Provided by: libclass-makemethods-perl_1.01-7_all bug

NAME

       Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Hash - Composite hash methods

SYNOPSIS

         package MyObject;
         use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Hash (
           new => 'new',
           scalar => [ 'foo', 'bar' ],
           array => 'my_list',
           hash => 'my_index',
         );
         ...

         my $obj = MyObject->new( foo => 'Foozle' );
         print $obj->foo();

         $obj->bar('Barbados');
         print $obj->bar();

         $obj->my_list(0 => 'Foozle', 1 => 'Bang!');
         print $obj->my_list(1);

         $obj->my_index('broccoli' => 'Blah!', 'foo' => 'Fiddle');
         print $obj->my_index('foo');

DESCRIPTION

       The Composite::Hash suclass of MakeMethods provides a basic constructor and accessors for blessed-hash
       object instances.

   Class::MakeMethods Calling Interface
       When you "use" this package, the method declarations you provide as arguments cause subroutines to be
       generated and installed in your module.

       You can also omit the arguments to "use" and instead make methods at runtime by passing the declarations
       to a subsequent call to "make()".

       You may include any number of declarations in each call to "use" or "make()". If methods with the same
       name already exist, earlier calls to "use" or "make()" win over later ones, but within each call, later
       declarations superceed earlier ones.

       You can install methods in a different package by passing "-TargetClass => package" as your first
       arguments to "use" or "make".

       See Class::MakeMethods for more details.

   Class::MakeMethods::Basic Declaration Syntax
       The following types of Basic declarations are supported:

       •   generator_type => "method_name"

       •   generator_type => "name_1 name_2..."

       •   generator_type => [ "name_1", "name_2", ...]

       See the "METHOD GENERATOR TYPES" section below for a list of the supported values of generator_type.

       For  each  method  name  you  provide, a subroutine of the indicated type will be generated and installed
       under that name in your module.

       Method names should start with a letter, followed by zero or more letters, numbers, or underscores.

   Class::MakeMethods::Composite Declaration Syntax
       The Composite syntax also provides several ways to optionally associate a hash of  additional  parameters
       with a given method name.

       •   generator_type => [ "name_1" => { param=>value... }, ... ]

           A hash of parameters to use just for this method name.

           (Note:  to prevent confusion with self-contained definition hashes, described below, parameter hashes
           following a method name must not contain the key 'name'.)

       •   generator_type => [ [ "name_1", "name_2", ... ] => { param=>value... } ]

           Each of these method names gets a copy of the same set of parameters.

       •   generator_type => [ { "name"=>"name_1", param=>value... }, ... ]

           By including the reserved parameter "name", you create a self-contained declaration  with  that  name
           and any associated hash values.

       Basic declarations, as described above, are given an empty parameter hash.

METHOD GENERATOR TYPES

   new - Constructor
       For each method name passed, returns a subroutine with the following characteristics:

       •   Has  a reference to a sample item to copy. This defaults to a reference to an empty hash, but you may
           override this with the "'defaults' => hash_ref"  method parameter.

       •   If called as a class method, makes a new hash and blesses it into that class.

       •   If called on a hash-based instance, makes a copy of it and blesses the copy into the  same  class  as
           the original instance.

       •   If  passed  a  list  of  key-value  pairs, appends them to the new hash. These arguments override any
           copied values, and later arguments with the same name will override earlier ones.

       •   Returns the new instance.

       Sample declaration and usage:

         package MyObject;
         use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Hash (
           new => 'new',
         );
         ...

         # Bare constructor
         my $empty = MyObject->new();

         # Constructor with initial values
         my $obj = MyObject->new( foo => 'Foozle', bar => 'Barbados' );

         # Copy with overriding value
         my $copy = $obj->new( bar => 'Bob' );

   new --with_values - Constructor
       For each method name passed, returns a subroutine with the following characteristics:

       •   May be called as a class method, or (equivalently) on any existing object of that class.

       •   Creates a hash, blesses it into the class, and returns the new instance.

       •   If no arguments are provided, the returned hash will be empty. If passed a single hash-ref  argument,
           copies  its  contents  into the new hash. If called with multiple arguments, treats them as key-value
           pairs, and copies them into the new hash. (Note that this is a "shallow" copy, not a "deep" clone.)

   scalar - Instance Accessor
       For each method name passed, uses a closure to generate a subroutine with the following characteristics:

       •   Must be called on a hash-based instance.

       •   Has a specific hash key to use to access the related value for each instance.  This defaults  to  the
           method name, but you may override this with the "'hash_key' =" string> method parameter.

       •   If called without any arguments returns the current value.

       •   If called with an argument, stores that as the value, and returns it.

       •   If  called  with  multiple  arguments,  stores  a  reference  to  a new array with those arguments as
           contents, and returns that array reference.

       Sample declaration and usage:

         package MyObject;
         use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Hash (
           scalar => 'foo',
         );
         ...

         # Store value
         $obj->foo('Foozle');

         # Retrieve value
         print $obj->foo;

   array - Instance Ref Accessor
       For each method name passed, uses a closure to generate a subroutine with the following characteristics:

       •   Must be called on a hash-based instance.

       •   Has a specific hash key to use to access the related value for each instance.  This defaults  to  the
           method name, but you may override this with the "'hash_key' =" string> method parameter.

       •   The value for each instance will be a reference to an array (or undef).

       •   If called without any arguments, returns the current array-ref value (or undef).

       •   If  called  with  a  single  non-ref  argument,  uses  that argument as an index to retrieve from the
           referenced array, and returns that value (or undef).

       •   If called with a single array ref argument, uses that list to return a slice of the referenced array.

       •   If called with a list of argument pairs, each with a non-ref index and an  associated  value,  stores
           the  value  at  the  given  index  in  the  referenced  array. If the instance's value was previously
           undefined, a new array is autovivified. The current value in each position will be  overwritten,  and
           later arguments with the same index will override earlier ones. Returns the current array-ref value.

       •   If called with a list of argument pairs, each with the first item being a reference to an array of up
           to two numbers, loops over each pair and uses those numbers to splice the value array.

           The  first  controlling number is the position at which the splice will begin. Zero will start before
           the first item in the list. Negative numbers count backwards from the end of the array.

           The second number is the number of items to be removed from the list. If it is omitted, or undefined,
           or zero, no items are removed. If it is a positive integer, that many items will be returned.

           If both numbers are omitted, or are both undefined, they  default  to  containing  the  entire  value
           array.

           If the second argument is undef, no values will be inserted; if it is a non-reference value, that one
           value will be inserted; if it is an array-ref, its values will be copied.

           The method returns the items that removed from the array, if any.

       Sample declaration and usage:

         package MyObject;
         use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Hash (
           array => 'bar',
         );
         ...

         # Clear and set contents of list
         print $obj->bar([ 'Spume', 'Frost' ] );

         # Set values by position
         $obj->bar(0 => 'Foozle', 1 => 'Bang!');

         # Positions may be overwritten, and in any order
         $obj->bar(2 => 'And Mash', 1 => 'Blah!');

         # Retrieve value by position
         print $obj->bar(1);

         # Direct access to referenced array
         print scalar @{ $obj->bar() };

       There are also calling conventions for slice and splice operations:

         # Retrieve slice of values by position
         print join(', ', $obj->bar( undef, [0, 2] ) );

         # Insert an item at position in the array
         $obj->bar([3], 'Potatoes' );

         # Remove 1 item from position 3 in the array
         $obj->bar([3, 1], undef );

         # Set a new value at position 2, and return the old value
         print $obj->bar([2, 1], 'Froth' );

   hash - Instance Ref Accessor
       For each method name passed, uses a closure to generate a subroutine with the following characteristics:

       •   Must be called on a hash-based instance.

       •   Has  a  specific hash key to use to access the related value for each instance.  This defaults to the
           method name, but you may override this with the "'hash_key' =" string> method parameter.

       •   The value for each instance will be a reference to a hash (or undef).

       •   If called without any arguments, returns the contents  of  the  hash  in  list  context,  or  a  hash
           reference in scalar context (or undef).

       •   If  called  with one non-ref argument, uses that argument as an index to retrieve from the referenced
           hash, and returns that value (or undef).

       •   If called with one array-ref argument, uses the contents of that array to retrieve  a  slice  of  the
           referenced hash.

       •   If  called  with  one  hash-ref  argument,  sets  the  contents  of the referenced hash to match that
           provided.

       •   If called with a list of key-value pairs, stores the value under the  given  key  in  the  referenced
           hash. If the instance's value was previously undefined, a new hash is autovivified. The current value
           under each key will be overwritten, and later arguments with the same key will override earlier ones.
           Returns the contents of the hash in list context, or a hash reference in scalar context.

       Sample declaration and usage:

         package MyObject;
         use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Hash (
           hash => 'baz',
         );
         ...

         # Set values by key
         $obj->baz('foo' => 'Foozle', 'bar' => 'Bang!');

         # Values may be overwritten, and in any order
         $obj->baz('broccoli' => 'Blah!', 'foo' => 'Fiddle');

         # Retrieve value by key
         print $obj->baz('foo');

         # Retrieve slice of values by position
         print join(', ', $obj->baz( ['foo', 'bar'] ) );

         # Direct access to referenced hash
         print keys %{ $obj->baz() };

         # Reset the hash contents to empty
         @{ $obj->baz() } = ();

   object - Instance Ref Accessor
       For each method name passed, uses a closure to generate a subroutine with the following characteristics:

       •   Must be called on a hash-based instance.

       •   Has  a  specific hash key to use to access the related value for each instance.  This defaults to the
           method name, but you may override this with the "'hash_key' =" string> method parameter.

       •   The value for each instance will be a reference to an object (or undef).

       •   If called without any arguments returns the current value.

       •   If called with an argument, stores that as the value, and returns it,

       Sample declaration and usage:

         package MyObject;
         use Class::MakeMethods::Composite::Hash (
           object => 'foo',
         );
         ...

         # Store value
         $obj->foo( Foozle->new() );

         # Retrieve value
         print $obj->foo;

SEE ALSO

       See Class::MakeMethods for general information about this distribution.

       See Class::MakeMethods::Composite for more about this family of subclasses.

perl v5.36.0                                       2022-10-13                  MakeMethods::Composite::Hash(3pm)