oracular (3) builtin.3perl.gz

Provided by: perl-doc_5.38.2-5_all bug

NAME

       builtin - Perl pragma to import built-in utility functions

SYNOPSIS

           use builtin qw(
               true false is_bool
               weaken unweaken is_weak
               blessed refaddr reftype
               created_as_string created_as_number
               ceil floor
               indexed
               trim
               is_tainted
               export_lexically
           );

DESCRIPTION

       Perl provides several utility functions in the "builtin" package. These are plain functions, and look and
       behave just like regular user-defined functions do. They do not provide new syntax or require special
       parsing. These functions are always present in the interpreter and can be called at any time by their
       fully-qualified names. By default they are not available as short names, but can be requested for
       convenience.

       Individual named functions can be imported by listing them as import parameters on the "use" statement
       for this pragma.

       The overall "builtin" mechanism, as well as every individual function it provides, are currently
       experimental.

       Warning:  At present, the entire "builtin" namespace is experimental.  Calling functions in it will
       trigger warnings of the "experimental::builtin" category.

   Lexical Import
       This pragma module creates lexical aliases in the currently-compiling scope to these builtin functions.
       This is similar to the lexical effect of other pragmas such as strict and feature.

           sub classify
           {
               my $val = shift;

               use builtin 'is_bool';
               return is_bool($val) ? "boolean" : "not a boolean";
           }

           # the is_bool() function is no longer visible here
           # but may still be called by builtin::is_bool()

       Because these functions are imported lexically, rather than by package symbols, the user does not need to
       take any special measures to ensure they don't accidentally appear as object methods from a class.

           package An::Object::Class {
               use builtin 'true', 'false';
               ...
           }

           # does not appear as a method
           An::Object::Class->true;

           # Can't locate object method "true" via package "An::Object::Class"
           #   at ...

FUNCTIONS

   true
           $val = true;

       Returns the boolean truth value. While any scalar value can be tested for truth and most defined, non-
       empty and non-zero values are considered "true" by perl, this one is special in that "is_bool" considers
       it to be a distinguished boolean value.

       This gives an equivalent value to expressions like "!!1" or "!0".

   false
           $val = false;

       Returns the boolean fiction value. While any non-true scalar value is considered "false" by perl, this
       one is special in that "is_bool" considers it to be a distinguished boolean value.

       This gives an equivalent value to expressions like "!!0" or "!1".

   is_bool
           $bool = is_bool($val);

       Returns true when given a distinguished boolean value, or false if not. A distinguished boolean value is
       the result of any boolean-returning builtin function (such as "true" or "is_bool" itself), boolean-
       returning operator (such as the "eq" or "==" comparison tests or the "!" negation operator), or any
       variable containing one of these results.

       This function used to be named "isbool". A compatibility alias is provided currently but will be removed
       in a later version.

   weaken
           weaken($ref);

       Weakens a reference. A weakened reference does not contribute to the reference count of its referent. If
       only weakened references to a referent remain, it will be disposed of, and all remaining weak references
       to it will have their value set to "undef".

   unweaken
           unweaken($ref);

       Strengthens a reference, undoing the effects of a previous call to "weaken".

   is_weak
           $bool = is_weak($ref);

       Returns true when given a weakened reference, or false if not a reference or not weak.

       This function used to be named "isweak". A compatibility alias is provided currently but will be removed
       in a later version.

   blessed
           $str = blessed($ref);

       Returns the package name for an object reference, or "undef" for a non-reference or reference that is not
       an object.

   refaddr
           $num = refaddr($ref);

       Returns the memory address for a reference, or "undef" for a non-reference.  This value is not likely to
       be very useful for pure Perl code, but is handy as a means to test for referential identity or
       uniqueness.

   reftype
           $str = reftype($ref);

       Returns the basic container type of the referent of a reference, or "undef" for a non-reference. This is
       returned as a string in all-capitals, such as "ARRAY" for array references, or "HASH" for hash
       references.

   created_as_string
           $bool = created_as_string($val);

       Returns a boolean representing if the argument value was originally created as a string. It will return
       true for any scalar expression whose most recent assignment or modification was of a string-like nature -
       such as assignment from a string literal, or the result of a string operation such as concatenation or
       regexp. It will return false for references (including any object), numbers, booleans and undef.

       It is unlikely that you will want to use this for regular data validation within Perl, as it will not
       return true for regular numbers that are still perfectly usable as strings, nor for any object reference
       - especially objects that overload the stringification operator in an attempt to behave more like
       strings. For example

           my $val = URI->new( "https://metacpan.org/" );

           if( created_as_string $val ) { ... }    # this will not execute

   created_as_number
           $bool = created_as_number($val);

       Returns a boolean representing if the argument value was originally created as a number. It will return
       true for any scalar expression whose most recent assignment or modification was of a numerical nature -
       such as assignment from a number literal, or the result of a numerical operation such as addition. It
       will return false for references (including any object), strings, booleans and undef.

       It is unlikely that you will want to use this for regular data validation within Perl, as it will not
       return true for regular strings of decimal digits that are still perfectly usable as numbers, nor for any
       object reference - especially objects that overload the numification operator in an attempt to behave
       more like numbers. For example

           my $val = Math::BigInt->new( 123 );

           if( created_as_number $val ) { ... }    # this will not execute

       While most Perl code should operate on scalar values without needing to know their creation history,
       these two functions are intended to be used by data serialisation modules such as JSON encoders or
       similar situations, where language interoperability concerns require making a distinction between values
       that are fundamentally stringlike versus numberlike in nature.

   ceil
           $num = ceil($num);

       Returns the smallest integer value greater than or equal to the given numerical argument.

   floor
           $num = floor($num);

       Returns the largest integer value less than or equal to the given numerical argument.

   indexed
           @ivpairs = indexed(@items)

       Returns an even-sized list of number/value pairs, where each pair is formed of a number giving an index
       in the original list followed by the value at that position in it.  I.e. returns a list twice the size of
       the original, being equal to

           (0, $items[0], 1, $items[1], 2, $items[2], ...)

       Note that unlike the core "values" function, this function returns copies of its original arguments, not
       aliases to them. Any modifications of these copies are not reflected in modifications to the original.

           my @x = ...;
           $_++ for indexed @x;  # The @x array remains unaffected

       This function is primarily intended to be useful combined with multi-variable "foreach" loop syntax; as

           foreach my ($index, $value) (indexed LIST) {
               ...
           }

       In scalar context this function returns the size of the list that it would otherwise have returned, and
       provokes a warning in the "scalar" category.

   trim
           $stripped = trim($string);

       Returns the input string with whitespace stripped from the beginning and end. trim() will remove these
       characters:

       " ", an ordinary space.

       "\t", a tab.

       "\n", a new line (line feed).

       "\r", a carriage return.

       and all other Unicode characters that are flagged as whitespace.  A complete list is in "Whitespace" in
       perlrecharclass.

           $var = "  Hello world   ";            # "Hello world"
           $var = "\t\t\tHello world";           # "Hello world"
           $var = "Hello world\n";               # "Hello world"
           $var = "\x{2028}Hello world\x{3000}"; # "Hello world"

       "trim" is equivalent to:

           $str =~ s/\A\s+|\s+\z//urg;

       For Perl versions where this feature is not available look at the String::Util module for a comparable
       implementation.

   is_tainted
           $bool = is_tainted($var);

       Returns true when given a tainted variable.

   export_lexically
           export_lexically($name1, $ref1, $name2, $ref2, ...)

       Exports new lexical names into the scope currently being compiled. Names given by the first of each pair
       of values will refer to the corresponding item whose reference is given by the second. Types of item that
       are permitted are subroutines, and scalar, array, and hash variables. If the item is a subroutine, the
       name may optionally be prefixed with the "&" sigil, but for convenience it doesn't have to. For items
       that are variables the sigil is required, and must match the type of the variable.

           export_lexically func    => \&func,
                            '&func' => \&func;  # same as above

           export_lexically '$scalar' => \my $var;

           # The following are not permitted
           export_lexically '$var' => \@arr;   # sigil does not match
           export_lexically name => \$scalar;  # implied '&' sigil does not match

           export_lexically '*name' => \*globref;  # globrefs are not supported

       This must be called at compile time; which typically means during a "BEGIN" block. Usually this would be
       used as part of an "import" method of a module, when invoked as part of a "use ..." statement.

SEE ALSO

       perlop, perlfunc, Scalar::Util