1=head1 NAME 2 3perlbot - Bag'o Object Tricks (the BOT) 4 5=head1 DESCRIPTION 6 7The following collection of tricks and hints is intended to whet curious 8appetites about such things as the use of instance variables and the 9mechanics of object and class relationships. The reader is encouraged to 10consult relevant textbooks for discussion of Object Oriented definitions and 11methodology. This is not intended as a tutorial for object-oriented 12programming or as a comprehensive guide to Perl's object oriented features, 13nor should it be construed as a style guide. If you're looking for tutorials, 14be sure to read L<perlboot>, L<perltoot>, and L<perltooc>. 15 16The Perl motto still holds: There's more than one way to do it. 17 18=head1 OO SCALING TIPS 19 20=over 5 21 22=item 1 23 24Do not attempt to verify the type of $self. That'll break if the class is 25inherited, when the type of $self is valid but its package isn't what you 26expect. See rule 5. 27 28=item 2 29 30If an object-oriented (OO) or indirect-object (IO) syntax was used, then the 31object is probably the correct type and there's no need to become paranoid 32about it. Perl isn't a paranoid language anyway. If people subvert the OO 33or IO syntax then they probably know what they're doing and you should let 34them do it. See rule 1. 35 36=item 3 37 38Use the two-argument form of bless(). Let a subclass use your constructor. 39See L<INHERITING A CONSTRUCTOR>. 40 41=item 4 42 43The subclass is allowed to know things about its immediate superclass, the 44superclass is allowed to know nothing about a subclass. 45 46=item 5 47 48Don't be trigger happy with inheritance. A "using", "containing", or 49"delegation" relationship (some sort of aggregation, at least) is often more 50appropriate. See L<OBJECT RELATIONSHIPS>, L<USING RELATIONSHIP WITH SDBM>, 51and L<"DELEGATION">. 52 53=item 6 54 55The object is the namespace. Make package globals accessible via the 56object. This will remove the guess work about the symbol's home package. 57See L<CLASS CONTEXT AND THE OBJECT>. 58 59=item 7 60 61IO syntax is certainly less noisy, but it is also prone to ambiguities that 62can cause difficult-to-find bugs. Allow people to use the sure-thing OO 63syntax, even if you don't like it. 64 65=item 8 66 67Do not use function-call syntax on a method. You're going to be bitten 68someday. Someone might move that method into a superclass and your code 69will be broken. On top of that you're feeding the paranoia in rule 2. 70 71=item 9 72 73Don't assume you know the home package of a method. You're making it 74difficult for someone to override that method. See L<THINKING OF CODE REUSE>. 75 76=back 77 78=head1 INSTANCE VARIABLES 79 80An anonymous array or anonymous hash can be used to hold instance 81variables. Named parameters are also demonstrated. 82 83 package Foo; 84 85 sub new { 86 my $type = shift; 87 my %params = @_; 88 my $self = {}; 89 $self->{'High'} = $params{'High'}; 90 $self->{'Low'} = $params{'Low'}; 91 bless $self, $type; 92 } 93 94 95 package Bar; 96 97 sub new { 98 my $type = shift; 99 my %params = @_; 100 my $self = []; 101 $self->[0] = $params{'Left'}; 102 $self->[1] = $params{'Right'}; 103 bless $self, $type; 104 } 105 106 package main; 107 108 $a = Foo->new( 'High' => 42, 'Low' => 11 ); 109 print "High=$a->{'High'}\n"; 110 print "Low=$a->{'Low'}\n"; 111 112 $b = Bar->new( 'Left' => 78, 'Right' => 40 ); 113 print "Left=$b->[0]\n"; 114 print "Right=$b->[1]\n"; 115 116=head1 SCALAR INSTANCE VARIABLES 117 118An anonymous scalar can be used when only one instance variable is needed. 119 120 package Foo; 121 122 sub new { 123 my $type = shift; 124 my $self; 125 $self = shift; 126 bless \$self, $type; 127 } 128 129 package main; 130 131 $a = Foo->new( 42 ); 132 print "a=$$a\n"; 133 134 135=head1 INSTANCE VARIABLE INHERITANCE 136 137This example demonstrates how one might inherit instance variables from a 138superclass for inclusion in the new class. This requires calling the 139superclass's constructor and adding one's own instance variables to the new 140object. 141 142 package Bar; 143 144 sub new { 145 my $type = shift; 146 my $self = {}; 147 $self->{'buz'} = 42; 148 bless $self, $type; 149 } 150 151 package Foo; 152 @ISA = qw( Bar ); 153 154 sub new { 155 my $type = shift; 156 my $self = Bar->new; 157 $self->{'biz'} = 11; 158 bless $self, $type; 159 } 160 161 package main; 162 163 $a = Foo->new; 164 print "buz = ", $a->{'buz'}, "\n"; 165 print "biz = ", $a->{'biz'}, "\n"; 166 167 168 169=head1 OBJECT RELATIONSHIPS 170 171The following demonstrates how one might implement "containing" and "using" 172relationships between objects. 173 174 package Bar; 175 176 sub new { 177 my $type = shift; 178 my $self = {}; 179 $self->{'buz'} = 42; 180 bless $self, $type; 181 } 182 183 package Foo; 184 185 sub new { 186 my $type = shift; 187 my $self = {}; 188 $self->{'Bar'} = Bar->new; 189 $self->{'biz'} = 11; 190 bless $self, $type; 191 } 192 193 package main; 194 195 $a = Foo->new; 196 print "buz = ", $a->{'Bar'}->{'buz'}, "\n"; 197 print "biz = ", $a->{'biz'}, "\n"; 198 199 200 201=head1 OVERRIDING SUPERCLASS METHODS 202 203The following example demonstrates how to override a superclass method and 204then call the overridden method. The B<SUPER> pseudo-class allows the 205programmer to call an overridden superclass method without actually knowing 206where that method is defined. 207 208 package Buz; 209 sub goo { print "here's the goo\n" } 210 211 package Bar; @ISA = qw( Buz ); 212 sub google { print "google here\n" } 213 214 package Baz; 215 sub mumble { print "mumbling\n" } 216 217 package Foo; 218 @ISA = qw( Bar Baz ); 219 220 sub new { 221 my $type = shift; 222 bless [], $type; 223 } 224 sub grr { print "grumble\n" } 225 sub goo { 226 my $self = shift; 227 $self->SUPER::goo(); 228 } 229 sub mumble { 230 my $self = shift; 231 $self->SUPER::mumble(); 232 } 233 sub google { 234 my $self = shift; 235 $self->SUPER::google(); 236 } 237 238 package main; 239 240 $foo = Foo->new; 241 $foo->mumble; 242 $foo->grr; 243 $foo->goo; 244 $foo->google; 245 246Note that C<SUPER> refers to the superclasses of the current package 247(C<Foo>), not to the superclasses of C<$self>. 248 249 250=head1 USING RELATIONSHIP WITH SDBM 251 252This example demonstrates an interface for the SDBM class. This creates a 253"using" relationship between the SDBM class and the new class Mydbm. 254 255 package Mydbm; 256 257 require SDBM_File; 258 require Tie::Hash; 259 @ISA = qw( Tie::Hash ); 260 261 sub TIEHASH { 262 my $type = shift; 263 my $ref = SDBM_File->new(@_); 264 bless {'dbm' => $ref}, $type; 265 } 266 sub FETCH { 267 my $self = shift; 268 my $ref = $self->{'dbm'}; 269 $ref->FETCH(@_); 270 } 271 sub STORE { 272 my $self = shift; 273 if (defined $_[0]){ 274 my $ref = $self->{'dbm'}; 275 $ref->STORE(@_); 276 } else { 277 die "Cannot STORE an undefined key in Mydbm\n"; 278 } 279 } 280 281 package main; 282 use Fcntl qw( O_RDWR O_CREAT ); 283 284 tie %foo, "Mydbm", "Sdbm", O_RDWR|O_CREAT, 0640; 285 $foo{'bar'} = 123; 286 print "foo-bar = $foo{'bar'}\n"; 287 288 tie %bar, "Mydbm", "Sdbm2", O_RDWR|O_CREAT, 0640; 289 $bar{'Cathy'} = 456; 290 print "bar-Cathy = $bar{'Cathy'}\n"; 291 292=head1 THINKING OF CODE REUSE 293 294One strength of Object-Oriented languages is the ease with which old code 295can use new code. The following examples will demonstrate first how one can 296hinder code reuse and then how one can promote code reuse. 297 298This first example illustrates a class which uses a fully-qualified method 299call to access the "private" method BAZ(). The second example will show 300that it is impossible to override the BAZ() method. 301 302 package FOO; 303 304 sub new { 305 my $type = shift; 306 bless {}, $type; 307 } 308 sub bar { 309 my $self = shift; 310 $self->FOO::private::BAZ; 311 } 312 313 package FOO::private; 314 315 sub BAZ { 316 print "in BAZ\n"; 317 } 318 319 package main; 320 321 $a = FOO->new; 322 $a->bar; 323 324Now we try to override the BAZ() method. We would like FOO::bar() to call 325GOOP::BAZ(), but this cannot happen because FOO::bar() explicitly calls 326FOO::private::BAZ(). 327 328 package FOO; 329 330 sub new { 331 my $type = shift; 332 bless {}, $type; 333 } 334 sub bar { 335 my $self = shift; 336 $self->FOO::private::BAZ; 337 } 338 339 package FOO::private; 340 341 sub BAZ { 342 print "in BAZ\n"; 343 } 344 345 package GOOP; 346 @ISA = qw( FOO ); 347 sub new { 348 my $type = shift; 349 bless {}, $type; 350 } 351 352 sub BAZ { 353 print "in GOOP::BAZ\n"; 354 } 355 356 package main; 357 358 $a = GOOP->new; 359 $a->bar; 360 361To create reusable code we must modify class FOO, flattening class 362FOO::private. The next example shows a reusable class FOO which allows the 363method GOOP::BAZ() to be used in place of FOO::BAZ(). 364 365 package FOO; 366 367 sub new { 368 my $type = shift; 369 bless {}, $type; 370 } 371 sub bar { 372 my $self = shift; 373 $self->BAZ; 374 } 375 376 sub BAZ { 377 print "in BAZ\n"; 378 } 379 380 package GOOP; 381 @ISA = qw( FOO ); 382 383 sub new { 384 my $type = shift; 385 bless {}, $type; 386 } 387 sub BAZ { 388 print "in GOOP::BAZ\n"; 389 } 390 391 package main; 392 393 $a = GOOP->new; 394 $a->bar; 395 396=head1 CLASS CONTEXT AND THE OBJECT 397 398Use the object to solve package and class context problems. Everything a 399method needs should be available via the object or should be passed as a 400parameter to the method. 401 402A class will sometimes have static or global data to be used by the 403methods. A subclass may want to override that data and replace it with new 404data. When this happens the superclass may not know how to find the new 405copy of the data. 406 407This problem can be solved by using the object to define the context of the 408method. Let the method look in the object for a reference to the data. The 409alternative is to force the method to go hunting for the data ("Is it in my 410class, or in a subclass? Which subclass?"), and this can be inconvenient 411and will lead to hackery. It is better just to let the object tell the 412method where that data is located. 413 414 package Bar; 415 416 %fizzle = ( 'Password' => 'XYZZY' ); 417 418 sub new { 419 my $type = shift; 420 my $self = {}; 421 $self->{'fizzle'} = \%fizzle; 422 bless $self, $type; 423 } 424 425 sub enter { 426 my $self = shift; 427 428 # Don't try to guess if we should use %Bar::fizzle 429 # or %Foo::fizzle. The object already knows which 430 # we should use, so just ask it. 431 # 432 my $fizzle = $self->{'fizzle'}; 433 434 print "The word is ", $fizzle->{'Password'}, "\n"; 435 } 436 437 package Foo; 438 @ISA = qw( Bar ); 439 440 %fizzle = ( 'Password' => 'Rumple' ); 441 442 sub new { 443 my $type = shift; 444 my $self = Bar->new; 445 $self->{'fizzle'} = \%fizzle; 446 bless $self, $type; 447 } 448 449 package main; 450 451 $a = Bar->new; 452 $b = Foo->new; 453 $a->enter; 454 $b->enter; 455 456=head1 INHERITING A CONSTRUCTOR 457 458An inheritable constructor should use the second form of bless() which allows 459blessing directly into a specified class. Notice in this example that the 460object will be a BAR not a FOO, even though the constructor is in class FOO. 461 462 package FOO; 463 464 sub new { 465 my $type = shift; 466 my $self = {}; 467 bless $self, $type; 468 } 469 470 sub baz { 471 print "in FOO::baz()\n"; 472 } 473 474 package BAR; 475 @ISA = qw(FOO); 476 477 sub baz { 478 print "in BAR::baz()\n"; 479 } 480 481 package main; 482 483 $a = BAR->new; 484 $a->baz; 485 486=head1 DELEGATION 487 488Some classes, such as SDBM_File, cannot be effectively subclassed because 489they create foreign objects. Such a class can be extended with some sort of 490aggregation technique such as the "using" relationship mentioned earlier or 491by delegation. 492 493The following example demonstrates delegation using an AUTOLOAD() function to 494perform message-forwarding. This will allow the Mydbm object to behave 495exactly like an SDBM_File object. The Mydbm class could now extend the 496behavior by adding custom FETCH() and STORE() methods, if this is desired. 497 498 package Mydbm; 499 500 require SDBM_File; 501 require Tie::Hash; 502 @ISA = qw(Tie::Hash); 503 504 sub TIEHASH { 505 my $type = shift; 506 my $ref = SDBM_File->new(@_); 507 bless {'delegate' => $ref}; 508 } 509 510 sub AUTOLOAD { 511 my $self = shift; 512 513 # The Perl interpreter places the name of the 514 # message in a variable called $AUTOLOAD. 515 516 # DESTROY messages should never be propagated. 517 return if $AUTOLOAD =~ /::DESTROY$/; 518 519 # Remove the package name. 520 $AUTOLOAD =~ s/^Mydbm:://; 521 522 # Pass the message to the delegate. 523 $self->{'delegate'}->$AUTOLOAD(@_); 524 } 525 526 package main; 527 use Fcntl qw( O_RDWR O_CREAT ); 528 529 tie %foo, "Mydbm", "adbm", O_RDWR|O_CREAT, 0640; 530 $foo{'bar'} = 123; 531 print "foo-bar = $foo{'bar'}\n"; 532 533=head1 SEE ALSO 534 535L<perlboot>, L<perltoot>, L<perltooc>. 536