Provided by: libtree-perl_1.01-0ubuntu2_all bug

NAME

       Tree - an N-ary tree

SYNOPSIS

         my $tree = Tree->new( 'root' );
         my $child = Tree->new( 'child' );
         $tree->add_child( $child );

         $tree->add_child( { at => 0 }, Tree->new( 'first child' ) );
         $tree->add_child( { at => -1 }, Tree->new( 'last child' ) );

         $tree->set_value( 'toor' );
         my $value = $tree->value;

         my @children = $tree->children;
         my @some_children = $tree->children( 0, 2 );

         my $height = $tree->height;
         my $width  = $tree->width;
         my $depth  = $tree->depth;
         my $size   = $tree->size;

         if ( $tree->has_child( $child ) ) {
             $tree->remove_child( $child );
         }

         $tree->remove_child( 0 );

         my @nodes = $tree->traverse( $tree->POST_ORDER );
         my $clone = $tree->clone;
         my $mirror = $tree->clone->mirror;

         $tree->add_event_handler({
             add_child    => sub { ... },
             remove_child => sub { ... },
             value        => sub { ... },
         });

DESCRIPTION

       This is meant to be a full-featured N-ary tree representation with configurable error-
       handling and a simple events system that allows for transparent persistence to a variety
       of datastores. It is derived from Tree::Simple, but has a simpler interface and much, much
       more.

METHODS

   Constructor
       new([$value])
           This will return a Tree object. It will accept one parameter which, if passed, will
           become the value (accessible by "value()"). All other parameters will be ignored.

           If you call "$tree->new([$value])", it will instead call "clone()", then set the value
           of the clone to $value.

       clone()
           This will return a clone of $tree. The clone will be a root tree, but all children
           will be cloned.

           If you call Tree->clone([$value]), it will instead call "new()".

           NOTE: the value is merely a shallow copy. This means that all references will be kept.

   Behaviors
       add_child([$options], @nodes)
           This will add all the @nodes as children of $tree. $options is a optional unblessed
           hashref that specifies options for add_child(). The optional parameters are:

           •   at

               This specifies the index to add @nodes at. If specified, this will be passed into
               splice(). The only exceptions are if this is 0, it will act as an unshift(). If it
               is unset or undefined, it will act as a push().

       remove_child([$options], @nodes)
           This will remove all the @nodes from the children of $tree. You can either pass in the
           actual child object you wish to remove, the index of the child you wish to remove, or
           a combination of both.

           $options is a optional unblessed hashref that specifies parameters for remove_child().
           Currently, no parameters are used.

       mirror()
           This will modify the tree such that it is a mirror of what it was before. This means
           that the order of all children is reversed.

           NOTE: This is a destructive action. It will modify the tree's internal structure. If
           you wish to get a mirror, yet keep the original tree intact, use "my $mirror =
           $tree->clone->mirror;"

       traverse( [$order] )
           This will return a list of the nodes in the given traversal order. The default
           traversal order is pre-order.

           The various traversal orders do the following steps:

           •   Pre-order (aka Prefix traversal)

               This will return the node, then the first sub tree in pre-order traversal, then
               the next sub tree, etc.

               Use "$tree->PRE_ORDER" as the $order.

           •   Post-order (aka Prefix traversal)

               This will return the each sub-tree in post-order traversal, then the node.

               Use "$tree->POST_ORDER" as the $order.

           •   Level-order (aka Prefix traversal)

               This will return the node, then the all children of the node, then all
               grandchildren of the node, etc.

               Use "$tree->LEVEL_ORDER" as the $order.

       All behaviors will reset last_error().

   State Queriesis_root()

           This will return true is $tree has no parent and false otherwise.

       •   is_leaf()

           This will return true is $tree has no children and false otherwise.

       •   has_child(@nodes)

           This will return true is $tree has each of the @nodes as a child.  Otherwise, it will
           return false.

       •   get_index_for(@nodes)

           This will return the index into the children list for each of the @nodes passed in.

   Accessorsparent()

           This will return the parent of $tree.

       •   children( [ $idx, [$idx, ..] ] )

           This will return the children of $tree. If called in list context, it will return all
           the children. If called in scalar context, it will return the number of children.

           You may optionally pass in a list of indices to retrieve. This will return the
           children in the order you asked for them. This is very much like an arrayslice.

       •   root()

           This will return the root node of the tree that $tree is in. The root of the root node
           is itself.

       •   height()

           This will return the height of $tree. A leaf has a height of 1. A parent has a height
           of its tallest child, plus 1.

       •   width()

           This will return the width of $tree. A leaf has a width of 1. A parent has a width
           equal to the sum of all the widths of its children.

       •   depth()

           This will return the depth of $tree. A root has a depth of 0. A child has the depth of
           its parent, plus 1.

           This is the distance from the root. It's useful for things like pretty-printing the
           tree.

       •   size()

           This will return the number of nodes within $tree. A leaf has a size of 1.  A parent
           has a size equal to the 1 plus the sum of all the sizes of its children.

       •   value()

           This will return the value stored in the node.

       •   set_value([$value])

           This will set the value stored in the node to $value, then return $self.

       •   meta()

           This will return a hashref that can be used to store whatever metadata the client
           wishes to store. For example, Tree::Persist::DB uses this to store database row ids.

           It is recommended that you store your metadata in a subhashref and not in the top-
           level metadata hashref, keyed by your package name. Tree::Persist does this, using a
           unique key for each persistence layer associated with that tree.  This will help
           prevent clobbering of metadata.

ERROR HANDLING

       Describe what the default error handlers do and what a custom error handler is expected to
       do.

   Error-related methodserror_handler( [ $handler ] )

           This will return the current error handler for the tree. If a value is passed in, then
           it will be used to set the error handler for the tree.

           If called as a class method, this will instead work with the default error handler.

       •   error( $error, [ arg1 [, arg2 ...] ] )

           Call this when you wish to report an error using the currently defined error_handler
           for the tree. The only guaranteed parameter is an error string describing the issue.
           There may be other arguments, and you may certainly provide other arguments in your
           subclass to be passed to your custom handler.

       •   last_error()

           If an error occurred during the last behavior, this will return the error string. It
           is reset only when a behavior is called.

   Default error handlers
       QUIET
           Use this error handler if you want to have quiet error-handling. The last_error method
           will retrieve the error from the last operation, if there was one. If an error occurs,
           the operation will return undefined.

       WARN
       DIE

EVENT HANDLING

       Forest provides for basic event handling. You may choose to register one or more callbacks
       to be called when the appropriate event occurs. The events are:

       •   add_child

           This event will trigger as the last step in an add_child() call.

           The parameters will be "( $self, @args )" where @args is the arguments passed into the
           add_child() call.

       •   remove_child

           This event will trigger as the last step in an remove_child() call.

           The parameters will be "( $self, @args )" where @args is the arguments passed into the
           remove_child() call.

       •   value

           This event will trigger as the last step in a set_value() call.

           The parameters will be "( $self, $old_value )" where $old_value is what the value was
           before it was changed. The new value can be accessed through "$self->value()".

   Event handling methodsadd_event_handler( $type = $callback [, $type => $callback, ... ])>

           You may choose to add event handlers for any known type. Callbacks must be references
           to subroutines. They will be called in the order they are defined.

       •   event( $type, $actor, @args )

           This will trigger an event of type $type. All event handlers registered on $tree will
           be called with parameters of "($actor, @args)". Then, the parent will be notified of
           the event and its handlers will be called, on up to the root.

           This allows you specify an event handler on the root and be guaranteed that it will
           fire every time the appropriate event occurs anywhere in the tree.

NULL TREE

       If you call "$self->parent" on a root node, it will return a Tree::Null object. This is an
       implementation of the Null Object pattern optimized for usage with Tree. It will evaluate
       as false in every case (using overload) and all methods called on it will return a
       Tree::Null object.

   Notes
       •   Tree::Null does not inherit from Tree. This is so that all the methods will go through
           AUTOLOAD vs. the actual method.

       •   However, calling isa() on a Tree::Null object will report that it is-a any object that
           is either Tree or in the Tree:: hierarchy.

       •   The Tree::Null object is a singleton.

       •   The Tree::Null object is defined, though. I couldn't find a way to make it evaluate as
           undefined. That may be a good thing.

CIRCULAR REFERENCES

       Please q.v. Forest for more info on this topic.

WHAT'S NOT HERE

       •   The Visitor pattern

           I have deliberately chosen to not implement the Visitor pattern as described by Gamma
           et al. Given a sufficiently powerful "traverse()" and Perl's capabilities, an explicit
           visitor object is almost always unneeded. If you want one, it's easy to write one
           yourself. Here's a simple one I wrote in 5 minutes:

             package My::Visitor;

             sub new {
                 my $class = shift;
                 my $opts  = @_;

                 return bless {
                     tree => $opts->{tree},
                     action => $opts->{action},
                 }, $class;
             }

             sub visit {
                 my $self = shift;
                 my ($mode) = @_;

                 foreach my $node ( $self->{tree}->traverse( $mode ) ) {
                     $self->{action}->( $node );
                 }
             }

CODE COVERAGE

       We use Devel::Cover to test the code coverage of our tests. Below is the Devel::Cover
       report on this module's test suite.

         ---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
         File                           stmt   bran   cond    sub    pod   time  total
         ---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
         blib/lib/Tree.pm              100.0  100.0   94.4  100.0  100.0   67.3   99.7
         blib/lib/Tree/Binary.pm        96.4   95.0  100.0  100.0  100.0   10.7   96.7
         blib/lib/Tree/Fast.pm          99.4   95.5   91.7  100.0  100.0   22.0   98.6
         Total                          98.9   96.8   94.9  100.0  100.0  100.0   98.5
         ---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       •   Stevan Little for writing Tree::Simple, upon which Tree is based.

SUPPORT

       The mailing list is at TreeCPAN@googlegroups.com. I also read <http://www.perlmonks.com>
       on a daily basis.

AUTHORS

       Rob Kinyon <rob.kinyon@iinteractive.com>

       Stevan Little <stevan.little@iinteractive.com>

       Thanks to Infinity Interactive for generously donating our time.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright 2004, 2005 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.

       <http://www.iinteractive.com>

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.