Provided by: libclass-insideout-perl_1.13-2_all bug

NAME

       Class::InsideOut - a safe, simple inside-out object construction kit

VERSION

       version 1.13

SYNOPSIS

         package My::Class;

         use Class::InsideOut qw( public readonly private register id );

         public     name => my %name;    # accessor: name()
         readonly   ssn  => my %ssn;     # read-only accessor: ssn()
         private    age  => my %age;     # no accessor

         sub new { register( shift ) }

         sub greeting {
           my $self = shift;
           return "Hello, my name is $name{ id $self }";
         }

DESCRIPTION

       This is a simple, safe and streamlined toolkit for building inside-out objects.  Unlike
       most other inside-out object building modules already on CPAN, this module aims for
       minimalism and robustness:

       •   Does not require derived classes to subclass it

       •   Uses no source filters, attributes or "CHECK" blocks

       •   Supports any underlying object type including black-box inheritance

       •   Does not leak memory on object destruction

       •   Overloading-safe

       •   Thread-safe for Perl 5.8.5 or better

       •   "mod_perl" compatible

       •   Makes no assumption about inheritance or initializer needs

       It provides the minimal support necessary for creating safe inside-out objects and
       generating flexible accessors.

   Additional documentation
       •   Class::InsideOut::Manual::About -- Guide to the inside-out technique, the
           "Class::InsideOut" philosophy, and other inside-out implementations

       •   Class::InsideOut::Manual::Advanced -- Advanced topics including customizing accessors,
           black-box inheritance, serialization and thread safety

USAGE

   Importing "Class::InsideOut"
       "Class::InsideOut" automatically imports several critical methods into the calling
       package, including "DESTROY" and support methods for serializing objects with "Storable".
       These methods are intimately tied to correct functioning of inside-out objects and will
       always be imported regardless of whether additional functions are requested.

       Additional functions may be imported as usual by including them as arguments to "use".
       For example:

         use Class::InsideOut qw( register public );

         public name => my %name;

         sub new { register( shift ) }

       As a shortcut, "Class::InsideOut" supports two tags for importing sets of functions:

       •   ":std" provides "id", "private", "public", "readonly" and "register"

       •   ":all" imports all functions (including an optional constructor)

       Note: Automatic imports can be bypassed via "require" or by passing an empty list to "use
       Class::InsideOut". There is almost no circumstance in which this is a good idea.

   Object properties and accessors
       Object properties are declared with the "public", "readonly" and "private" functions.
       They must be passed a label and the lexical hash that will be used to store object
       properties:

         public   name => my %name;
         readonly ssn  => my %ssn;
         private  age  => my %age;

       Properties for an object are accessed through an index into the lexical hash based on the
       memory address of the object.  This memory address must be obtained via
       "Scalar::Util::refaddr".  The alias "id" may be imported for brevity.

         $name{ refaddr $self } = "James";
         $ssn { id      $self } = 123456789;
         $age { id      $self } = 32;

       Tip: since "refaddr" and "id" are function calls, it may be efficient to store the value
       once at the beginning of a method, particularly if it is being called repeatedly, e.g.
       within a loop.

       Object properties declared with "public" will have an accessor created with the same name
       as the label.  If the accessor is passed an argument, the property will be set to the
       argument.  The accessor always returns the value of the property.

         # Outside the class
         $person = My::Class->new;
         $person->name( "Larry" );

       Object properties declared with "readonly" will have a read-only accessor created.  The
       accessor will die if passed an argument to set the property value.  The property may be
       set directly in the hash from within the class package as usual.

         # Inside the class
         $ssn { id $person } = 987654321;

         # Inside or outside the class
         $person->ssn( 123456789 );      # dies

       Property accessors may also be hand-written by declaring the property "private" and
       writing whatever style of accessor is desired.  For example:

         sub age     { $age{ id $_[0] } }
         sub set_age { $age{ id $_[0] } = $_[1] }

       Hand-written accessors will be very slightly faster as generated accessors hold a
       reference to the property hash rather than accessing the property hash directly.

       It is also possible to use a package hash instead of a lexical hash to store object
       properties:

         public name => our %name;

       However, this makes private object data accessible outside the class and incurs a slight
       performance penalty when accessing the property hash directly; it is not recommended to do
       this unless you really need it for some specialized reason.

   Object construction
       "Class::InsideOut" provides no default constructor method as there are many possible ways
       of constructing an inside-out object. This avoids constraining users to any particular
       object initialization or superclass initialization methodology.

       By using the memory address of the object as the index for properties, any type of
       reference may be used as the basis for an inside-out object with "Class::InsideOut".

         sub new {
           my $class = shift;

           my $self = \( my $scalar );    # anonymous scalar
         # my $self = {};                 # anonymous hash
         # my $self = [];                 # anonymous array
         # open my $self, "<", $filename; # filehandle reference

           bless $self, $class;
           register( $self );
         }

       However, to ensure that the inside-out object is thread-safe, the "register" function must
       be called on the newly created object.  The "register" function may also be called with
       just the class name for the common case of blessing an anonymous scalar.

         register( $class ); # same as register( bless \(my $s), $class )

       As a convenience, "Class::InsideOut" provides an optional "new" constructor for simple
       objects.  This constructor automatically initializes the object from key/value pairs
       passed to the constructor for all keys matching the name of a property (including
       otherwise "private" or "readonly" properties).

       A more advanced technique for object construction uses another object, usually a
       superclass object, as the object reference.  See "black-box inheritance" in
       Class::InsideOut::Manual::Advanced.

   Object destruction
       "Class::InsideOut" automatically exports a special "DESTROY" function.  This function
       cleans up object property memory for all declared properties the class and for all
       "Class::InsideOut" based classes in the @ISA array to avoid memory leaks or data
       collision.

       Additionally, if a user-supplied "DEMOLISH" function is available in the same package, it
       will be called with the object being destroyed as its argument.  "DEMOLISH" can be used
       for custom destruction behavior such as updating class properties, closing sockets or
       closing database connections.  Object properties will not be deleted until after
       "DEMOLISH" returns.

         # Sample DEMOLISH: Count objects demolished (for whatever reason)

         my $objects_destroyed;

         sub DEMOLISH {
           $objects_destroyed++;
         }

       "DEMOLISH" will only be called if it exists for an object's actual class.  "DEMOLISH" will
       not be inherited and "DEMOLISH" will not be called automatically for any superclasses.

       "DEMOLISH" should manage any necessary calls to superclass "DEMOLISH" methods.  As with
       "new", implementation details are left to the user based on the user's approach to object
       inheritance.  Depending on how the inheritance chain is constructed and how "DEMOLISH" is
       being used, users may wish to entirely override superclass "DEMOLISH" methods, rely upon
       "SUPER::DEMOLISH", or may prefer to walk the entire @ISA tree:

         use Class::ISA;

         sub DEMOLISH {
           my $self = shift;
           # class specific demolish actions

           # DEMOLISH for all parent classes, but only once
           my @parents = Class::ISA::super_path( __PACKAGE__ );
           my %called;
           for my $p ( @parents  ) {
             my $demolish = $p->can('DEMOLISH');
             $demolish->($self) if not $called{ $demolish }++;
           }
         }

FUNCTIONS

   "id"
         $name{ id $object } = "Larry";

       This is a shorter, mnemonic alias for "Scalar::Util::refaddr".  It returns the memory
       address of an object (just like "refaddr") as the index to access the properties of an
       inside-out object.

   "new"
         My::Class->new( name => "Larry", age => 42 );

       This simplistic constructor is provided as a convenience and is only exported on request.
       When called as a class method, it returns a blessed anonymous scalar.  Arguments will be
       used to initialize all matching inside-out class properties in the @ISA tree.  The
       argument may be a hash or hash reference.

       Note: Properties are set directly, not via accessors.  This means "set_hook" functions
       will not be called.  For more robust argument checking, you will need to implement your
       own constructor.

   "options"
         Class::InsideOut::options( \%new_options );
         %current_options = Class::InsideOut::options();

       The "options" function sets default options for use with all subsequent property
       definitions for the calling package.  If called without arguments, this function will
       return the options currently in effect.  When called with a hash reference of options,
       these will be joined with the existing defaults, overriding any options of the same name.

   "private"
         private weight => my %weight;
         private haircolor => my %hair_color, { %options };

       This is an alias to "property" that also sets the privacy option to 'private'.  It will
       override default options or options passed as an argument.

   "property"
         property name => my %name;
         property rank => my %rank, { %options };

       Declares an inside-out property.  Two arguments are required and a third is optional.  The
       first is a label for the property; this label will be used for introspection and
       generating accessors and thus must be a valid perl identifier.  The second argument must
       be the lexical hash that will be used to store data for that property.  Note that the "my"
       keyword can be included as part of the argument rather than as a separate statement.  The
       property will be tracked for memory cleanup during object destruction and for proper
       thread-safety.

       If a third, optional argument is provided, it must be a reference to a hash of options
       that will be applied to the property and will override any default options that have been
       set.

   "public"
         public height => my %height;
         public age => my %age, { %options };

       This is an alias to "property" that also sets the privacy option to 'public'.  It will
       override default options or options passed as an argument.

   "readonly"
         readonly ssn => my %ssn;
         readonly fingerprint => my %fingerprint, { %options };

       This is an alias to "property" that sets the privacy option to 'public' and adds a
       "set_hook" option that dies if an attempt is made to use the accessor to change the
       property.  It will override default options or options passed as an argument.

   "register"
         register( bless( $object, $class ) ); # register the object
         register( $reference, $class );       # automatic bless
         register( $class );                   # automatic blessed scalar

       Registers objects for thread-safety.  This should be called as part of a constructor on a
       object blessed into the current package.  Returns the resulting object.  When called with
       only a class name, "register" will bless an anonymous scalar reference into the given
       class.  When called with both a reference and a class name, "register" will bless the
       reference into the class.

OPTIONS

       Options customize how properties are generated.  Options may be set as a default with the
       "options" function or passed as a hash reference to "public", "private" or "property".

       Valid options include:

   "privacy"
         property rank => my %rank, { privacy => 'public' };
         property serial => my %serial, { privacy => 'private' };

       If the privacy option is set to public, an accessor will be created with the same name as
       the label.  If the accessor is passed an argument, the property will be set to the
       argument.  The accessor always returns the value of the property.

   "get_hook"
         public list => my %list, {
             get_hook => sub { @$_ }
         };

       Defines an accessor hook for when values are retrieved.  $_ is locally aliased to the
       property value for the object.  The return value of the hook is passed through as the
       return value of the accessor. See "Customizing Accessors" in
       Class::InsideOut::Manual::Advanced for details.

       The hook must be a coderef, including blessed coderefs and overloaded objects.

   "set_hook"
         public age => my %age, {
            set_hook => sub { /^\d+$/ or die "must be an integer" }
         };

       Defines an accessor hook for when values are set. The hook subroutine receives the entire
       argument list.  $_ is locally aliased to the first argument for convenience.  The property
       receives the value of $_. See "Customizing Accessors" in
       Class::InsideOut::Manual::Advanced for details.

       The hook must be a coderef, including blessed coderefs and overloaded objects.

SEE ALSO

       Programmers seeking a more full-featured approach to inside-out objects are encouraged to
       explore Object::InsideOut.  Other implementations are also noted in
       Class::InsideOut::Manual::About.

KNOWN LIMITATIONS

       Requires weak reference support (Perl >= 5.6) and Scalar::Util::weaken() to avoid memory
       leaks and to provide thread-safety.

ROADMAP

       Features slated for after the 1.0 release include:

       •   Adding support for Data::Dump::Streamer serialization hooks

       •   Adding additional accessor styles (e.g. get_name()/set_name())

       •   Further documentation revisions and clarification

SUPPORT

   Bugs / Feature Requests
       Please report any bugs or feature requests through the issue tracker at
       https://github.com/dagolden/class-insideout/issues <https://github.com/dagolden/class-
       insideout/issues>.  You will be notified automatically of any progress on your issue.

   Source Code
       This is open source software.  The code repository is available for public review and
       contribution under the terms of the license.

       https://github.com/dagolden/class-insideout <https://github.com/dagolden/class-insideout>

         git clone git://github.com/dagolden/class-insideout.git

AUTHOR

       David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>

CONTRIBUTORS

       •   Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>

       •   Toby Inkster <tonyink@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is Copyright (c) 2006 by David A. Golden.

       This is free software, licensed under:

         The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004