Provided by: libtemplate-alloy-perl_1.022-2_all bug

NAME

       Template::Alloy::Operator - Operator role.

DESCRIPTION

       The Template::Alloy::Operator role provides the regexes necessary for Template::Alloy::Parse to parse
       operators and place them in their appropriate precedence.  It also provides the play_operator method
       which is used by Template::Alloy::Play and Template::Alloy::Compile for playing out the stored operator
       ASTs.

ROLE METHODS

       play_operator
           Takes an operator AST in the form of

               [undef, '+', 1, 2]

           Essentially,  all  operators  are  stored  in  RPN  notation  with  a leading "undef" to disambiguate
           operators in a normal Alloy expression AST.

       define_operator
           Used for defining new operators.

           See Template::Alloy for more details.

OPERATOR LIST

       The following operators are available  in  Template::Alloy.   Except  where  noted  these  are  the  same
       operators  available  in TT.  They are listed in the order of their precedence (the higher the precedence
       the tighter it binds).

       "." The dot operator.  Allows for accessing sub-members, methods,  or  virtual  methods  of  nested  data
           structures.

               my $obj->process(\$content, {a => {b => [0, {c => [34, 57]}]}}, \$output);

               [% a.b.1.c.0 %] => 34

           Note:  on access to hashrefs, any hash keys that match the sub key name will be used before a virtual
           method of the same name.  For example if a passed hash contained pair with a keyname "defined" and  a
           value of "2", then any calls to hash.defined(another_keyname) would always return 2 rather than using
           the vmethod named "defined."  To get around this limitation use the "|" operator (listed next).  Also
           -  on objects the "." will always try and call the method by that name.  To always call the vmethod -
           use "|".

       "|" The pipe operator.  Similar to the dot operator.  Allows for explicit calling of virtual methods  and
           filters  (filters  are  "merged"  with  virtual  methods  in  Template::Alloy and TT3) when accessing
           hashrefs and objects.  See the note for the "." operator.

           The pipe character is similar to TT2 in that it can be used in place of a directive as an  alias  for
           FILTER.   It  similar  to  TT3 in that it can be used for virtual method access.  This duality is one
           source of difference between Template::Alloy and TT2 compatibility.  Templates that  have  directives
           that end with a variable name that then use the "|" directive to apply a filter will be broken as the
           "|" will be applied to the variable name.

           The following two cases will do the same thing.

               [% foo | html %]

               [% foo FILTER html %]

           Though  they do the same thing, internally, foo|html is stored as a single variable while "foo FILTER
           html" is stored as the variable foo which is then passed to the FILTER html.

           A TT2 sample that would break in Template::Alloy or TT3 is:

               [% PROCESS foo a = b | html %]

           Under TT2 the content returned by "PROCESS foo a = b" would all be passed to the html filter.   Under
           Template::Alloy and TT3, b would be passed to the html filter before assigning it to the variable "a"
           before the template foo was processed.

           A simple fix is to do any of the following:

               [% PROCESS foo a = b FILTER html %]

               [% | html %][% PROCESS foo a = b %][% END %]

               [% FILTER html %][% PROCESS foo a = b %][% END %]

           This  shouldn't  be  too  much  hardship and offers the great return of disambiguating virtual method
           access.

       "\" Unary.  The reference operator.  Not well publicized in TT.  Stores a reference to a variable for use
           later.  Can also be used to "alias" long names.

               [% f = 7 ; foo = \f ; f = 8 ; foo %] => 8

               [% foo = \f.g.h.i.j.k; f.g.h.i.j.k = 7; foo %] => 7

               [% f = "abcd"; foo = \f.replace("ab", "-AB-") ; foo %] => -AB-cd

               [% f = "abcd"; foo = \f.replace("bc") ; foo("-BC-") %] => a-BC-d


               [% f = "abcd"; foo = \f.replace ; foo("cd", "-CD-") %] => ab-CD-
       "++ --"
           Pre and post increment and decrement.  My be used as either a prefix or postfix operator.

               [% ++a %][% ++a %] => 12

               [% a++ %][% a++ %] => 01

               [% --a %][% --a %] => -1-2

               [% a-- %][% a-- %] => 0-1

       "**  ^  pow"
           Right associative binary.  X raised to the Y power.  This isn't available in TT 2.15.

               [% 2 ** 3 %] => 8

       "!" Prefix not.  Negation of the value.

       "-" Prefix minus.  Returns the value multiplied by -1.

               [% a = 1 ; b = -a ; b %] => -1

       "*" Left associative binary. Multiplication.

       "/  div  DIV"
           Left associative binary. Division.  Note that / is floating point  division,  but  div  and  DIV  are
           integer division.

              [% 10  /  4 %] => 2.5
              [% 10 div 4 %] => 2

       "%  mod  MOD"
           Left associative binary. Modulus.

              [% 15 % 8 %] => 7

       "+" Left associative binary.  Addition.

       "-" Left associative binary.  Minus.

       "_  ~"
           Left associative binary.  String concatenation.

               [% "a" ~ "b" %] => ab

       "<  >  <=  >="
           Non associative binary.  Numerical comparators.

       "lt  gt  le  ge"
           Non associative binary.  String comparators.

       "eq"
           Non associative binary.  String equality test.

       "=="
           Non  associative  binary. In TT syntaxes the V2EQUALS configuration item defaults to true which means
           this operator will operate the same as the "eq" operator.  Setting V2EQUALS to  0  will  change  this
           operator to mean numeric equality.  You could also use [% ! (a <=> b) %] but that is a bit messy.

           The  HTML::Template syntaxes default V2EQUALS to 0 which means that it will test for numeric equality
           just as you would normally expect.

           In either case - you should always use "eq" when you  mean  "eq".   The  V2EQUALS  will  most  likely
           eventually default to 0.

       "ne"
           Non associative binary.  String non-equality test.

       "!="
           Non  associative  binary. In TT syntaxes the V2EQUALS configuration item defaults to true which means
           this operator will operate the same as the "ne" operator.  Setting V2EQUALS to  0  will  change  this
           operator to mean numeric non-equality.  You could also use [% (a <=> b) %] but that is a bit messy.

           The  HTML::Template  syntaxes  default  V2EQUALS  to 0 which means that it will test for numeric non-
           equality just as you would normally expect.

           In either case - you should always use "ne" when you  mean  "ne".   The  V2EQUALS  will  most  likely
           eventually default to 0.

       "<=>"
           Non  associative binary.  Numeric comparison operator.  Returns -1 if the first argument is less than
           the second, 0 if they are equal, and 1 if the first argument is greater.

       "cmp"
           Non associative binary.  String comparison operator.  Returns -1 if the first argument is  less  than
           the second, 0 if they are equal, and 1 if the first argument is greater.

       "&&"
           Left  associative  binary.  And.  All values must be true.  If all values are true, the last value is
           returned as the truth value.

               [% 2 && 3 && 4 %] => 4

       "||"
           Right associative binary.  Or.  The first true value is returned.

               [% 0 || '' || 7 %] => 7

           Note: perl is left associative on this operator - but it  doesn't  matter  because  ||  has  its  own
           precedence  level.   Setting  it to right allows for Alloy to short circuit earlier in the expression
           optree (left is (((1,2), 3), 4) while right is (1, (2, (3, 4))).

       "//"
           Right associative binary.  Perl 6 err.  The first defined value is returned.

               [% foo // bar %]

       ".."
           Non associative binary.  Range creator.  Returns  an  arrayref  containing  the  values  between  and
           including the first and last arguments.

               [% t = [1 .. 5] %] => variable t contains an array with 1,2,3,4, and 5

           It is possible to place multiple ranges in the same [] constructor.  This is not available in TT.

               [% t = [1..3, 6..8] %] => variable t contains an array with 1,2,3,6,7,8

           The .. operator is the only operator that returns a list of items.

       "? :"
           Ternary - right associative.  Can be nested with other ?: pairs.

               [% 1 ? 2 : 3 %] => 2
               [% 0 ? 2 : 3 %] => 3

       "*= += -= /= **= %= ~="
           Self-modifying  assignment - right associative.  Sets the left hand side to the operation of the left
           hand side and right (clear as mud).  In order to not conflict with SET, FOREACH and other operations,
           this operator is only available in parenthesis.

              [% a = 2 %][%  a += 3  %] --- [% a %]    => --- 5   # is handled by SET
              [% a = 2 %][% (a += 3) %] --- [% a %]    => 5 --- 5

       "=" Assignment - right associative.  Sets the left-hand side to the value  of  the  righthand  side.   In
           order  to  not  conflict  with  SET, FOREACH and other operations, this operator is only available in
           parenthesis.  Returns the value of the righthand side.

              [%  a = 1  %] --- [% a %]    => --- 1   # is handled by SET
              [% (a = 1) %] --- [% a %]    => 1 --- 1

       "not  NOT"
           Prefix. Lower precedence version of the '!' operator.

       "and  AND"
           Left associative. Lower precedence version of the '&&' operator.

       "or OR"
           Right associative. Lower precedence version of the '||' operator.

       "err ERR"
           Right associative.  Lower precedence version of the '//' operator.

       "->" (Not in TT2)
           Macro operator.  Works like the MACRO directive  but  can  be  used  in  map,  sort,  and  grep  list
           operations.   Syntax  is  based  on  the Perl 6 pointy sub.  There are two differences from the MACRO
           directive.  First is that if no argument list is specified, a default argument  list  with  a  single
           parameter named "this" will be used.  Second, the "->" operator parses its block as if it was already
           in a template tag.

               [% foo = ->{ "Hi" } %][% foo %] => Hi
               [% foo = ->{ this.repeat(2) } %][% foo("Hi") %] => HiHi
               [% foo = ->(n){ n.repeat(2) } %][% foo("Hi") %] => HiHi
               [% foo = ->(a,b){ a; "|"; b } %][% foo(2,3) %]  => 2|3

               [% [0..10].grep(->{ this % 2 }).join %] => 1 3 5 7 9
               [% ['a'..'c'].map(->{ this.upper }).join %] => A B C

               [% [1,2,3].sort(->(a,b){ b <=> a }).join %] prints 3 2 1

               [% c = [{k => "wow"}, {k => "wee"}, {k => "a"}] %]
               [% c.sort(->(a,b){ a.k cmp b.k }).map(->{this.k}).join %] => a wee wow

           Note:  Care should be used when attempting to sort large lists.  The mini-language of Template::Alloy
           is a interpreted language running in Perl which is an interpreted language.  There are likely  to  be
           performance issues when trying to do low level functions such as sort on large lists.

           The  RETURN directive and return item, list, and hash vmethods can be used to return more interesting
           values from a MACRO.

             [% a = ->(n){ [1..n].return } %]
             [% a(3).join %]    => 1 2 3
             [% a(10).join %]   => 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

           The Schwartzian transform is now possible in Template::Alloy (somebody somewhere is rolling  over  in
           their grave).

             [%- qw(Z a b D y M)
                   .map(->{ [this.lc, this].return })
                   .sort(->(a,b){a.0 cmp b.0})
                   .map(->{this.1})
                   .join %]          => a b D M y Z

       "{}"
           This operator is not exposed for external use.  It is used internally by Template::Alloy to delay the
           creation of a hash until the execution of the compiled template.

       "[]"
           This operator is not exposed for external use.  It is used internally by Template::Alloy to delay the
           creation of an array until the execution of the compiled template.

       "@()"
           List  context  specifier.   Methods  or  functions inside this operator will always be called in list
           context and will always return an arrayref  of  the  results.   See  the  CALL_CONTEXT  configuration
           directive.

       "$()"
           Item  context  specifier.   Methods  or  functions inside this operator will always be called in item
           (scalar) context.  See the CALL_CONTEXT configuration directive.

       "qr"
           This operator is not exposed for external use.  It is used internally by Template::Alloy to  store  a
           regular expression and its options.  It will return a compiled Regexp object when compiled.

       "-temp-"
           This  operator  is  not  exposed  for external use.  It is used internally by some directives to pass
           temporary, literal data into play_expr to allow additional  vmethods  or  filters  to  be  called  on
           existing data.

AUTHOR

       Paul Seamons <paul@seamons.com>

LICENSE

       This module may be distributed under the same terms as Perl itself.

perl v5.36.0                                       2022-10-16                     Template::Alloy::Operator(3pm)