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fields (3)
  • >> fields (3) ( Solaris man: Библиотечные вызовы )
  • fields (3) ( Linux man: Библиотечные вызовы )
  • 
    
    

    NAME

         fields - compile-time class fields
    
    
    

    SYNOPSIS

             {
                 package Foo;
                 use fields qw(foo bar _Foo_private);
                 sub new {
                     my Foo $self = shift;
                     unless (ref $self) {
                         $self = fields::new($self);
                         $self->{_Foo_private} = "this is Foo's secret";
                     }
                     $self->{foo} = 10;
                     $self->{bar} = 20;
                     return $self;
                 }
             }
    
             my Foo $var = Foo::->new;
             $var->{foo} = 42;
    
             # this will generate a compile-time error
             $var->{zap} = 42;
    
             # subclassing
             {
                 package Bar;
                 use base 'Foo';
                 use fields qw(baz _Bar_private);        # not shared with Foo
                 sub new {
                     my $class = shift;
                     my $self = fields::new($class);
                     $self->SUPER::new();                # init base fields
                     $self->{baz} = 10;                  # init own fields
                     $self->{_Bar_private} = "this is Bar's secret";
                     return $self;
                 }
             }
    
    
    
    

    DESCRIPTION

         The `fields' pragma enables compile-time verified class
         fields.
    
         NOTE: The current implementation keeps the declared fields
         in the %FIELDS hash of the calling package, but this may
         change in future versions.  Do not update the %FIELDS hash
         directly, because it must be created at compile-time for it
         to be fully useful, as is done by this pragma.
    
    
         If a typed lexical variable holding a reference is used to
         access a hash element and a package with the same name as
         the type has declared class fields using this pragma, then
         the operation is turned into an array access at compile
         time.
    
         The related `base' pragma will combine fields from base
         classes and any fields declared using the `fields' pragma.
         This enables field inheritance to work properly.
    
         Field names that start with an underscore character are made
         private to the class and are not visible to subclasses.
         Inherited fields can be overridden but will generate a
         warning if used together with the `-w' switch.
    
         The effect of all this is that you can have objects with
         named fields which are as compact and as fast arrays to
         access.  This only works as long as the objects are accessed
         through properly typed variables.  If the objects are not
         typed, access is only checked at run time.
    
         The following functions are supported:
    
         new     fields::new() creates and blesses a pseudo-hash
                 comprised of the fields declared using the `fields'
                 pragma into the specified class.  This makes it
                 possible to write a constructor like this:
    
                     package Critter::Sounds;
                     use fields qw(cat dog bird);
    
                     sub new {
                         my Critter::Sounds $self = shift;
                         $self = fields::new($self) unless ref $self;
                         $self->{cat} = 'meow';                          # scalar element
                         @$self{'dog','bird'} = ('bark','tweet');        # slice
                         return $self;
                     }
    
    
         phash   fields::phash() can be used to create and initialize
                 a plain (unblessed) pseudo-hash.  This function
                 should always be used instead of creating pseudo-
                 hashes directly.
    
                 If the first argument is a reference to an array,
                 the pseudo-hash will be created with keys from that
                 array.  If a second argument is supplied, it must
                 also be a reference to an array whose elements will
                 be used as the values.  If the second array contains
                 less elements than the first, the trailing elements
                 of the pseudo-hash will not be initialized.  This
                 makes it particularly useful for creating a pseudo-
                 hash from subroutine arguments:
    
                     sub dogtag {
                         my $tag = fields::phash([qw(name rank ser_num)], [@_]);
                     }
    
                 fields::phash() also accepts a list of key-value
                 pairs that will be used to construct the pseudo
                 hash.  Examples:
    
                     my $tag = fields::phash(name => "Joe",
                                             rank => "captain",
                                             ser_num => 42);
    
                     my $pseudohash = fields::phash(%args);
    
    
    
    

    SEE ALSO

         the base manpage, the Pseudo-hashes: Using an array as a
         hash entry in the perlref manpage
    
    
    
    


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