sigil. $key
is either an array index or a hash key, depending of which kind of variable you localize.
localize_delete $what, $key, $context
Similiar to "localize", but for deleting variables or array/hash elements. $what
can be:
A glob, in which case
$key
is ignored and the call is equivalent tolocal *x
.A string beginning with
'@'
or'%'
, for which the call is equivalent to respectiveleylocal $a[$key]; delete $a[$key]
andlocal $h{$key}; delete $h{$key}
.A string beginning with
'&'
, which more or less doesundef &func
in the upper scope. It's actually more powerful, as&func
won't evenexists
anymore.$key
is ignored.
unwind @values, $context
Returns @values
from the context pointed by $context
, i.e. from the subroutine, eval or format just above $context
, and immediately restart the program flow at this point - thus effectively returning to (or from, depending on how you see it) an upper context.
The upper context isn't coerced onto @values
, which is hence always evaluated in list context. This means that
my $num = sub {
my @a = ('a' .. 'z');
unwind @a => HERE;
# not reached
}->();
will set $num
to 'z'
. You can use "want_at" to handle these cases.
want_at $context
Like wantarray
, but for the subroutine/eval/format just above $context
.
The previous example can then be "corrected" :
my $num = sub {
my @a = ('a' .. 'z');
unwind +(want_at(HERE) ? @a : scalar @a) => HERE;
# not reached
}->();
will righteously set $num
to 26
.
CONSTANTS
SU_THREADSAFE
True iff the module could have been built when thread-safety features.
WORDS
Constants
TOP
Returns the context that currently represents the highest scope.
HERE
The context of the current scope.
Getting a context from a context
For any of those functions, $from
is expected to be a context. When omitted, it defaults to the the current context.
UP $from
The context of the scope just above $from
.
SUB $from
The context of the closest subroutine above $from
. Note that $from
is returned if it is already a subroutine context ; hence SUB SUB == SUB
.
EVAL $from
The context of the closest eval above $from
. Note that $from
is returned if it is already an eval context ; hence EVAL EVAL == EVAL
.
Getting a context from a level
Here, $level
should denote a number of scopes above the current one. When omitted, it defaults to 0
and those functions return the same context as "HERE".
SCOPE $level
The $level
-th upper context, regardless of its type.
CALLER $level
The context of the $level
-th upper subroutine/eval/format. It kind of corresponds to the context represented by caller $level
, but while e.g. caller 0
refers to the caller context, CALLER 0
will refer to the top scope in the current context.
Examples
Where "reap" fires depending on the $cxt
:
sub {
eval {
sub {
{
reap \&cleanup => $cxt;
...
} # $cxt = SCOPE(0), or HERE
...
}->(); # $cxt = SCOPE(1), or UP, or SUB, or CALLER, or CALLER(0)
...
}; # $cxt = SCOPE(2), or UP UP, or UP SUB, or EVAL, or CALLER(1)
...
}->(); # $cxt = SCOPE(3), or SUB UP SUB, or SUB EVAL, or CALLER(2)
...
Where "localize", "localize_elem" and "localize_delete" act depending on the $cxt
:
sub {
eval {
sub {
{
localize '$x' => 1 => $cxt;
# $cxt = SCOPE(0), or HERE
...
}
# $cxt = SCOPE(1), or UP, or SUB, or CALLER, or CALLER(0)
...
}->();
# $cxt = SCOPE(2), or UP UP, or UP SUB, or EVAL, or CALLER(1)
...
};
# $cxt = SCOPE(3), or SUB UP SUB, or SUB EVAL, or CALLER(2)
...
}->();
# $cxt = SCOPE(4), UP SUB UP SUB, or UP SUB EVAL, or UP CALLER(2), or TOP
...
Where "unwind" and "want_at" point to depending on the $cxt
:
sub {
eval {
sub {
{
unwind @things => $cxt;
...
}
...
}->(); # $cxt = SCOPE(0 .. 1), or HERE, or UP, or SUB, or CALLER(0)
...
}; # $cxt = SCOPE(2), or UP UP, or UP SUB, or EVAL, or CALLER(1)
...
}->(); # $cxt = SCOPE(3), or SUB UP SUB, or SUB EVAL, or CALLER(2)
...
EXPORT
The functions "reap", "localize", "localize_elem", "localize_delete", "unwind" and "want_at" are only exported on request, either individually or by the tags ':funcs'
and ':all'
.
The constant "SU_THREADSAFE" is also only exported on request, individually or by the tags ':consts'
and ':all'
.
Same goes for the words "TOP", "HERE", "UP", "SUB", "EVAL", "SCOPE" and "CALLER" that are only exported on request, individually or by the tags ':words'
and ':all'
.
CAVEATS
Be careful that local variables are restored in the reverse order in which they were localized. Consider those examples:
local $x = 0;
{
reap sub { print $x } => HERE;
local $x = 1;
...
}
# prints '0'
...
{
local $x = 1;
reap sub { $x = 2 } => HERE;
...
}
# $x is 0
The first case is "solved" by moving the local
before the reap
, and the second by using "localize" instead of "reap".
The effects of "reap", "localize" and "localize_elem" can't cross BEGIN
blocks, hence calling those functions in import
is deemed to be useless. This is an hopeless case because BEGIN
blocks are executed once while localizing constructs should do their job at each run. However, it's possible to hook the end of the current scope compilation with B::Hooks::EndOfScope.
Some rare oddities may still happen when running inside the debugger. It may help to use a perl higher than 5.8.9 or 5.10.0, as they contain some context-related fixes.
DEPENDENCIES
XSLoader (standard since perl 5.006).
SEE ALSO
Alias, Hook::Scope, Scope::Guard, Guard.
AUTHOR
Vincent Pit, <perl at profvince.com>
, http://www.profvince.com.
You can contact me by mail or on irc.perl.org
(vincent).
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-scope-upper at rt.cpan.org
, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Scope-Upper. 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 Scope::Upper
Tests code coverage report is available at http://www.profvince.com/perl/cover/Scope-Upper.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Inspired by Ricardo Signes.
Thanks to Shawn M. Moore for motivation.
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2008-2009 Vincent Pit, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.