Provided by: libcall-context-perl_0.03-3_all
NAME
Call::Context - Sanity-check calling context
SYNOPSIS
use Call::Context; sub gives_a_list { #Will die() if the context is not list. Call::Context::must_be_list(); return (1, 2, 3); } gives_a_list(); # die()s: incorrect context (void) my $v = gives_a_list(); # die()s: incorrect context (scalar) my @list = gives_a_list(); # lives #---------------------------------------------------------------------- sub scalar_is_bad { #Will die() if the context is not list. Call::Context::must_not_be_scalar(); return (1, 2, 3); } scalar_is_bad(); # lives my $v = scalar_is_bad(); # die()s: incorrect context (scalar) my @list = scalar_is_bad(); # lives
DISCUSSION
If your function only expects to return a list, then a call in some other context is, by definition, an error. The problem is that, depending on how the function is written, it may actually do something expected in testing, but then in production act differently.
FUNCTIONS
must_be_list() "die()"s if the calling function is itself called outside list context. (See the SYNOPSIS for examples.) must_not_be_scalar() "die()"s if the calling function is itself called in scalar context. (See the SYNOPSIS for examples.)
EXCEPTIONS
This module throws instances of "Call::Context::X". "Call::Context::X" is overloaded to stringify; however, to keep memory usage low, "overload" is not loaded until instantiation.
REPOSITORY
https://github.com/FGasper/p5-Call-Context