Provided by: libxs-parse-sublike-perl_0.37-1_amd64 

NAME
"Sublike::Extended" - enable extended features when parsing "sub"-like syntax
SYNOPSIS
use v5.26;
use Sublike::Extended;
use experimental 'signatures';
extended sub greet (:$name = "world") {
say "Hello, $name";
}
greet( name => $ENV{USER} );
Or, since version 0.29:
use v5.26;
use Sublike::Extended 0.29 'sub';
use experimental 'signatures';
sub greet (:$name = "world") {
say "Hello, $name";
}
greet( name => $ENV{USER} );
DESCRIPTION
This module extends the syntax for declaring named or anonymous subroutines using Perl's builtin "sub"
keyword, or other similar keywords provided by third-party modules, to enable parsing of extra features.
By default, this module provides a new keyword, "extended", which parses the extra syntax required.
Optionally since version 0.29, this module can additionally take over the handling of the "sub" keyword
itself, allowing this extra syntax to be used without the "extended" prefix keyword. As this ability may
be surprising to unsuspecting readers, this is not done by default and must be explicitly requested with
the "sub" import argument:
use Sublike::Extended 'sub';
On Perl 5.38 or above, this can also take over handling of the "method" keyword when using "feature
'class'".
use Sublike::Extended 'method';
Currently, the only extended features that are provided are related to the parsing of a subroutine
signature. Since signatures are only available on Perl version 5.26 or later, this module is unlikely to
be useful in earlier versions of Perl.
Named parameters
Extended subroutines can declare named parameters in the signature, after any positional ones. These take
the form of a name prefixed by a colon character. The caller of such a function should pass values for
these parameters by the usual name-value pair syntax that would be used for passing into a regular hash.
Within the body of the subroutine the values passed into these are unpacked into regular lexical
variables.
sub colour (:$red, :$green, :$blue) {
... # $red, $green and $blue are available as regular lexicals
}
# argument order at the caller site is not important
colour(green => 1, blue => 2, red => 3);
Positional parameters can be placed after optional positional ones, but in order to make use of them the
caller would have to pass a value for every positional parameter including the optional ones first. This
is unlikely to be very useful; if you want to have optional parameters and named parameters, use named
optional ones after any mandatory positional parameters.
As with positional parameters, they are normally mandatory, but can be made optional by supplying a
defaulting expression. If the caller fails to pass a value corresponding to an optional parameter, the
default expression is evaluated and used instead.
sub f (:$x0, :$x1, :$x2 = 0) { ... }
# The caller must provide x0 and x1, but x2 is optional
Since version 0.23 named parameters can be given defaulting expressions with the "//=" or "||="
operators, meaning their defaults apply also if the caller passed a present-but-undef, or present-but-
false value.
sub f (:$x0, :$x1, :$x2 //= 0) { ... }
# $x2 will be set to 0 even if the caller passes x2 => undef
An optional slurpy hash or (since version 0.24) slurpy array is also permitted after all of these. It
will contain the values of any other name-value pairs given by the caller, after those corresponding to
named parameters have already been extracted.
sub g (:$alpha, :$beta, %rest) { ... }
sub g (:$alpha, :$beta, @rest) { ... }
In the case of a slurpy array, it will contain every argument value that was not consumed as a named
parameter pair, in the original order passed by the caller, including any duplicates.
Parameter Attributes
Parameters to extended subroutines can use attribute syntax to apply extra attributes to individual
parameters.
sub info ($x :Attribute) { ... }
Any attributes that are available are ones that have been previously registered with XS::Parse::Sublike
using its XS-level API. The particular behaviour of such an attribute would be defined by whatever module
provided the attribute.
KEYWORDS
extended
extended sub NAME (SIGNATURE...) { BODY... }
extended sub (SIGNATURE...) { BODY... };
This prefix keyword enables extra parsing features when handling a "sub" (or other sub-like function
keyword).
This keyword can be freely mixed with other "sub"-prefix keywords, such as "async" from
Future::AsyncAwait
async extended sub f (:$param) { ... }
This can also be used with other keywords that provide "sub"-like syntax, such as "method" from
Object::Pad or the core "use feature 'class'".
extended method f (:$param) { ... }
TODO
• Support defined-or and true-or positional parameters even on versions of Perl before they were
officially added (v5.38).
AUTHOR
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>
perl v5.40.0 2025-02-15 Sublike::Extended(3pm)