Provided by: libcontext-preserve-perl_0.01-1_all bug

NAME

       Context::Preserve - run code after a subroutine call, preserving the context the
       subroutine would have seen if it were the last statement in the caller

SYNOPSIS

       Have you ever written this?

           my ($result, @result);

           # run a sub in the correct context
           if(!defined wantarray){
               some::code();
           }
           elsif(wantarray){
               @result = some::code();
           }
           else {
               $result = some::code();
           }

           # do something after some::code
           $_ += 42 for (@result, $result);

           # finally return the correct value
           if(!defined wantarray){
               return;
           }
           elsif(wantarray){
               return @result;
           }
           else {
               return $result;
           }

       Now you can just write this instead:

         use Context::Preserve;

         return preserve_context { some::code() }
                    after => sub { $_ += 42 for @_ };

DESCRIPTION

       Sometimes you need to call a function, get the results, act on the results, then return
       the result of the function.  This is painful because of contexts; the original function
       can behave different if it's called in void, scalar, or list context.  You can ignore the
       various cases and just pick one, but that's fragile.  To do things right, you need to see
       which case you're being called in, and then call the function in that context.  This
       results in 3 code paths, which is a pain to type in (and maintain).

       This module automates the process.  You provide a coderef that is the "original function",
       and another coderef to run after the original runs.  You can modify the return value
       (aliased to @_) here, and do whatever else you need to do.  "wantarray" is correct inside
       both coderefs; in "after", though, the return value is ignored and the value "wantarray"
       returns is related to the context that the original function was called in.

EXPORT

       "preserve_context"

FUNCTIONS

   preserve_context { original } [after|replace] => sub { after }
       Invokes "original" in the same context as "preserve_context" was called in, save the
       results, runs "after" in the same context, then returns the result of "original" (or
       "after" if "replace" is used).

       If the second argument is "after", then you can modify @_ to affect the return value.
       "after"'s return value is ignored.

       If the second argument is "replace", then modifying @_ doesn't do anything.  The return
       value of "after" is returned from "preserve_context" instead.

       Run "preserve_context" like this:

         sub whatever {
             ...
             return preserve_context { orginal_function() }
                        after => sub { modify @_          };
         }

         or

         sub whatever {
             ...
             return preserve_context   { orginal_function() }
                        replace => sub { return @new_return };
         }

       Note that there's no comma between the first block and the "after =>" part.  This is how
       perl parses functions with the "(&@)" prototype.  The alternative is to say:

             preserve_context(sub { original }, after => sub { after });

       You can pick the one you like, but I think the first version is much prettier.

AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT

       Jonathan Rockway "<jrockway@cpan.org>"

       Copyright (c) 2008 Infinity Interactive.  You may redistribute this module under the same
       terms as Perl itself.