Provided by: libconfig-general-perl_2.65-2_all bug

NAME

       Config::General::Extended - Extended access to Config files

SYNOPSIS

        use Config::General;

        $conf = Config::General->new(
           -ConfigFile     => 'configfile',
           -ExtendedAccess => 1
        );

DESCRIPTION

       This is an internal module which makes it possible to use object oriented methods to access parts of your
       config file.

       Normally you don't call it directly.

METHODS

       configfile('filename')
           Set  the  filename  to  be  used by save to "filename". It returns the current configured filename if
           called without arguments.

       obj('key')
           Returns a new object (of Config::General::Extended Class) from the given key.  Short example:  Assume
           you have the following config:

            <individual>
                 <martin>
                    age   23
                 </martin>
                 <joseph>
                    age   56
                 </joseph>
            </individual>
            <other>
                 blah     blubber
                 blah     gobble
                 leer
            </other>

           and already read it in using Config::General::Extended::new(), then you can get a new object from the
           "individual" block this way:

            $individual = $conf->obj("individual");

           Now if you call getall on $individual (just for reference) you would get:

            $VAR1 = (
               martin => { age => 13 }
                    );

           Or, here is another use:

            my $individual = $conf->obj("individual");
            foreach my $person ($conf->keys("individual")) {
               $man = $individual->obj($person);
               print "$person is " . $man->value("age") . " years old\n";
            }

           See the discussion on hash() and value() below.

           If  the key from which you want to create a new object is empty, an empty object will be returned. If
           you run the following on the above config:

            $obj = $conf->obj("other")->obj("leer");

           Then $obj will be empty, just like if you have had run this:

            $obj = Config::General::Extended->new( () );

           Read operations on this empty object will return nothing or even fail.  But  you  can  use  an  empty
           object for creating a new config using write operations, i.e.:

            $obj->someoption("value");

           See the discussion on AUTOLOAD METHODS below.

           If  the  key  points  to  a  list  of hashes, a list of objects will be returned. Given the following
           example config:

            <option>
              name = max
            </option>
            <option>
              name = bea
            </option>

           you could write code like this to access the list the OOP way:

            my $objlist = $conf->obj("option");
            foreach my $option (@{$objlist}) {
             print $option->name;
            }

           Please note that the list will be returned as a reference to an array.

           Empty elements or non-hash elements of the list, if any, will be skipped.

       hash('key')
           This method returns a hash(if it is one!) from the config which is referenced  by  "key".  Given  the
           sample config above you would get:

            my %sub_hash = $conf->hash("individual");
            print Dumper(\%sub_hash);
            $VAR1 = {
               martin => { age => 13 }
                    };

       array('key')
           This  the  equivalent  of hash() mentioned above, except that it returns an array.  Again, we use the
           sample config mentioned above:

            $other = $conf->obj("other");
            my @blahs = $other->array("blah");
            print Dumper(\@blahs);
            $VAR1 = [ "blubber", "gobble" ];

       value('key')
           This method returns the scalar value of a given key. Given the following sample config:

            name  = arthur
            age   = 23

           you could do something like that:

            print $conf->value("name") . " is " . $conf->value("age") . " years old\n";

           You can use this method also to set the value  of  "key"  to  something  if  you  give  over  a  hash
           reference, array reference or a scalar in addition to the key. An example:

            $conf->value("key", \%somehash);
            # or
            $conf->value("key", \@somearray);
            # or
            $conf->value("key", $somescalar);

           Please note, that this method does not complain about existing values within "key"!

       is_hash('key') is_array('key') is_scalar('key')
           As  seen  above, you can access parts of your current config using hash, array or scalar methods. But
           you are right if you guess, that this might become problematic, if for example you call hash()  on  a
           key  which  is in real not a hash but a scalar. Under normal circumstances perl would refuse this and
           die.

           To avoid such behavior you can use one of the methods is_hash() is_array() is_scalar()  to  check  if
           the value of "key" is really what you expect it to be.

           An example(based on the config example from above):

            if($conf->is_hash("individual") {
               $individual = $conf->obj("individual");
            }
            else {
               die "You need to configure a "individual" block!\n";
            }

       exists('key')
           This method returns just true if the given key exists in the config.

       keys('key')
           Returns an array of the keys under the specified "key". If you use the example config above you could
           do that:

            print Dumper($conf->keys("individual");
            $VAR1 = [ "martin", "joseph" ];

           If no key name was supplied, then the keys of the object itself will be returned.

           You can use this method in foreach loops as seen in an example above(obj() ).

       delete('key')
           This  method removes the given key and all associated data from the internal hash structure. If 'key'
           contained data, then this data will be returned, otherwise undef will be returned.

       find(@list)
           Given a list of nodes, ->find will search for a tree that branches in just this  way,  returning  the
           Config::General::Extended  object  it  finds at the bottom if it exists.  You can also search partway
           down the tree and ->find should return where you left off.

           For example, given the values find (qw (A B C)) and the  following  tree  (</end>  tags  omitted  for
           brevity):

            <A>
                   <FOO>
                           ...
                   <B>
                           <BAZ>
                                   ...
                           <C>
                                   BAR = shoo

           find() will find the object at C with the value BAR = shoo and return it.

AUTOLOAD METHODS

       Another  useful  feature is implemented in this class using the AUTOLOAD feature of perl. If you know the
       keynames of a block within your config, you can access to the values of each  individual  key  using  the
       method notation. See the following example and you will get it:

       We assume the following config:

        <person>
           name    = Moser
           prename = Peter
           birth   = 12.10.1972
        </person>

       Now we read it in and process it:

        my $conf = Config::General::Extended->new("configfile");
        my $person = $conf->obj("person");
        print $person->prename . " " . $person->name . " is " . $person->age . " years old\n";

       This  notation  supports  only  scalar  values!  You  need to make sure, that the block <person> does not
       contain any subblock or multiple identical options(which will become an array after parsing)!

       If you access a non-existent key this way, Config::General will  croak  an  error.   You  can  turn  this
       behavior off by setting -StrictObjects to 0 or "no". In this case undef will be returned.

       Of course you can use this kind of methods for writing data too:

        $person->name("Neustein");

       This  changes the value of the "name" key to "Neustein". This feature behaves exactly like value(), which
       means you can assign hash or array references as well and that existing values under the given  key  will
       be overwritten.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2000-2022 Thomas Linden

       This  library  is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic
       License 2.0.

BUGS

       none known yet.

AUTHOR

       Thomas Linden <tlinden |AT| cpan.org>

VERSION

       2.07

perl v5.36.0                                       2022-10-13                             General::Extended(3pm)