Provided by: libstruct-dumb-perl_0.14-1_all bug

NAME

       "Struct::Dumb" - make simple lightweight record-like structures

SYNOPSIS

          use Struct::Dumb;

          struct Point => [qw( x y )];

          my $point = Point(10, 20);

          printf "Point is at (%d, %d)\n", $point->x, $point->y;

          $point->y = 30;
          printf "Point is now at (%d, %d)\n", $point->x, $point->y;

          struct Point3D => [qw( x y z )], named_constructor => 1;

          my $point3d = Point3D( z => 12, x => 100, y => 50 );

          printf "Point3d's height is %d\n", $point3d->z;

          struct Point3D => [qw( x y z )], predicate => "is_Point3D";

          my $point3d = Point3D( 1, 2, 3 );

          printf "This is a Point3D\n" if is_Point3D( $point3d );

          use Struct::Dumb qw( -named_constructors )

          struct Point3D => [qw( x y z )];

          my $point3d = Point3D( x => 100, z => 12, y => 50 );

DESCRIPTION

       "Struct::Dumb" creates record-like structure types, similar to the "struct" keyword in C,
       C++ or C#, or "Record" in Pascal. An invocation of this module will create a construction
       function which returns new object references with the given field values. These references
       all respond to lvalue methods that access or modify the values stored.

       It's specifically and intentionally not meant to be an object class. You cannot subclass
       it. You cannot provide additional methods. You cannot apply roles or mixins or metaclasses
       or traits or antlers or whatever else is in fashion this week.

       On the other hand, it is tiny, creates cheap lightweight array-backed structures, uses
       nothing outside of core. It's intended simply to be a slightly nicer way to store data
       structures, where otherwise you might be tempted to abuse a hash, complete with the risk
       of typoing key names. The constructor will "croak" if passed the wrong number of
       arguments, as will attempts to refer to fields that don't exist. Accessor-mutators will
       "croak" if invoked with arguments. (This helps detect likely bugs such as accidentally
       passing in the new value as an argument, or attempting to invoke a stored "CODE" reference
       by passing argument values directly to the accessor.)

          $ perl -E 'use Struct::Dumb; struct Point => [qw( x y )]; Point(30)'
          usage: main::Point($x, $y) at -e line 1

          $ perl -E 'use Struct::Dumb; struct Point => [qw( x y )]; Point(10,20)->z'
          main::Point does not have a 'z' field at -e line 1

          $ perl -E 'use Struct::Dumb; struct Point => [qw( x y )]; Point(1,2)->x(3)'
          main::Point->x invoked with arguments at -e line 1.

       Objects in this class are (currently) backed by an ARRAY reference store, though this is
       an internal implementation detail and should not be relied on by using code. Attempting to
       dereference the object as an ARRAY will throw an exception.

       Note: That on development perls that support "use feature 'class'", this is used instead
       of a blessed ARRAY reference. This implementation choice should be transparent to the end-
       user, as all the same features are supported.

   CONSTRUCTOR FORMS
       The "struct" and "readonly_struct" declarations create two different kinds of constructor
       function, depending on the setting of the "named_constructor" option. When false, the
       constructor takes positional values in the same order as the fields were declared. When
       true, the constructor takes a key/value pair list in no particular order, giving the value
       of each named field.

       This option can be specified to the "struct" and "readonly_struct" functions. It defaults
       to false, but it can be set on a per-package basis to default true by supplying the
       "-named_constructors" option on the "use" statement.

       When using named constructors, individual fields may be declared as being optional. By
       preceeding the field name with a "?" character, the constructor is instructed not to
       complain if a named parameter is not given for that field; instead it will be set to
       "undef".

          struct Person => [qw( name age ?address )],
             named_constructor => 1;

          my $bob = Person( name => "Bob", age => 20 );
          # This is valid because 'address' is marked as optional

FUNCTIONS

   struct
          struct $name => [ @fieldnames ],
             named_constructor => (1|0),
             predicate         => "is_$name";

       Creates a new structure type. This exports a new function of the type's name into the
       caller's namespace. Invoking this function returns a new instance of a type that
       implements those field names, as accessors and mutators for the fields.

       Takes the following options:

       named_constructor => BOOL
           Determines whether the structure will take positional or named arguments.

       predicate => STR
           If defined, gives the name of a second function to export to the caller's namespace.
           This function will be a type test predicate; that is, a function that takes a single
           argmuent, and returns true if-and-only-if that argument is an instance of this
           structure type.

   readonly_struct
          readonly_struct $name => [ @fieldnames ],
             ...

       Similar to "struct", but instances of this type are immutable once constructed. The field
       accessor methods will not be marked with the ":lvalue" attribute.

       Takes the same options as "struct".

DATA::DUMP FILTER

       Since version 0.10.

       If Data::Dump is loaded, an extra filter is applied so that struct instances are printed
       in a format matching that which would construct them.

          struct Colour => [qw( red green blue )];

          use Data::Dump;

          my %hash = ( col => Colour( 0.8, 0.5, 0.2 ) );
          Data::Dump::dd \%hash;

          # prints {col => main::Colour(0.8, 0.5, 0.2)}

NOTES

   Allowing ARRAY dereference
       The way that forbidding access to instances as if they were ARRAY references is currently
       implemented uses an internal method on the generated structure class called
       "_forbid_arrayification". If special circumstances require that this exception mechanism
       be bypassed, the method can be overloaded with an empty "sub {}" body, allowing the struct
       instances in that class to be accessed like normal ARRAY references. For good practice
       this should be limited by a "local" override.

       For example, Devel::Cycle needs to access the instances as plain ARRAY references so it
       can walk the data structure looking for reference cycles.

          use Devel::Cycle;

          {
             no warnings 'redefine';
             local *Point::_forbid_arrayification = sub {};

             memory_cycle_ok( $point );
          }

TODO

       •   Consider adding an "coerce_hash" option, giving name of another function to convert
           structs to key/value pairs, or a HASH ref.

AUTHOR

       Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>