Provided by: libhtml-mason-perl_1.60-2_all bug

NAME

       HTML::Mason::Component - Mason Component Class

SYNOPSIS

           my $comp1 = $m->current_comp;
           my $comp2 = $m->callers(1);
           my $comp3 = $m->fetch_comp('foo/bar');

           foreach ($comp1,$comp2,$comp3) {
              print "My name is ".$_->title.".\n";
           }

DESCRIPTION

       Mason uses the Component class to store components loaded into memory. Components come from three
       distinct sources:

       1.  File-based: loaded from a source or object file.

       2.  Subcomponents: embedded components defined with the "<%def>" or "<%method>" tags.

       3.  Anonymous: created on-the-fly with the "make_component" Interp method.

       Some of the methods below return different values (or nothing at all) depending on the component type.

       The component API is primarily useful for introspection, e.g. "what component called me" or "does the
       next component take a certain argument".  You can build complex Mason sites without ever dealing directly
       with a component object.

   CREATING AND ACCESSING COMPONENTS
       Common ways to get handles on existing component objects include the Request->current_comp,
       Request->callers, and Request->fetch_comp methods.

       There is no published "new" method, because creating a component requires an Interpreter. Use the
       make_component method to create a new component dynamically.

       Similarly, there is no "execute" or "call" method, because calling a component requires a request. All of
       the interfaces for calling a component ("<& &>", "$m->comp", "$interp->exec") which normally take a
       component path will also take a component object.

METHODS

       attr (name)
           Looks for the specified attribute in this component and its parents, returning the first value found.
           Dies with an error if not found. Attributes are declared in the "<%attr>" section.

       attr_if_exists (name)
           This method works exactly like the one above but returns undef if the attribute does not exist.

       attr_exists (name)
           Returns true if the specified attribute exists in this component or one of its parents, undef
           otherwise.

       attributes
           Returns a hashref containing the attributes defined in this component, with the attribute names as
           keys.  This does not return attributes inherited from parent components.

       call_method (name, args...)
           Looks for the specified user-defined method in this component and its parents, calling the first one
           found. Dies with an error if not found.  Methods are declared in the "<%method>" section.

       create_time
           A synonym for load_time (deprecated).

       declared_args
           Returns a reference to a hash of hashes representing the arguments declared in the "<%args>" section.
           The keys of the main hash are the variable names including prefix (e.g. $foo, @list). Each secondary
           hash contains:

           •   'default': the string specified for default value (e.g. 'fido') or undef if none specified.  Note
               that in general this is not the default value itself but rather a Perl expression that gets
               evaluated every time the component runs.

           For example:

             # does $comp have an argument called $fido?
             if (exists($comp->declared_args->{'$fido'})) { ... }

             # does $fido have a default value?
             if (defined($comp->declared_args->{'$fido'}->{default})) { ... }

       dir_path
           Returns the component's notion of a current directory, relative to the component root; this is used
           to resolve relative component paths. For file-based components this is the full component path minus
           the filename.  For subcomponents this is the same as the component that defines it.  Undefined for
           anonymous components.

       flag (name)
           Returns the value for the specified system flag.  Flags are declared in the "<%flags>" section and
           affect the behavior of the component.  Unlike attributes, flags values do not get inherited from
           parent components.

       is_subcomp
           Returns true if this is a subcomponent of another component.  For historical reasons, this returns
           true for both methods and subcomponents.

       is_method
           Returns true if this is a method.

       is_file_based
           Returns true if this component was loaded from a source or object file.

       load_time
           Returns the time (in Perl time() format) when this component object was created.

       method_exists (name)
           Returns true if the specified user-defined method exists in this component or one of its parents,
           undef otherwise.

       methods
           This method works exactly like the subcomps method, but it returns methods, not subcomponents.  This
           does not return methods inherited from parent components.

           Methods are declared in "<%method>" sections.

       name
           Returns a short name of the component.  For file-based components this is the filename without the
           path. For subcomponents this is the name specified in "<%def>". Undefined for anonymous components.

       object_file
           Returns the object filename for this component.

       parent
           Returns the parent of this component for inheritance purposes, by default the nearest "autohandler"
           in or above the component's directory.  Can be changed via the "inherit" flag.

       path
           Returns the entire path of this component, relative to the component root.

       scall_method (name, args...)
           Like item_call_method, but returns the method output as a string instead of printing it. (Think
           sprintf versus printf.) The method's return value, if any, is discarded.

       subcomps
           With no arguments, returns a hashref containing the subcomponents defined in this component, with
           names as keys and component objects as values.  With one argument, returns the subcomponent of that
           name or undef if no such subcomponent exists. e.g.

               if (my $subcomp = $comp->subcomps('.link')) {
                   ...
               }

           Subcomponents are declared in "<%def>" sections.

       title
           Returns a printable string denoting this component.  It is intended to uniquely identify a component
           within a given interpreter although this is not 100% guaranteed. Mason uses this string in error
           messages, among other places.

           For file-based components this is the component path.  For subcomponents this is
           "parent_component_path:subcomponent_name". For anonymous components this is a unique label like
           "[anon 17]".

FILE-BASED METHODS

       The following methods apply only to file-based components (those loaded from source or object files).
       They return undef for other component types.

       source_file
           Returns the source filename for this component.

       source_dir
           Returns the directory of the source filename for this component.