Sub-Exporter-GlobExporter/lib/Sub/Exporter/GlobExporter.pm
use strict;
use warnings;
package Sub::Exporter::GlobExporter 0.006;
# ABSTRACT: export shared globs with Sub::Exporter collectors
use Scalar::Util ();
use Sub::Exporter -setup => [ qw(glob_exporter) ];
#pod =head1 SYNOPSIS
#pod
#pod First, you write something that exports globs:
#pod
#pod package Shared::Symbol;
#pod
#pod use Sub::Exporter;
#pod use Sub::Exporter::GlobExport qw(glob_exporter);
#pod
#pod use Sub::Exporter -setup => {
#pod ...
#pod collectors => { '$Symbol' => glob_exporter(Symbol => \'_shared_globref') },
#pod };
#pod
#pod sub _shared_globref { return \*Common }
#pod
#pod Now other code can import C<$Symbol> and get their C<*Symbol> made an alias to
#pod C<*Shared::Symbol::Common>.
#pod
#pod If you don't know what this means or why you'd want to do it, you may want to
#pod stop reading now.
#pod
#pod The other class can do something like this:
#pod
#pod use Shared::Symbol '$Symbol';
#pod
#pod print $Symbol; # prints the scalar entry of *Shared::Symbol::Common
#pod
#pod ...or...
#pod
#pod use Shared::Symbol '$Symbol' => { -as => 'SharedSymbol' };
#pod
#pod print $SharedSymbol; # prints the scalar entry of *Shared::Symbol::Common
#pod
#pod ...or...
#pod
#pod my $glob;
#pod use Shared::Symbol '$Symbol' => { -as => \$glob };
#pod
#pod print $$glob; # prints the scalar entry of *Shared::Symbol::Common
#pod
#pod =head1 OVERVIEW
#pod
#pod Sub::Exporter::GlobExporter provides only one routine, C<glob_exporter>, which
#pod may be called either by its full name or may be imported on request.
#pod
#pod my $exporter = glob_exporter( $default_name, $globref_locator );
#pod
#pod The routine returns a L<collection validator|Sub::Exporter/Collector
#pod Configuration> that will export a glob into the importing package. It will
#pod export it under the name C<$default_name>, unless an alternate name is given
#pod (as shown above). The glob that is installed is specified by the
#pod C<$globref_locator>, which can be either the globref itself, or a reference to
#pod a string which will be called on the exporter
#pod
#pod For an example, see the L</SYNOPSIS>, in which a method is defined to produce
#pod the globref to share. This allows the glob-exporting package to be subclassed,
#pod so the subclass may choose to either re-use the same glob when exporting or to
#pod export a new one.
#pod
#pod If there are entries in the arguments to the globref-exporting collector
#pod I<other> than those beginning with a dash, a hashref of them will be passed to
#pod the globref locator. In other words, if we were to write this:
#pod
#pod use Shared::Symbol '$Symbol' => { arg => 1, -as => 2 };
#pod
#pod It would result in a call like the following:
#pod
#pod my $globref = Shared::Symbol->_shared_globref({ arg => 1 });
#pod
#pod =cut
my $is_ref;
BEGIN {
$is_ref = sub {
return(
! Scalar::Util::blessed($_[0])
&& Scalar::Util::reftype($_[0]) eq $_[1]
);
};
}
sub glob_exporter {
my ($default_name, $globref) = @_;
my $globref_method = $is_ref->($globref, 'GLOB') ? sub { $globref }
: $is_ref->($globref, 'SCALAR') ? $$globref
: Carp::confess("illegal glob locator '$globref'");
return sub {
my ($value, $data) = @_;
my @args = defined $value
? ({ map {; $_ => $value->{$_} } grep { ! /^-/ } keys %$value })
: ();
my $globref = $data->{class}->$globref_method(@args);
my $name;
$name = defined $value->{'-as'} ? $value->{'-as'} : $default_name;
if (ref $name) {
$$name = *$globref;
} else {
my $sym = "$data->{into}::$name";
{
no strict 'refs';
*{$sym} = *$globref;
}
}
# Why is this line here? I have no recollection of it. -- rjbs, 2015-11-04
$_[0] = $globref;
return 1;
}
}
1;
__END__
=pod
=encoding UTF-8
=head1 NAME
Sub::Exporter::GlobExporter - export shared globs with Sub::Exporter collectors
=head1 VERSION
version 0.006
=head1 SYNOPSIS
First, you write something that exports globs:
package Shared::Symbol;
use Sub::Exporter;
use Sub::Exporter::GlobExport qw(glob_exporter);
use Sub::Exporter -setup => {
...
collectors => { '$Symbol' => glob_exporter(Symbol => \'_shared_globref') },
};
sub _shared_globref { return \*Common }
Now other code can import C<$Symbol> and get their C<*Symbol> made an alias to
C<*Shared::Symbol::Common>.
If you don't know what this means or why you'd want to do it, you may want to
stop reading now.
The other class can do something like this:
use Shared::Symbol '$Symbol';
print $Symbol; # prints the scalar entry of *Shared::Symbol::Common
...or...
use Shared::Symbol '$Symbol' => { -as => 'SharedSymbol' };
print $SharedSymbol; # prints the scalar entry of *Shared::Symbol::Common
...or...
my $glob;
use Shared::Symbol '$Symbol' => { -as => \$glob };
print $$glob; # prints the scalar entry of *Shared::Symbol::Common
=head1 OVERVIEW
Sub::Exporter::GlobExporter provides only one routine, C<glob_exporter>, which
may be called either by its full name or may be imported on request.
my $exporter = glob_exporter( $default_name, $globref_locator );
The routine returns a L<collection validator|Sub::Exporter/Collector
Configuration> that will export a glob into the importing package. It will
export it under the name C<$default_name>, unless an alternate name is given
(as shown above). The glob that is installed is specified by the
C<$globref_locator>, which can be either the globref itself, or a reference to
a string which will be called on the exporter
For an example, see the L</SYNOPSIS>, in which a method is defined to produce
the globref to share. This allows the glob-exporting package to be subclassed,
so the subclass may choose to either re-use the same glob when exporting or to
export a new one.
If there are entries in the arguments to the globref-exporting collector
I<other> than those beginning with a dash, a hashref of them will be passed to
the globref locator. In other words, if we were to write this:
use Shared::Symbol '$Symbol' => { arg => 1, -as => 2 };
It would result in a call like the following:
my $globref = Shared::Symbol->_shared_globref({ arg => 1 });
=head1 PERL VERSION
This library should run on perls released even a long time ago. It should work
on any version of perl released in the last five years.
Although it may work on older versions of perl, no guarantee is made that the
minimum required version will not be increased. The version may be increased
for any reason, and there is no promise that patches will be accepted to lower
the minimum required perl.
=head1 AUTHOR
Ricardo Signes <cpan@semiotic.systems>
=head1 CONTRIBUTORS
=for stopwords David Steinbrunner Ricardo Signes
=over 4
=item *
David Steinbrunner <dsteinbrunner@pobox.com>
=item *
Ricardo Signes <rjbs@semiotic.systems>
=back
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2010 by Ricardo Signes.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
=cut