Provided by: libswiss-perl_1.67-1.1_all bug

NAME

       SWISS::BaseClass

DESCRIPTION

       This class is designed to impliment many of the properties that you expect in inheritance.
       All the housekeeping functions are defined in this module.  See the notes on use for a
       description of how to make use of it.

Functions

       new Returns a new SWISS::BaseClass object.

       rebless
           Converts a base class into your class!  Call as $self->rebless($class) where $self is
           a base class object.  It returns $self, reblessed, with the correct member variables.

       initialize
           Override this in each derived class to provide class specific initialization.  For
           example, initialize may put arrays into member variables that need them.  You must
           provide an initialize function.

       reformat
           Some line objects are implementing "lazy writing". This means that on writing an
           entry, they are only reformatted if they have been modified. The method reformat
           forces an object to be reformatted even if its content has not been modified. This may
           be useful e.g. to make sure the current formatting rules are applied.

       setEvidenceTags @array
           Sets the evidence tags of the object to the list passed in @array.

       addEvidenceTag string
           Adds the evidence tag to the object.

       deleteEvidenceTag string
           Deletes the evidence tag from the object.

       hasEvidenceTag string
           returns true if the object has the evidence tag.

       getEvidenceTags
           returns the array of evidence tags of the object

       Check4Clashes
           This function checks your classes member variable list for clashes with any class that
           it inherits from (any class that can(_containsFields) returns true on!).  If it
           detects that in any base class that any data members have been already defined, it
           dies with a listing of the variables already used.

           It stops searching a root of an inheritance hierachy when it can find no baseclasses
           that support _containsFields.  It will find all clashes in an entire inheritance tree.

           So in the inheritance hierachy of

            SWISS::BaseClass -> A -> B -\
                                        > E
            SWISS::BaseClass -> C -> D -/

           where E is the most derived class, if E contains names that clash with A members and
           names that clash with B members, both the A and B member clashes will be reported.

           If there were clashes with B and C, say, then again, all of the clashes would be
           reported.

       _containsFields
           This function is responsible for comparing a classes fields with the set in the
           calling package.  This implimentation will work for cases where all of the classes
           that contribute fields are derived from SWISS::BaseClass.  You may wish to make your
           own class fit this interface, so what follows is an interface API.

           _containsFields assumes that the first argument is the package that it is being called
           in.  The following arguments are taken to be a list of fields which to check are not
           found in members of the current package.

           It should return either "undef" or a reference to an array of name clashes in the
           format "package::variable".  It should call it's self for each parental class that
           supports this function.

           So it would look something like
             _containsFields {
               my $class = shift;
               my @toCheck = @_;

               foreach @toCheck {
                 check that they are not in me.  If they are, add them to the list of clashes to return.
               }

               add all base class clashes to your list of clashes

               if there were name clashes return a reference to them

               otherwise return undef
             }

       equal
           If two objects are equal, it returns true.

           Warning: This funktion compares two objects using a simple dump in Perl format, see
           Data::Dumper module. The comparison also takes private variables into account.
           Therefore: If the method 'equal' returns true, the objects are guaranteed to be equal,
           but it might return false although the two objects are equal in they public
           attributes.

       copy
           Returns a "deep copy" of the object.

A skeletal derived class

        package myDerived;

        use vars qw ( @ISA %fields );

        BEGIN {
           @ISA = ('SWISS::BaseClass');

           %fields = (
                      'i' => 1,
                      'hash' => undef
                      );

           myDerived->check4Clashes();
        }

        sub new {
           print "myDerived::new(@_)\n";
           my $class = shift;
           my $self = new SWISS::BaseClass;

           $self->rebless ($class);

           return $self;
        }

        sub initialize {
           my $self = shift;
           $self->{'hash'} = {};
        }

       A class derived from myDerived would just substitute the name myDerived for
       SWISS::BaseClass.  Hey presto - all sorted!