1package Class::Struct;
2
3## See POD after __END__
4
5use 5.006_001;
6
7use strict;
8use warnings::register;
9our(@ISA, @EXPORT, $VERSION);
10
11use Carp;
12
13require Exporter;
14@ISA = qw(Exporter);
15@EXPORT = qw(struct);
16
17$VERSION = '0.66';
18
19my $print = 0;
20sub printem {
21    if (@_) { $print = shift }
22    else    { $print++ }
23}
24
25{
26    package Class::Struct::Tie_ISA;
27
28    sub TIEARRAY {
29        my $class = shift;
30        return bless [], $class;
31    }
32
33    sub STORE {
34        my ($self, $index, $value) = @_;
35        Class::Struct::_subclass_error();
36    }
37
38    sub FETCH {
39        my ($self, $index) = @_;
40        $self->[$index];
41    }
42
43    sub FETCHSIZE {
44        my $self = shift;
45        return scalar(@$self);
46    }
47
48    sub DESTROY { }
49}
50
51sub import {
52    my $self = shift;
53
54    if ( @_ == 0 ) {
55      $self->export_to_level( 1, $self, @EXPORT );
56    } elsif ( @_ == 1 ) {
57	# This is admittedly a little bit silly:
58	# do we ever export anything else than 'struct'...?
59      $self->export_to_level( 1, $self, @_ );
60    } else {
61      goto &struct;
62    }
63}
64
65sub struct {
66
67    # Determine parameter list structure, one of:
68    #   struct( class => [ element-list ])
69    #   struct( class => { element-list })
70    #   struct( element-list )
71    # Latter form assumes current package name as struct name.
72
73    my ($class, @decls);
74    my $base_type = ref $_[1];
75    if ( $base_type eq 'HASH' ) {
76        $class = shift;
77        @decls = %{shift()};
78        _usage_error() if @_;
79    }
80    elsif ( $base_type eq 'ARRAY' ) {
81        $class = shift;
82        @decls = @{shift()};
83        _usage_error() if @_;
84    }
85    else {
86        $base_type = 'ARRAY';
87        $class = (caller())[0];
88        @decls = @_;
89    }
90
91    _usage_error() if @decls % 2 == 1;
92
93    # Ensure we are not, and will not be, a subclass.
94
95    my $isa = do {
96        no strict 'refs';
97        \@{$class . '::ISA'};
98    };
99    _subclass_error() if @$isa;
100    tie @$isa, 'Class::Struct::Tie_ISA';
101
102    # Create constructor.
103
104    croak "function 'new' already defined in package $class"
105        if do { no strict 'refs'; defined &{$class . "::new"} };
106
107    my @methods = ();
108    my %refs = ();
109    my %arrays = ();
110    my %hashes = ();
111    my %classes = ();
112    my $got_class = 0;
113    my $out = '';
114
115    $out = "{\n  package $class;\n  use Carp;\n  sub new {\n";
116    $out .= "    my (\$class, \%init) = \@_;\n";
117    $out .= "    \$class = __PACKAGE__ unless \@_;\n";
118
119    my $cnt = 0;
120    my $idx = 0;
121    my( $cmt, $name, $type, $elem );
122
123    if( $base_type eq 'HASH' ){
124        $out .= "    my(\$r) = {};\n";
125        $cmt = '';
126    }
127    elsif( $base_type eq 'ARRAY' ){
128        $out .= "    my(\$r) = [];\n";
129    }
130
131    $out .= " bless \$r, \$class;\n\n";
132
133    while( $idx < @decls ){
134        $name = $decls[$idx];
135        $type = $decls[$idx+1];
136        push( @methods, $name );
137        if( $base_type eq 'HASH' ){
138            $elem = "{'${class}::$name'}";
139        }
140        elsif( $base_type eq 'ARRAY' ){
141            $elem = "[$cnt]";
142            ++$cnt;
143            $cmt = " # $name";
144        }
145        if( $type =~ /^\*(.)/ ){
146            $refs{$name}++;
147            $type = $1;
148        }
149        my $init = "defined(\$init{'$name'}) ? \$init{'$name'} :";
150        if( $type eq '@' ){
151            $out .= "    croak 'Initializer for $name must be array reference'\n";
152            $out .= "        if defined(\$init{'$name'}) && ref(\$init{'$name'}) ne 'ARRAY';\n";
153            $out .= "    \$r->$name( $init [] );$cmt\n";
154            $arrays{$name}++;
155        }
156        elsif( $type eq '%' ){
157            $out .= "    croak 'Initializer for $name must be hash reference'\n";
158            $out .= "        if defined(\$init{'$name'}) && ref(\$init{'$name'}) ne 'HASH';\n";
159            $out .= "    \$r->$name( $init {} );$cmt\n";
160            $hashes{$name}++;
161        }
162        elsif ( $type eq '$') {
163            $out .= "    \$r->$name( $init undef );$cmt\n";
164        }
165        elsif( $type =~ /^\w+(?:::\w+)*$/ ){
166            $out .= "    if (defined(\$init{'$name'})) {\n";
167           $out .= "       if (ref \$init{'$name'} eq 'HASH')\n";
168            $out .= "            { \$r->$name( $type->new(\%{\$init{'$name'}}) ) } $cmt\n";
169           $out .= "       elsif (UNIVERSAL::isa(\$init{'$name'}, '$type'))\n";
170            $out .= "            { \$r->$name( \$init{'$name'} ) } $cmt\n";
171            $out .= "       else { croak 'Initializer for $name must be hash or $type reference' }\n";
172            $out .= "    }\n";
173            $classes{$name} = $type;
174            $got_class = 1;
175        }
176        else{
177            croak "'$type' is not a valid struct element type";
178        }
179        $idx += 2;
180    }
181
182    $out .= "\n \$r;\n}\n";
183
184    # Create accessor methods.
185
186    my( $pre, $pst, $sel );
187    $cnt = 0;
188    foreach $name (@methods){
189        if ( do { no strict 'refs'; defined &{$class . "::$name"} } ) {
190            warnings::warnif("function '$name' already defined, overrides struct accessor method");
191        }
192        else {
193            $pre = $pst = $cmt = $sel = '';
194            if( defined $refs{$name} ){
195                $pre = "\\(";
196                $pst = ")";
197                $cmt = " # returns ref";
198            }
199            $out .= "  sub $name {$cmt\n    my \$r = shift;\n";
200            if( $base_type eq 'ARRAY' ){
201                $elem = "[$cnt]";
202                ++$cnt;
203            }
204            elsif( $base_type eq 'HASH' ){
205                $elem = "{'${class}::$name'}";
206            }
207            if( defined $arrays{$name} ){
208                $out .= "    my \$i;\n";
209                $out .= "    \@_ ? (\$i = shift) : return \$r->$elem;\n";
210                $out .= "    if (ref(\$i) eq 'ARRAY' && !\@_) { \$r->$elem = \$i; return \$r }\n";
211                $sel = "->[\$i]";
212            }
213            elsif( defined $hashes{$name} ){
214                $out .= "    my \$i;\n";
215                $out .= "    \@_ ? (\$i = shift) : return \$r->$elem;\n";
216                $out .= "    if (ref(\$i) eq 'HASH' && !\@_) { \$r->$elem = \$i; return \$r }\n";
217                $sel = "->{\$i}";
218            }
219            elsif( defined $classes{$name} ){
220                $out .= "    croak '$name argument is wrong class' if \@_ && ! UNIVERSAL::isa(\$_[0], '$classes{$name}');\n";
221            }
222            $out .= "    croak 'Too many args to $name' if \@_ > 1;\n";
223            $out .= "    \@_ ? ($pre\$r->$elem$sel = shift$pst) : $pre\$r->$elem$sel$pst;\n";
224            $out .= "  }\n";
225        }
226    }
227    $out .= "}\n1;\n";
228
229    print $out if $print;
230    my $result = eval $out;
231    carp $@ if $@;
232}
233
234sub _usage_error {
235    confess "struct usage error";
236}
237
238sub _subclass_error {
239    croak 'struct class cannot be a subclass (@ISA not allowed)';
240}
241
2421; # for require
243
244
245__END__
246
247=head1 NAME
248
249Class::Struct - declare struct-like datatypes as Perl classes
250
251=head1 SYNOPSIS
252
253    use Class::Struct;
254            # declare struct, based on array:
255    struct( CLASS_NAME => [ ELEMENT_NAME => ELEMENT_TYPE, ... ]);
256            # declare struct, based on hash:
257    struct( CLASS_NAME => { ELEMENT_NAME => ELEMENT_TYPE, ... });
258
259    package CLASS_NAME;
260    use Class::Struct;
261            # declare struct, based on array, implicit class name:
262    struct( ELEMENT_NAME => ELEMENT_TYPE, ... );
263
264    # Declare struct at compile time
265    use Class::Struct CLASS_NAME => [ELEMENT_NAME => ELEMENT_TYPE, ...];
266    use Class::Struct CLASS_NAME => {ELEMENT_NAME => ELEMENT_TYPE, ...};
267
268    # declare struct at compile time, based on array, implicit
269    # class name:
270    package CLASS_NAME;
271    use Class::Struct ELEMENT_NAME => ELEMENT_TYPE, ... ;
272
273    package Myobj;
274    use Class::Struct;
275            # declare struct with four types of elements:
276    struct( s => '$', a => '@', h => '%', c => 'My_Other_Class' );
277
278    $obj = new Myobj;               # constructor
279
280                                    # scalar type accessor:
281    $element_value = $obj->s;           # element value
282    $obj->s('new value');               # assign to element
283
284                                    # array type accessor:
285    $ary_ref = $obj->a;                 # reference to whole array
286    $ary_element_value = $obj->a(2);    # array element value
287    $obj->a(2, 'new value');            # assign to array element
288
289                                    # hash type accessor:
290    $hash_ref = $obj->h;                # reference to whole hash
291    $hash_element_value = $obj->h('x'); # hash element value
292    $obj->h('x', 'new value');          # assign to hash element
293
294                                    # class type accessor:
295    $element_value = $obj->c;           # object reference
296    $obj->c->method(...);               # call method of object
297    $obj->c(new My_Other_Class);        # assign a new object
298
299=head1 DESCRIPTION
300
301C<Class::Struct> exports a single function, C<struct>.
302Given a list of element names and types, and optionally
303a class name, C<struct> creates a Perl 5 class that implements
304a "struct-like" data structure.
305
306The new class is given a constructor method, C<new>, for creating
307struct objects.
308
309Each element in the struct data has an accessor method, which is
310used to assign to the element and to fetch its value.  The
311default accessor can be overridden by declaring a C<sub> of the
312same name in the package.  (See Example 2.)
313
314Each element's type can be scalar, array, hash, or class.
315
316=head2 The C<struct()> function
317
318The C<struct> function has three forms of parameter-list.
319
320    struct( CLASS_NAME => [ ELEMENT_LIST ]);
321    struct( CLASS_NAME => { ELEMENT_LIST });
322    struct( ELEMENT_LIST );
323
324The first and second forms explicitly identify the name of the
325class being created.  The third form assumes the current package
326name as the class name.
327
328An object of a class created by the first and third forms is
329based on an array, whereas an object of a class created by the
330second form is based on a hash. The array-based forms will be
331somewhat faster and smaller; the hash-based forms are more
332flexible.
333
334The class created by C<struct> must not be a subclass of another
335class other than C<UNIVERSAL>.
336
337It can, however, be used as a superclass for other classes. To facilitate
338this, the generated constructor method uses a two-argument blessing.
339Furthermore, if the class is hash-based, the key of each element is
340prefixed with the class name (see I<Perl Cookbook>, Recipe 13.12).
341
342A function named C<new> must not be explicitly defined in a class
343created by C<struct>.
344
345The I<ELEMENT_LIST> has the form
346
347    NAME => TYPE, ...
348
349Each name-type pair declares one element of the struct. Each
350element name will be defined as an accessor method unless a
351method by that name is explicitly defined; in the latter case, a
352warning is issued if the warning flag (B<-w>) is set.
353
354=head2 Class Creation at Compile Time
355
356C<Class::Struct> can create your class at compile time.  The main reason
357for doing this is obvious, so your class acts like every other class in
358Perl.  Creating your class at compile time will make the order of events
359similar to using any other class ( or Perl module ).
360
361There is no significant speed gain between compile time and run time
362class creation, there is just a new, more standard order of events.
363
364=head2 Element Types and Accessor Methods
365
366The four element types -- scalar, array, hash, and class -- are
367represented by strings -- C<'$'>, C<'@'>, C<'%'>, and a class name --
368optionally preceded by a C<'*'>.
369
370The accessor method provided by C<struct> for an element depends
371on the declared type of the element.
372
373=over 4
374
375=item Scalar (C<'$'> or C<'*$'>)
376
377The element is a scalar, and by default is initialized to C<undef>
378(but see L</Initializing with new>).
379
380The accessor's argument, if any, is assigned to the element.
381
382If the element type is C<'$'>, the value of the element (after
383assignment) is returned. If the element type is C<'*$'>, a reference
384to the element is returned.
385
386=item Array (C<'@'> or C<'*@'>)
387
388The element is an array, initialized by default to C<()>.
389
390With no argument, the accessor returns a reference to the
391element's whole array (whether or not the element was
392specified as C<'@'> or C<'*@'>).
393
394With one or two arguments, the first argument is an index
395specifying one element of the array; the second argument, if
396present, is assigned to the array element.  If the element type
397is C<'@'>, the accessor returns the array element value.  If the
398element type is C<'*@'>, a reference to the array element is
399returned.
400
401As a special case, when the accessor is called with an array reference
402as the sole argument, this causes an assignment of the whole array element.
403The object reference is returned.
404
405=item Hash (C<'%'> or C<'*%'>)
406
407The element is a hash, initialized by default to C<()>.
408
409With no argument, the accessor returns a reference to the
410element's whole hash (whether or not the element was
411specified as C<'%'> or C<'*%'>).
412
413With one or two arguments, the first argument is a key specifying
414one element of the hash; the second argument, if present, is
415assigned to the hash element.  If the element type is C<'%'>, the
416accessor returns the hash element value.  If the element type is
417C<'*%'>, a reference to the hash element is returned.
418
419As a special case, when the accessor is called with a hash reference
420as the sole argument, this causes an assignment of the whole hash element.
421The object reference is returned.
422
423=item Class (C<'Class_Name'> or C<'*Class_Name'>)
424
425The element's value must be a reference blessed to the named
426class or to one of its subclasses. The element is not initialized
427by default.
428
429The accessor's argument, if any, is assigned to the element. The
430accessor will C<croak> if this is not an appropriate object
431reference.
432
433If the element type does not start with a C<'*'>, the accessor
434returns the element value (after assignment). If the element type
435starts with a C<'*'>, a reference to the element itself is returned.
436
437=back
438
439=head2 Initializing with C<new>
440
441C<struct> always creates a constructor called C<new>. That constructor
442may take a list of initializers for the various elements of the new
443struct.
444
445Each initializer is a pair of values: I<element name>C< =E<gt> >I<value>.
446The initializer value for a scalar element is just a scalar value. The
447initializer for an array element is an array reference. The initializer
448for a hash is a hash reference.
449
450The initializer for a class element is an object of the corresponding class,
451or of one of it's subclasses, or a reference to a hash containing named
452arguments to be passed to the element's constructor.
453
454See Example 3 below for an example of initialization.
455
456=head1 EXAMPLES
457
458=over 4
459
460=item Example 1
461
462Giving a struct element a class type that is also a struct is how
463structs are nested.  Here, C<Timeval> represents a time (seconds and
464microseconds), and C<Rusage> has two elements, each of which is of
465type C<Timeval>.
466
467    use Class::Struct;
468
469    struct( Rusage => {
470        ru_utime => 'Timeval',  # user time used
471        ru_stime => 'Timeval',  # system time used
472    });
473
474    struct( Timeval => [
475        tv_secs  => '$',        # seconds
476        tv_usecs => '$',        # microseconds
477    ]);
478
479    # create an object:
480    my $t = Rusage->new(ru_utime=>Timeval->new(),
481        ru_stime=>Timeval->new());
482
483    # $t->ru_utime and $t->ru_stime are objects of type Timeval.
484    # set $t->ru_utime to 100.0 sec and $t->ru_stime to 5.0 sec.
485    $t->ru_utime->tv_secs(100);
486    $t->ru_utime->tv_usecs(0);
487    $t->ru_stime->tv_secs(5);
488    $t->ru_stime->tv_usecs(0);
489
490=item Example 2
491
492An accessor function can be redefined in order to provide
493additional checking of values, etc.  Here, we want the C<count>
494element always to be nonnegative, so we redefine the C<count>
495accessor accordingly.
496
497    package MyObj;
498    use Class::Struct;
499
500    # declare the struct
501    struct ( 'MyObj', { count => '$', stuff => '%' } );
502
503    # override the default accessor method for 'count'
504    sub count {
505        my $self = shift;
506        if ( @_ ) {
507            die 'count must be nonnegative' if $_[0] < 0;
508            $self->{'MyObj::count'} = shift;
509            warn "Too many args to count" if @_;
510        }
511        return $self->{'MyObj::count'};
512    }
513
514    package main;
515    $x = new MyObj;
516    print "\$x->count(5) = ", $x->count(5), "\n";
517                            # prints '$x->count(5) = 5'
518
519    print "\$x->count = ", $x->count, "\n";
520                            # prints '$x->count = 5'
521
522    print "\$x->count(-5) = ", $x->count(-5), "\n";
523                            # dies due to negative argument!
524
525=item Example 3
526
527The constructor of a generated class can be passed a list
528of I<element>=>I<value> pairs, with which to initialize the struct.
529If no initializer is specified for a particular element, its default
530initialization is performed instead. Initializers for non-existent
531elements are silently ignored.
532
533Note that the initializer for a nested class may be specified as
534an object of that class, or as a reference to a hash of initializers
535that are passed on to the nested struct's constructor.
536
537    use Class::Struct;
538
539    struct Breed =>
540    {
541        name  => '$',
542        cross => '$',
543    };
544
545    struct Cat =>
546    [
547        name     => '$',
548        kittens  => '@',
549        markings => '%',
550        breed    => 'Breed',
551    ];
552
553
554    my $cat = Cat->new( name => 'Socks',
555               kittens  => ['Monica', 'Kenneth'],
556               markings => { socks=>1, blaze=>"white" },
557               breed    => Breed->new(name=>'short-hair', cross=>1),
558          or:  breed    => {name=>'short-hair', cross=>1},
559                      );
560
561    print "Once a cat called ", $cat->name, "\n";
562    print "(which was a ", $cat->breed->name, ")\n";
563    print "had 2 kittens: ", join(' and ', @{$cat->kittens}), "\n";
564
565=back
566
567=head1 Author and Modification History
568
569Modified by Damian Conway, 2001-09-10, v0.62.
570
571   Modified implicit construction of nested objects.
572   Now will also take an object ref instead of requiring a hash ref.
573   Also default initializes nested object attributes to undef, rather
574   than calling object constructor without args
575   Original over-helpfulness was fraught with problems:
576       * the class's constructor might not be called 'new'
577       * the class might not have a hash-like-arguments constructor
578       * the class might not have a no-argument constructor
579       * "recursive" data structures didn't work well:
580                 package Person;
581                 struct { mother => 'Person', father => 'Person'};
582
583
584Modified by Casey West, 2000-11-08, v0.59.
585
586    Added the ability for compile time class creation.
587
588Modified by Damian Conway, 1999-03-05, v0.58.
589
590    Added handling of hash-like arg list to class ctor.
591
592    Changed to two-argument blessing in ctor to support
593    derivation from created classes.
594
595    Added classname prefixes to keys in hash-based classes
596    (refer to "Perl Cookbook", Recipe 13.12 for rationale).
597
598    Corrected behaviour of accessors for '*@' and '*%' struct
599    elements.  Package now implements documented behaviour when
600    returning a reference to an entire hash or array element.
601    Previously these were returned as a reference to a reference
602    to the element.
603
604Renamed to C<Class::Struct> and modified by Jim Miner, 1997-04-02.
605
606    members() function removed.
607    Documentation corrected and extended.
608    Use of struct() in a subclass prohibited.
609    User definition of accessor allowed.
610    Treatment of '*' in element types corrected.
611    Treatment of classes as element types corrected.
612    Class name to struct() made optional.
613    Diagnostic checks added.
614
615Originally C<Class::Template> by Dean Roehrich.
616
617    # Template.pm   --- struct/member template builder
618    #   12mar95
619    #   Dean Roehrich
620    #
621    # changes/bugs fixed since 28nov94 version:
622    #  - podified
623    # changes/bugs fixed since 21nov94 version:
624    #  - Fixed examples.
625    # changes/bugs fixed since 02sep94 version:
626    #  - Moved to Class::Template.
627    # changes/bugs fixed since 20feb94 version:
628    #  - Updated to be a more proper module.
629    #  - Added "use strict".
630    #  - Bug in build_methods, was using @var when @$var needed.
631    #  - Now using my() rather than local().
632    #
633    # Uses perl5 classes to create nested data types.
634    # This is offered as one implementation of Tom Christiansen's
635    # "structs.pl" idea.
636
637=cut
638