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5f05dabc 1=head1 NAME
2
3perltoot - Tom's object-oriented tutorial for perl
4
5=head1 DESCRIPTION
6
7Object-oriented programming is a big seller these days. Some managers
8would rather have objects than sliced bread. Why is that? What's so
9special about an object? Just what I<is> an object anyway?
10
11An object is nothing but a way of tucking away complex behaviours into
12a neat little easy-to-use bundle. (This is what professors call
13abstraction.) Smart people who have nothing to do but sit around for
14weeks on end figuring out really hard problems make these nifty
15objects that even regular people can use. (This is what professors call
16software reuse.) Users (well, programmers) can play with this little
17bundle all they want, but they aren't to open it up and mess with the
18insides. Just like an expensive piece of hardware, the contract says
19that you void the warranty if you muck with the cover. So don't do that.
20
21The heart of objects is the class, a protected little private namespace
22full of data and functions. A class is a set of related routines that
23addresses some problem area. You can think of it as a user-defined type.
24The Perl package mechanism, also used for more traditional modules,
25is used for class modules as well. Objects "live" in a class, meaning
26that they belong to some package.
27
28More often than not, the class provides the user with little bundles.
29These bundles are objects. They know whose class they belong to,
30and how to behave. Users ask the class to do something, like "give
31me an object." Or they can ask one of these objects to do something.
32Asking a class to do something for you is calling a I<class method>.
33Asking an object to do something for you is calling an I<object method>.
34Asking either a class (usually) or an object (sometimes) to give you
35back an object is calling a I<constructor>, which is just a
36kind of method.
37
38That's all well and good, but how is an object different from any other
39Perl data type? Just what is an object I<really>; that is, what's its
40fundamental type? The answer to the first question is easy. An object
41is different from any other data type in Perl in one and only one way:
42you may dereference it using not merely string or numeric subscripts
43as with simple arrays and hashes, but with named subroutine calls.
44In a word, with I<methods>.
45
46The answer to the second question is that it's a reference, and not just
47any reference, mind you, but one whose referent has been I<bless>()ed
48into a particular class (read: package). What kind of reference? Well,
49the answer to that one is a bit less concrete. That's because in Perl
50the designer of the class can employ any sort of reference they'd like
51as the underlying intrinsic data type. It could be a scalar, an array,
52or a hash reference. It could even be a code reference. But because
53of its inherent flexibility, an object is usually a hash reference.
54
55=head1 Creating a Class
56
57Before you create a class, you need to decide what to name it. That's
58because the class (package) name governs the name of the file used to
59house it, just as with regular modules. Then, that class (package)
60should provide one or more ways to generate objects. Finally, it should
61provide mechanisms to allow users of its objects to indirectly manipulate
62these objects from a distance.
63
64For example, let's make a simple Person class module. It gets stored in
65the file Person.pm. If it were called a Happy::Person class, it would
66be stored in the file Happy/Person.pm, and its package would become
67Happy::Person instead of just Person. (On a personal computer not
8939ba94 68running Unix or Plan 9, but something like Mac OS or VMS, the directory
5f05dabc 69separator may be different, but the principle is the same.) Do not assume
70any formal relationship between modules based on their directory names.
71This is merely a grouping convenience, and has no effect on inheritance,
72variable accessibility, or anything else.
73
74For this module we aren't going to use Exporter, because we're
75a well-behaved class module that doesn't export anything at all.
76In order to manufacture objects, a class needs to have a I<constructor
77method>. A constructor gives you back not just a regular data type,
78but a brand-new object in that class. This magic is taken care of by
79the bless() function, whose sole purpose is to enable its referent to
80be used as an object. Remember: being an object really means nothing
81more than that methods may now be called against it.
82
83While a constructor may be named anything you'd like, most Perl
84programmers seem to like to call theirs new(). However, new() is not
85a reserved word, and a class is under no obligation to supply such.
86Some programmers have also been known to use a function with
87the same name as the class as the constructor.
88
89=head2 Object Representation
90
91By far the most common mechanism used in Perl to represent a Pascal
3e3baf6d 92record, a C struct, or a C++ class is an anonymous hash. That's because a
5f05dabc 93hash has an arbitrary number of data fields, each conveniently accessed by
94an arbitrary name of your own devising.
95
96If you were just doing a simple
97struct-like emulation, you would likely go about it something like this:
98
99 $rec = {
100 name => "Jason",
101 age => 23,
102 peers => [ "Norbert", "Rhys", "Phineas"],
103 };
104
105If you felt like it, you could add a bit of visual distinction
106by up-casing the hash keys:
107
108 $rec = {
109 NAME => "Jason",
110 AGE => 23,
111 PEERS => [ "Norbert", "Rhys", "Phineas"],
112 };
113
c47ff5f1
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114And so you could get at C<< $rec->{NAME} >> to find "Jason", or
115C<< @{ $rec->{PEERS} } >> to get at "Norbert", "Rhys", and "Phineas".
5f05dabc 116(Have you ever noticed how many 23-year-old programmers seem to
117be named "Jason" these days? :-)
118
119This same model is often used for classes, although it is not considered
120the pinnacle of programming propriety for folks from outside the
121class to come waltzing into an object, brazenly accessing its data
122members directly. Generally speaking, an object should be considered
123an opaque cookie that you use I<object methods> to access. Visually,
124methods look like you're dereffing a reference using a function name
125instead of brackets or braces.
126
127=head2 Class Interface
128
129Some languages provide a formal syntactic interface to a class's methods,
130but Perl does not. It relies on you to read the documentation of each
131class. If you try to call an undefined method on an object, Perl won't
132complain, but the program will trigger an exception while it's running.
133Likewise, if you call a method expecting a prime number as its argument
8d9aa5e0 134with a non-prime one instead, you can't expect the compiler to catch this.
5f05dabc 135(Well, you can expect it all you like, but it's not going to happen.)
136
137Let's suppose you have a well-educated user of your Person class,
138someone who has read the docs that explain the prescribed
139interface. Here's how they might use the Person class:
140
141 use Person;
142
143 $him = Person->new();
144 $him->name("Jason");
145 $him->age(23);
146 $him->peers( "Norbert", "Rhys", "Phineas" );
147
148 push @All_Recs, $him; # save object in array for later
149
150 printf "%s is %d years old.\n", $him->name, $him->age;
151 print "His peers are: ", join(", ", $him->peers), "\n";
152
153 printf "Last rec's name is %s\n", $All_Recs[-1]->name;
154
155As you can see, the user of the class doesn't know (or at least, has no
156business paying attention to the fact) that the object has one particular
157implementation or another. The interface to the class and its objects
158is exclusively via methods, and that's all the user of the class should
159ever play with.
160
161=head2 Constructors and Instance Methods
162
163Still, I<someone> has to know what's in the object. And that someone is
164the class. It implements methods that the programmer uses to access
165the object. Here's how to implement the Person class using the standard
166hash-ref-as-an-object idiom. We'll make a class method called new() to
167act as the constructor, and three object methods called name(), age(), and
168peers() to get at per-object data hidden away in our anonymous hash.
169
170 package Person;
171 use strict;
172
173 ##################################################
174 ## the object constructor (simplistic version) ##
175 ##################################################
176 sub new {
177 my $self = {};
178 $self->{NAME} = undef;
179 $self->{AGE} = undef;
180 $self->{PEERS} = [];
181 bless($self); # but see below
182 return $self;
183 }
184
185 ##############################################
186 ## methods to access per-object data ##
187 ## ##
188 ## With args, they set the value. Without ##
189 ## any, they only retrieve it/them. ##
190 ##############################################
191
192 sub name {
193 my $self = shift;
194 if (@_) { $self->{NAME} = shift }
195 return $self->{NAME};
196 }
197
198 sub age {
199 my $self = shift;
200 if (@_) { $self->{AGE} = shift }
201 return $self->{AGE};
202 }
203
204 sub peers {
205 my $self = shift;
206 if (@_) { @{ $self->{PEERS} } = @_ }
207 return @{ $self->{PEERS} };
208 }
209
210 1; # so the require or use succeeds
211
212We've created three methods to access an object's data, name(), age(),
213and peers(). These are all substantially similar. If called with an
214argument, they set the appropriate field; otherwise they return the
215value held by that field, meaning the value of that hash key.
216
217=head2 Planning for the Future: Better Constructors
218
219Even though at this point you may not even know what it means, someday
220you're going to worry about inheritance. (You can safely ignore this
221for now and worry about it later if you'd like.) To ensure that this
222all works out smoothly, you must use the double-argument form of bless().
223The second argument is the class into which the referent will be blessed.
224By not assuming our own class as the default second argument and instead
225using the class passed into us, we make our constructor inheritable.
226
5f05dabc 227 sub new {
eac7fe86 228 my $class = shift;
5f05dabc 229 my $self = {};
230 $self->{NAME} = undef;
231 $self->{AGE} = undef;
232 $self->{PEERS} = [];
233 bless ($self, $class);
234 return $self;
235 }
236
237That's about all there is for constructors. These methods bring objects
238to life, returning neat little opaque bundles to the user to be used in
239subsequent method calls.
240
241=head2 Destructors
242
243Every story has a beginning and an end. The beginning of the object's
244story is its constructor, explicitly called when the object comes into
245existence. But the ending of its story is the I<destructor>, a method
246implicitly called when an object leaves this life. Any per-object
247clean-up code is placed in the destructor, which must (in Perl) be called
248DESTROY.
249
250If constructors can have arbitrary names, then why not destructors?
251Because while a constructor is explicitly called, a destructor is not.
252Destruction happens automatically via Perl's garbage collection (GC)
253system, which is a quick but somewhat lazy reference-based GC system.
254To know what to call, Perl insists that the destructor be named DESTROY.
31412f28
CS
255Perl's notion of the right time to call a destructor is not well-defined
256currently, which is why your destructors should not rely on when they are
257called.
5f05dabc 258
68dc0745 259Why is DESTROY in all caps? Perl on occasion uses purely uppercase
5f05dabc 260function names as a convention to indicate that the function will
261be automatically called by Perl in some way. Others that are called
262implicitly include BEGIN, END, AUTOLOAD, plus all methods used by
263tied objects, described in L<perltie>.
264
265In really good object-oriented programming languages, the user doesn't
266care when the destructor is called. It just happens when it's supposed
267to. In low-level languages without any GC at all, there's no way to
268depend on this happening at the right time, so the programmer must
269explicitly call the destructor to clean up memory and state, crossing
270their fingers that it's the right time to do so. Unlike C++, an
271object destructor is nearly never needed in Perl, and even when it is,
272explicit invocation is uncalled for. In the case of our Person class,
273we don't need a destructor because Perl takes care of simple matters
274like memory deallocation.
275
276The only situation where Perl's reference-based GC won't work is
277when there's a circularity in the data structure, such as:
278
279 $this->{WHATEVER} = $this;
280
281In that case, you must delete the self-reference manually if you expect
282your program not to leak memory. While admittedly error-prone, this is
283the best we can do right now. Nonetheless, rest assured that when your
284program is finished, its objects' destructors are all duly called.
285So you are guaranteed that an object I<eventually> gets properly
286destroyed, except in the unique case of a program that never exits.
287(If you're running Perl embedded in another application, this full GC
288pass happens a bit more frequently--whenever a thread shuts down.)
289
290=head2 Other Object Methods
291
292The methods we've talked about so far have either been constructors or
293else simple "data methods", interfaces to data stored in the object.
294These are a bit like an object's data members in the C++ world, except
295that strangers don't access them as data. Instead, they should only
296access the object's data indirectly via its methods. This is an
297important rule: in Perl, access to an object's data should I<only>
298be made through methods.
299
300Perl doesn't impose restrictions on who gets to use which methods.
301The public-versus-private distinction is by convention, not syntax.
54310121 302(Well, unless you use the Alias module described below in
7b8d334a 303L<Data Members as Variables>.) Occasionally you'll see method names beginning or ending
5f05dabc 304with an underscore or two. This marking is a convention indicating
305that the methods are private to that class alone and sometimes to its
306closest acquaintances, its immediate subclasses. But this distinction
307is not enforced by Perl itself. It's up to the programmer to behave.
308
309There's no reason to limit methods to those that simply access data.
310Methods can do anything at all. The key point is that they're invoked
311against an object or a class. Let's say we'd like object methods that
312do more than fetch or set one particular field.
313
314 sub exclaim {
315 my $self = shift;
316 return sprintf "Hi, I'm %s, age %d, working with %s",
87275199 317 $self->{NAME}, $self->{AGE}, join(", ", @{$self->{PEERS}});
5f05dabc 318 }
319
320Or maybe even one like this:
321
322 sub happy_birthday {
323 my $self = shift;
324 return ++$self->{AGE};
325 }
326
327Some might argue that one should go at these this way:
328
329 sub exclaim {
330 my $self = shift;
331 return sprintf "Hi, I'm %s, age %d, working with %s",
332 $self->name, $self->age, join(", ", $self->peers);
333 }
334
335 sub happy_birthday {
336 my $self = shift;
337 return $self->age( $self->age() + 1 );
338 }
339
340But since these methods are all executing in the class itself, this
54310121 341may not be critical. There are tradeoffs to be made. Using direct
5f05dabc 342hash access is faster (about an order of magnitude faster, in fact), and
343it's more convenient when you want to interpolate in strings. But using
344methods (the external interface) internally shields not just the users of
345your class but even you yourself from changes in your data representation.
346
347=head1 Class Data
348
349What about "class data", data items common to each object in a class?
350What would you want that for? Well, in your Person class, you might
351like to keep track of the total people alive. How do you implement that?
352
353You I<could> make it a global variable called $Person::Census. But about
354only reason you'd do that would be if you I<wanted> people to be able to
355get at your class data directly. They could just say $Person::Census
356and play around with it. Maybe this is ok in your design scheme.
357You might even conceivably want to make it an exported variable. To be
358exportable, a variable must be a (package) global. If this were a
359traditional module rather than an object-oriented one, you might do that.
360
361While this approach is expected in most traditional modules, it's
362generally considered rather poor form in most object modules. In an
363object module, you should set up a protective veil to separate interface
364from implementation. So provide a class method to access class data
365just as you provide object methods to access object data.
366
367So, you I<could> still keep $Census as a package global and rely upon
368others to honor the contract of the module and therefore not play around
369with its implementation. You could even be supertricky and make $Census a
370tied object as described in L<perltie>, thereby intercepting all accesses.
371
372But more often than not, you just want to make your class data a
373file-scoped lexical. To do so, simply put this at the top of the file:
374
375 my $Census = 0;
376
377Even though the scope of a my() normally expires when the block in which
378it was declared is done (in this case the whole file being required or
379used), Perl's deep binding of lexical variables guarantees that the
380variable will not be deallocated, remaining accessible to functions
381declared within that scope. This doesn't work with global variables
382given temporary values via local(), though.
383
384Irrespective of whether you leave $Census a package global or make
385it instead a file-scoped lexical, you should make these
386changes to your Person::new() constructor:
387
388 sub new {
eac7fe86 389 my $class = shift;
5f05dabc 390 my $self = {};
391 $Census++;
392 $self->{NAME} = undef;
393 $self->{AGE} = undef;
394 $self->{PEERS} = [];
395 bless ($self, $class);
396 return $self;
397 }
398
399 sub population {
400 return $Census;
401 }
402
403Now that we've done this, we certainly do need a destructor so that
404when Person is destroyed, the $Census goes down. Here's how
405this could be done:
406
407 sub DESTROY { --$Census }
408
409Notice how there's no memory to deallocate in the destructor? That's
410something that Perl takes care of for you all by itself.
411
8257a158
MS
412Alternatively, you could use the Class::Data::Inheritable module from
413CPAN.
414
415
5f05dabc 416=head2 Accessing Class Data
417
418It turns out that this is not really a good way to go about handling
419class data. A good scalable rule is that I<you must never reference class
420data directly from an object method>. Otherwise you aren't building a
421scalable, inheritable class. The object must be the rendezvous point
422for all operations, especially from an object method. The globals
423(class data) would in some sense be in the "wrong" package in your
424derived classes. In Perl, methods execute in the context of the class
425they were defined in, I<not> that of the object that triggered them.
426Therefore, namespace visibility of package globals in methods is unrelated
427to inheritance.
428
429Got that? Maybe not. Ok, let's say that some other class "borrowed"
430(well, inherited) the DESTROY method as it was defined above. When those
8d9aa5e0 431objects are destroyed, the original $Census variable will be altered,
5f05dabc 432not the one in the new class's package namespace. Perhaps this is what
433you want, but probably it isn't.
434
435Here's how to fix this. We'll store a reference to the data in the
436value accessed by the hash key "_CENSUS". Why the underscore? Well,
437mostly because an initial underscore already conveys strong feelings
438of magicalness to a C programmer. It's really just a mnemonic device
439to remind ourselves that this field is special and not to be used as
440a public data member in the same way that NAME, AGE, and PEERS are.
441(Because we've been developing this code under the strict pragma, prior
a6006777 442to perl version 5.004 we'll have to quote the field name.)
5f05dabc 443
444 sub new {
eac7fe86 445 my $class = shift;
5f05dabc 446 my $self = {};
447 $self->{NAME} = undef;
448 $self->{AGE} = undef;
449 $self->{PEERS} = [];
450 # "private" data
451 $self->{"_CENSUS"} = \$Census;
452 bless ($self, $class);
453 ++ ${ $self->{"_CENSUS"} };
454 return $self;
455 }
456
457 sub population {
458 my $self = shift;
459 if (ref $self) {
460 return ${ $self->{"_CENSUS"} };
461 } else {
462 return $Census;
463 }
464 }
465
466 sub DESTROY {
467 my $self = shift;
468 -- ${ $self->{"_CENSUS"} };
469 }
470
471=head2 Debugging Methods
472
473It's common for a class to have a debugging mechanism. For example,
474you might want to see when objects are created or destroyed. To do that,
475add a debugging variable as a file-scoped lexical. For this, we'll pull
476in the standard Carp module to emit our warnings and fatal messages.
477That way messages will come out with the caller's filename and
478line number instead of our own; if we wanted them to be from our own
479perspective, we'd just use die() and warn() directly instead of croak()
480and carp() respectively.
481
482 use Carp;
483 my $Debugging = 0;
484
485Now add a new class method to access the variable.
486
487 sub debug {
488 my $class = shift;
489 if (ref $class) { confess "Class method called as object method" }
490 unless (@_ == 1) { confess "usage: CLASSNAME->debug(level)" }
491 $Debugging = shift;
492 }
493
494Now fix up DESTROY to murmur a bit as the moribund object expires:
495
496 sub DESTROY {
497 my $self = shift;
498 if ($Debugging) { carp "Destroying $self " . $self->name }
499 -- ${ $self->{"_CENSUS"} };
500 }
501
502One could conceivably make a per-object debug state. That
503way you could call both of these:
504
505 Person->debug(1); # entire class
506 $him->debug(1); # just this object
507
508To do so, we need our debugging method to be a "bimodal" one, one that
509works on both classes I<and> objects. Therefore, adjust the debug()
510and DESTROY methods as follows:
511
512 sub debug {
513 my $self = shift;
514 confess "usage: thing->debug(level)" unless @_ == 1;
515 my $level = shift;
516 if (ref($self)) {
517 $self->{"_DEBUG"} = $level; # just myself
518 } else {
519 $Debugging = $level; # whole class
520 }
521 }
522
523 sub DESTROY {
524 my $self = shift;
525 if ($Debugging || $self->{"_DEBUG"}) {
526 carp "Destroying $self " . $self->name;
527 }
528 -- ${ $self->{"_CENSUS"} };
529 }
530
8d9aa5e0 531What happens if a derived class (which we'll call Employee) inherits
c47ff5f1 532methods from this Person base class? Then C<< Employee->debug() >>, when called
8d9aa5e0 533as a class method, manipulates $Person::Debugging not $Employee::Debugging.
5f05dabc 534
535=head2 Class Destructors
536
537The object destructor handles the death of each distinct object. But sometimes
538you want a bit of cleanup when the entire class is shut down, which
539currently only happens when the program exits. To make such a
540I<class destructor>, create a function in that class's package named
541END. This works just like the END function in traditional modules,
542meaning that it gets called whenever your program exits unless it execs
543or dies of an uncaught signal. For example,
544
545 sub END {
546 if ($Debugging) {
547 print "All persons are going away now.\n";
548 }
549 }
550
551When the program exits, all the class destructors (END functions) are
552be called in the opposite order that they were loaded in (LIFO order).
553
554=head2 Documenting the Interface
555
556And there you have it: we've just shown you the I<implementation> of this
557Person class. Its I<interface> would be its documentation. Usually this
558means putting it in pod ("plain old documentation") format right there
559in the same file. In our Person example, we would place the following
560docs anywhere in the Person.pm file. Even though it looks mostly like
561code, it's not. It's embedded documentation such as would be used by
562the pod2man, pod2html, or pod2text programs. The Perl compiler ignores
563pods entirely, just as the translators ignore code. Here's an example of
564some pods describing the informal interface:
565
566 =head1 NAME
567
568 Person - class to implement people
569
570 =head1 SYNOPSIS
571
572 use Person;
573
574 #################
575 # class methods #
576 #################
577 $ob = Person->new;
578 $count = Person->population;
579
580 #######################
581 # object data methods #
582 #######################
583
584 ### get versions ###
585 $who = $ob->name;
586 $years = $ob->age;
587 @pals = $ob->peers;
588
589 ### set versions ###
590 $ob->name("Jason");
591 $ob->age(23);
592 $ob->peers( "Norbert", "Rhys", "Phineas" );
593
594 ########################
595 # other object methods #
596 ########################
597
598 $phrase = $ob->exclaim;
599 $ob->happy_birthday;
600
601 =head1 DESCRIPTION
602
603 The Person class implements dah dee dah dee dah....
604
605That's all there is to the matter of interface versus implementation.
606A programmer who opens up the module and plays around with all the private
607little shiny bits that were safely locked up behind the interface contract
608has voided the warranty, and you shouldn't worry about their fate.
609
610=head1 Aggregation
611
612Suppose you later want to change the class to implement better names.
613Perhaps you'd like to support both given names (called Christian names,
614irrespective of one's religion) and family names (called surnames), plus
615nicknames and titles. If users of your Person class have been properly
616accessing it through its documented interface, then you can easily change
617the underlying implementation. If they haven't, then they lose and
618it's their fault for breaking the contract and voiding their warranty.
619
620To do this, we'll make another class, this one called Fullname. What's
621the Fullname class look like? To answer that question, you have to
622first figure out how you want to use it. How about we use it this way:
623
624 $him = Person->new();
625 $him->fullname->title("St");
626 $him->fullname->christian("Thomas");
627 $him->fullname->surname("Aquinas");
628 $him->fullname->nickname("Tommy");
629 printf "His normal name is %s\n", $him->name;
630 printf "But his real name is %s\n", $him->fullname->as_string;
631
632Ok. To do this, we'll change Person::new() so that it supports
633a full name field this way:
634
635 sub new {
eac7fe86 636 my $class = shift;
5f05dabc 637 my $self = {};
638 $self->{FULLNAME} = Fullname->new();
639 $self->{AGE} = undef;
640 $self->{PEERS} = [];
641 $self->{"_CENSUS"} = \$Census;
642 bless ($self, $class);
643 ++ ${ $self->{"_CENSUS"} };
644 return $self;
645 }
646
647 sub fullname {
648 my $self = shift;
649 return $self->{FULLNAME};
650 }
651
652Then to support old code, define Person::name() this way:
653
654 sub name {
655 my $self = shift;
656 return $self->{FULLNAME}->nickname(@_)
657 || $self->{FULLNAME}->christian(@_);
658 }
659
660Here's the Fullname class. We'll use the same technique
661of using a hash reference to hold data fields, and methods
662by the appropriate name to access them:
663
664 package Fullname;
665 use strict;
666
667 sub new {
eac7fe86 668 my $class = shift;
5f05dabc 669 my $self = {
670 TITLE => undef,
671 CHRISTIAN => undef,
672 SURNAME => undef,
673 NICK => undef,
674 };
675 bless ($self, $class);
676 return $self;
677 }
678
679 sub christian {
680 my $self = shift;
681 if (@_) { $self->{CHRISTIAN} = shift }
682 return $self->{CHRISTIAN};
683 }
684
685 sub surname {
686 my $self = shift;
687 if (@_) { $self->{SURNAME} = shift }
688 return $self->{SURNAME};
689 }
690
691 sub nickname {
692 my $self = shift;
693 if (@_) { $self->{NICK} = shift }
694 return $self->{NICK};
695 }
696
697 sub title {
698 my $self = shift;
699 if (@_) { $self->{TITLE} = shift }
700 return $self->{TITLE};
701 }
702
703 sub as_string {
704 my $self = shift;
705 my $name = join(" ", @$self{'CHRISTIAN', 'SURNAME'});
706 if ($self->{TITLE}) {
707 $name = $self->{TITLE} . " " . $name;
708 }
709 return $name;
710 }
711
712 1;
713
714Finally, here's the test program:
715
716 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
717 use strict;
718 use Person;
719 sub END { show_census() }
720
721 sub show_census () {
722 printf "Current population: %d\n", Person->population;
723 }
724
725 Person->debug(1);
726
727 show_census();
728
729 my $him = Person->new();
730
731 $him->fullname->christian("Thomas");
732 $him->fullname->surname("Aquinas");
733 $him->fullname->nickname("Tommy");
734 $him->fullname->title("St");
735 $him->age(1);
736
69fc43e8 737 printf "%s is really %s.\n", $him->name, $him->fullname->as_string;
5f05dabc 738 printf "%s's age: %d.\n", $him->name, $him->age;
739 $him->happy_birthday;
740 printf "%s's age: %d.\n", $him->name, $him->age;
741
742 show_census();
743
744=head1 Inheritance
745
746Object-oriented programming systems all support some notion of
747inheritance. Inheritance means allowing one class to piggy-back on
748top of another one so you don't have to write the same code again and
749again. It's about software reuse, and therefore related to Laziness,
750the principal virtue of a programmer. (The import/export mechanisms in
751traditional modules are also a form of code reuse, but a simpler one than
752the true inheritance that you find in object modules.)
753
754Sometimes the syntax of inheritance is built into the core of the
755language, and sometimes it's not. Perl has no special syntax for
756specifying the class (or classes) to inherit from. Instead, it's all
757strictly in the semantics. Each package can have a variable called @ISA,
758which governs (method) inheritance. If you try to call a method on an
759object or class, and that method is not found in that object's package,
760Perl then looks to @ISA for other packages to go looking through in
761search of the missing method.
762
763Like the special per-package variables recognized by Exporter (such as
764@EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK, @EXPORT_FAIL, %EXPORT_TAGS, and $VERSION), the @ISA
765array I<must> be a package-scoped global and not a file-scoped lexical
766created via my(). Most classes have just one item in their @ISA array.
767In this case, we have what's called "single inheritance", or SI for short.
768
769Consider this class:
770
771 package Employee;
772 use Person;
773 @ISA = ("Person");
774 1;
775
776Not a lot to it, eh? All it's doing so far is loading in another
777class and stating that this one will inherit methods from that
778other class if need be. We have given it none of its own methods.
779We rely upon an Employee to behave just like a Person.
780
781Setting up an empty class like this is called the "empty subclass test";
782that is, making a derived class that does nothing but inherit from a
783base class. If the original base class has been designed properly,
784then the new derived class can be used as a drop-in replacement for the
785old one. This means you should be able to write a program like this:
786
3e3baf6d 787 use Employee;
5f05dabc 788 my $empl = Employee->new();
789 $empl->name("Jason");
790 $empl->age(23);
791 printf "%s is age %d.\n", $empl->name, $empl->age;
792
793By proper design, we mean always using the two-argument form of bless(),
794avoiding direct access of global data, and not exporting anything. If you
795look back at the Person::new() function we defined above, we were careful
796to do that. There's a bit of package data used in the constructor,
797but the reference to this is stored on the object itself and all other
798methods access package data via that reference, so we should be ok.
799
800What do we mean by the Person::new() function -- isn't that actually
801a method? Well, in principle, yes. A method is just a function that
802expects as its first argument a class name (package) or object
803(blessed reference). Person::new() is the function that both the
c47ff5f1 804C<< Person->new() >> method and the C<< Employee->new() >> method end
5f05dabc 805up calling. Understand that while a method call looks a lot like a
806function call, they aren't really quite the same, and if you treat them
807as the same, you'll very soon be left with nothing but broken programs.
808First, the actual underlying calling conventions are different: method
809calls get an extra argument. Second, function calls don't do inheritance,
810but methods do.
811
812 Method Call Resulting Function Call
813 ----------- ------------------------
814 Person->new() Person::new("Person")
815 Employee->new() Person::new("Employee")
816
817So don't use function calls when you mean to call a method.
818
819If an employee is just a Person, that's not all too very interesting.
820So let's add some other methods. We'll give our employee
821data fields to access their salary, their employee ID, and their
822start date.
823
824If you're getting a little tired of creating all these nearly identical
825methods just to get at the object's data, do not despair. Later,
826we'll describe several different convenience mechanisms for shortening
827this up. Meanwhile, here's the straight-forward way:
828
829 sub salary {
830 my $self = shift;
831 if (@_) { $self->{SALARY} = shift }
832 return $self->{SALARY};
833 }
834
835 sub id_number {
836 my $self = shift;
837 if (@_) { $self->{ID} = shift }
838 return $self->{ID};
839 }
840
841 sub start_date {
842 my $self = shift;
843 if (@_) { $self->{START_DATE} = shift }
844 return $self->{START_DATE};
845 }
846
847=head2 Overridden Methods
848
849What happens when both a derived class and its base class have the same
850method defined? Well, then you get the derived class's version of that
851method. For example, let's say that we want the peers() method called on
852an employee to act a bit differently. Instead of just returning the list
853of peer names, let's return slightly different strings. So doing this:
854
855 $empl->peers("Peter", "Paul", "Mary");
856 printf "His peers are: %s\n", join(", ", $empl->peers);
857
858will produce:
859
860 His peers are: PEON=PETER, PEON=PAUL, PEON=MARY
861
862To do this, merely add this definition into the Employee.pm file:
863
864 sub peers {
865 my $self = shift;
866 if (@_) { @{ $self->{PEERS} } = @_ }
867 return map { "PEON=\U$_" } @{ $self->{PEERS} };
868 }
869
870There, we've just demonstrated the high-falutin' concept known in certain
871circles as I<polymorphism>. We've taken on the form and behaviour of
872an existing object, and then we've altered it to suit our own purposes.
873This is a form of Laziness. (Getting polymorphed is also what happens
874when the wizard decides you'd look better as a frog.)
875
876Every now and then you'll want to have a method call trigger both its
68dc0745 877derived class (also known as "subclass") version as well as its base class
5f05dabc 878(also known as "superclass") version. In practice, constructors and
879destructors are likely to want to do this, and it probably also makes
880sense in the debug() method we showed previously.
881
882To do this, add this to Employee.pm:
883
884 use Carp;
885 my $Debugging = 0;
886
887 sub debug {
888 my $self = shift;
889 confess "usage: thing->debug(level)" unless @_ == 1;
890 my $level = shift;
891 if (ref($self)) {
892 $self->{"_DEBUG"} = $level;
893 } else {
894 $Debugging = $level; # whole class
895 }
896 Person::debug($self, $Debugging); # don't really do this
897 }
898
899As you see, we turn around and call the Person package's debug() function.
900But this is far too fragile for good design. What if Person doesn't
901have a debug() function, but is inheriting I<its> debug() method
902from elsewhere? It would have been slightly better to say
903
904 Person->debug($Debugging);
905
906But even that's got too much hard-coded. It's somewhat better to say
907
908 $self->Person::debug($Debugging);
909
910Which is a funny way to say to start looking for a debug() method up
911in Person. This strategy is more often seen on overridden object methods
912than on overridden class methods.
913
914There is still something a bit off here. We've hard-coded our
915superclass's name. This in particular is bad if you change which classes
916you inherit from, or add others. Fortunately, the pseudoclass SUPER
917comes to the rescue here.
918
71be2cbc 919 $self->SUPER::debug($Debugging);
5f05dabc 920
921This way it starts looking in my class's @ISA. This only makes sense
922from I<within> a method call, though. Don't try to access anything
923in SUPER:: from anywhere else, because it doesn't exist outside
029f3b44
DM
924an overridden method call. Note that C<SUPER> refers to the superclass of
925the current package, I<not> to the superclass of C<$self>.
5f05dabc 926
927Things are getting a bit complicated here. Have we done anything
928we shouldn't? As before, one way to test whether we're designing
929a decent class is via the empty subclass test. Since we already have
930an Employee class that we're trying to check, we'd better get a new
931empty subclass that can derive from Employee. Here's one:
932
933 package Boss;
934 use Employee; # :-)
935 @ISA = qw(Employee);
936
937And here's the test program:
938
939 #!/usr/bin/perl -w
940 use strict;
941 use Boss;
942 Boss->debug(1);
943
944 my $boss = Boss->new();
945
946 $boss->fullname->title("Don");
947 $boss->fullname->surname("Pichon Alvarez");
948 $boss->fullname->christian("Federico Jesus");
949 $boss->fullname->nickname("Fred");
950
951 $boss->age(47);
952 $boss->peers("Frank", "Felipe", "Faust");
953
69fc43e8 954 printf "%s is age %d.\n", $boss->fullname->as_string, $boss->age;
5f05dabc 955 printf "His peers are: %s\n", join(", ", $boss->peers);
956
957Running it, we see that we're still ok. If you'd like to dump out your
958object in a nice format, somewhat like the way the 'x' command works in
959the debugger, you could use the Data::Dumper module from CPAN this way:
960
961 use Data::Dumper;
962 print "Here's the boss:\n";
963 print Dumper($boss);
964
965Which shows us something like this:
966
967 Here's the boss:
968 $VAR1 = bless( {
969 _CENSUS => \1,
970 FULLNAME => bless( {
971 TITLE => 'Don',
972 SURNAME => 'Pichon Alvarez',
973 NICK => 'Fred',
974 CHRISTIAN => 'Federico Jesus'
975 }, 'Fullname' ),
976 AGE => 47,
977 PEERS => [
978 'Frank',
979 'Felipe',
980 'Faust'
981 ]
982 }, 'Boss' );
983
984Hm.... something's missing there. What about the salary, start date,
985and ID fields? Well, we never set them to anything, even undef, so they
986don't show up in the hash's keys. The Employee class has no new() method
987of its own, and the new() method in Person doesn't know about Employees.
988(Nor should it: proper OO design dictates that a subclass be allowed to
989know about its immediate superclass, but never vice-versa.) So let's
990fix up Employee::new() this way:
991
992 sub new {
eac7fe86 993 my $class = shift;
5f05dabc 994 my $self = $class->SUPER::new();
995 $self->{SALARY} = undef;
996 $self->{ID} = undef;
997 $self->{START_DATE} = undef;
998 bless ($self, $class); # reconsecrate
999 return $self;
1000 }
1001
1002Now if you dump out an Employee or Boss object, you'll find
1003that new fields show up there now.
1004
1005=head2 Multiple Inheritance
1006
1007Ok, at the risk of confusing beginners and annoying OO gurus, it's
1008time to confess that Perl's object system includes that controversial
1009notion known as multiple inheritance, or MI for short. All this means
1010is that rather than having just one parent class who in turn might
1011itself have a parent class, etc., that you can directly inherit from
1012two or more parents. It's true that some uses of MI can get you into
1013trouble, although hopefully not quite so much trouble with Perl as with
1014dubiously-OO languages like C++.
1015
1016The way it works is actually pretty simple: just put more than one package
1017name in your @ISA array. When it comes time for Perl to go finding
1018methods for your object, it looks at each of these packages in order.
1019Well, kinda. It's actually a fully recursive, depth-first order.
1020Consider a bunch of @ISA arrays like this:
1021
1022 @First::ISA = qw( Alpha );
1023 @Second::ISA = qw( Beta );
1024 @Third::ISA = qw( First Second );
1025
1026If you have an object of class Third:
1027
1028 my $ob = Third->new();
1029 $ob->spin();
1030
1031How do we find a spin() method (or a new() method for that matter)?
1032Because the search is depth-first, classes will be looked up
1033in the following order: Third, First, Alpha, Second, and Beta.
1034
1035In practice, few class modules have been seen that actually
1036make use of MI. One nearly always chooses simple containership of
1037one class within another over MI. That's why our Person
1038object I<contained> a Fullname object. That doesn't mean
1039it I<was> one.
1040
1041However, there is one particular area where MI in Perl is rampant:
1042borrowing another class's class methods. This is rather common,
1043especially with some bundled "objectless" classes,
1044like Exporter, DynaLoader, AutoLoader, and SelfLoader. These classes
1045do not provide constructors; they exist only so you may inherit their
1046class methods. (It's not entirely clear why inheritance was done
1047here rather than traditional module importation.)
1048
1049For example, here is the POSIX module's @ISA:
1050
1051 package POSIX;
1052 @ISA = qw(Exporter DynaLoader);
1053
1054The POSIX module isn't really an object module, but then,
1055neither are Exporter or DynaLoader. They're just lending their
1056classes' behaviours to POSIX.
1057
1058Why don't people use MI for object methods much? One reason is that
1059it can have complicated side-effects. For one thing, your inheritance
1060graph (no longer a tree) might converge back to the same base class.
1061Although Perl guards against recursive inheritance, merely having parents
1062who are related to each other via a common ancestor, incestuous though
1063it sounds, is not forbidden. What if in our Third class shown above we
1064wanted its new() method to also call both overridden constructors in its
1065two parent classes? The SUPER notation would only find the first one.
1066Also, what about if the Alpha and Beta classes both had a common ancestor,
1067like Nought? If you kept climbing up the inheritance tree calling
1068overridden methods, you'd end up calling Nought::new() twice,
1069which might well be a bad idea.
1070
1071=head2 UNIVERSAL: The Root of All Objects
1072
1073Wouldn't it be convenient if all objects were rooted at some ultimate
1074base class? That way you could give every object common methods without
1075having to go and add it to each and every @ISA. Well, it turns out that
1076you can. You don't see it, but Perl tacitly and irrevocably assumes
1077that there's an extra element at the end of @ISA: the class UNIVERSAL.
a6006777 1078In version 5.003, there were no predefined methods there, but you could put
5f05dabc 1079whatever you felt like into it.
1080
a6006777 1081However, as of version 5.004 (or some subversive releases, like 5.003_08),
54310121 1082UNIVERSAL has some methods in it already. These are builtin to your Perl
5f05dabc 1083binary, so they don't take any extra time to load. Predefined methods
1084include isa(), can(), and VERSION(). isa() tells you whether an object or
1085class "is" another one without having to traverse the hierarchy yourself:
1086
1087 $has_io = $fd->isa("IO::Handle");
1088 $itza_handle = IO::Socket->isa("IO::Handle");
1089
1090The can() method, called against that object or class, reports back
1091whether its string argument is a callable method name in that class.
1092In fact, it gives you back a function reference to that method:
1093
1094 $his_print_method = $obj->can('as_string');
1095
1096Finally, the VERSION method checks whether the class (or the object's
1097class) has a package global called $VERSION that's high enough, as in:
1098
1099 Some_Module->VERSION(3.0);
1100 $his_vers = $ob->VERSION();
1101
1102However, we don't usually call VERSION ourselves. (Remember that an all
68dc0745 1103uppercase function name is a Perl convention that indicates that the
5f05dabc 1104function will be automatically used by Perl in some way.) In this case,
1105it happens when you say
1106
1107 use Some_Module 3.0;
1108
8d9aa5e0 1109If you wanted to add version checking to your Person class explained
5f05dabc 1110above, just add this to Person.pm:
1111
77ca0c92 1112 our $VERSION = '1.1';
5f05dabc 1113
0184c62d 1114and then in Employee.pm you can say
5f05dabc 1115
0184c62d 1116 use Person 1.1;
5f05dabc 1117
1118And it would make sure that you have at least that version number or
1119higher available. This is not the same as loading in that exact version
1120number. No mechanism currently exists for concurrent installation of
1121multiple versions of a module. Lamentably.
1122
1123=head1 Alternate Object Representations
1124
1125Nothing requires objects to be implemented as hash references. An object
1126can be any sort of reference so long as its referent has been suitably
1127blessed. That means scalar, array, and code references are also fair
1128game.
1129
1130A scalar would work if the object has only one datum to hold. An array
1131would work for most cases, but makes inheritance a bit dodgy because
1132you have to invent new indices for the derived classes.
1133
1134=head2 Arrays as Objects
1135
1136If the user of your class honors the contract and sticks to the advertised
1137interface, then you can change its underlying interface if you feel
1138like it. Here's another implementation that conforms to the same
1139interface specification. This time we'll use an array reference
1140instead of a hash reference to represent the object.
1141
1142 package Person;
1143 use strict;
1144
1145 my($NAME, $AGE, $PEERS) = ( 0 .. 2 );
1146
1147 ############################################
1148 ## the object constructor (array version) ##
1149 ############################################
1150 sub new {
1151 my $self = [];
1152 $self->[$NAME] = undef; # this is unnecessary
68dc0745 1153 $self->[$AGE] = undef; # as is this
5f05dabc 1154 $self->[$PEERS] = []; # but this isn't, really
1155 bless($self);
1156 return $self;
1157 }
1158
1159 sub name {
1160 my $self = shift;
1161 if (@_) { $self->[$NAME] = shift }
1162 return $self->[$NAME];
1163 }
1164
1165 sub age {
1166 my $self = shift;
1167 if (@_) { $self->[$AGE] = shift }
1168 return $self->[$AGE];
1169 }
1170
1171 sub peers {
1172 my $self = shift;
1173 if (@_) { @{ $self->[$PEERS] } = @_ }
1174 return @{ $self->[$PEERS] };
1175 }
1176
1177 1; # so the require or use succeeds
1178
8d9aa5e0
TC
1179You might guess that the array access would be a lot faster than the
1180hash access, but they're actually comparable. The array is a I<little>
5f05dabc 1181bit faster, but not more than ten or fifteen percent, even when you
1182replace the variables above like $AGE with literal numbers, like 1.
1183A bigger difference between the two approaches can be found in memory use.
1184A hash representation takes up more memory than an array representation
8d9aa5e0 1185because you have to allocate memory for the keys as well as for the values.
a6006777 1186However, it really isn't that bad, especially since as of version 5.004,
5f05dabc 1187memory is only allocated once for a given hash key, no matter how many
1188hashes have that key. It's expected that sometime in the future, even
1189these differences will fade into obscurity as more efficient underlying
1190representations are devised.
1191
1192Still, the tiny edge in speed (and somewhat larger one in memory)
1193is enough to make some programmers choose an array representation
1194for simple classes. There's still a little problem with
1195scalability, though, because later in life when you feel
1196like creating subclasses, you'll find that hashes just work
1197out better.
1198
1199=head2 Closures as Objects
1200
1201Using a code reference to represent an object offers some fascinating
1202possibilities. We can create a new anonymous function (closure) who
1203alone in all the world can see the object's data. This is because we
1204put the data into an anonymous hash that's lexically visible only to
1205the closure we create, bless, and return as the object. This object's
1206methods turn around and call the closure as a regular subroutine call,
1207passing it the field we want to affect. (Yes,
1208the double-function call is slow, but if you wanted fast, you wouldn't
1209be using objects at all, eh? :-)
1210
1211Use would be similar to before:
1212
1213 use Person;
1214 $him = Person->new();
1215 $him->name("Jason");
1216 $him->age(23);
1217 $him->peers( [ "Norbert", "Rhys", "Phineas" ] );
1218 printf "%s is %d years old.\n", $him->name, $him->age;
1219 print "His peers are: ", join(", ", @{$him->peers}), "\n";
1220
1221but the implementation would be radically, perhaps even sublimely
1222different:
1223
1224 package Person;
1225
1226 sub new {
eac7fe86 1227 my $class = shift;
5f05dabc 1228 my $self = {
1229 NAME => undef,
1230 AGE => undef,
1231 PEERS => [],
1232 };
1233 my $closure = sub {
1234 my $field = shift;
1235 if (@_) { $self->{$field} = shift }
1236 return $self->{$field};
1237 };
1238 bless($closure, $class);
1239 return $closure;
1240 }
1241
1242 sub name { &{ $_[0] }("NAME", @_[ 1 .. $#_ ] ) }
1243 sub age { &{ $_[0] }("AGE", @_[ 1 .. $#_ ] ) }
1244 sub peers { &{ $_[0] }("PEERS", @_[ 1 .. $#_ ] ) }
1245
1246 1;
1247
1248Because this object is hidden behind a code reference, it's probably a bit
1249mysterious to those whose background is more firmly rooted in standard
1250procedural or object-based programming languages than in functional
1251programming languages whence closures derive. The object
1252created and returned by the new() method is itself not a data reference
1253as we've seen before. It's an anonymous code reference that has within
1254it access to a specific version (lexical binding and instantiation)
1255of the object's data, which are stored in the private variable $self.
1256Although this is the same function each time, it contains a different
1257version of $self.
1258
1259When a method like C<$him-E<gt>name("Jason")> is called, its implicit
8d9aa5e0 1260zeroth argument is the invoking object--just as it is with all method
5f05dabc 1261calls. But in this case, it's our code reference (something like a
1262function pointer in C++, but with deep binding of lexical variables).
1263There's not a lot to be done with a code reference beyond calling it, so
1264that's just what we do when we say C<&{$_[0]}>. This is just a regular
1265function call, not a method call. The initial argument is the string
1266"NAME", and any remaining arguments are whatever had been passed to the
1267method itself.
1268
1269Once we're executing inside the closure that had been created in new(),
1270the $self hash reference suddenly becomes visible. The closure grabs
1271its first argument ("NAME" in this case because that's what the name()
1272method passed it), and uses that string to subscript into the private
1273hash hidden in its unique version of $self.
1274
1275Nothing under the sun will allow anyone outside the executing method to
1276be able to get at this hidden data. Well, nearly nothing. You I<could>
1277single step through the program using the debugger and find out the
1278pieces while you're in the method, but everyone else is out of luck.
1279
1280There, if that doesn't excite the Scheme folks, then I just don't know
1281what will. Translation of this technique into C++, Java, or any other
1282braindead-static language is left as a futile exercise for aficionados
1283of those camps.
1284
1285You could even add a bit of nosiness via the caller() function and
1286make the closure refuse to operate unless called via its own package.
1287This would no doubt satisfy certain fastidious concerns of programming
1288police and related puritans.
1289
1290If you were wondering when Hubris, the third principle virtue of a
1291programmer, would come into play, here you have it. (More seriously,
1292Hubris is just the pride in craftsmanship that comes from having written
1293a sound bit of well-designed code.)
1294
1295=head1 AUTOLOAD: Proxy Methods
1296
1297Autoloading is a way to intercept calls to undefined methods. An autoload
1298routine may choose to create a new function on the fly, either loaded
1299from disk or perhaps just eval()ed right there. This define-on-the-fly
1300strategy is why it's called autoloading.
1301
1302But that's only one possible approach. Another one is to just
1303have the autoloaded method itself directly provide the
1304requested service. When used in this way, you may think
1305of autoloaded methods as "proxy" methods.
1306
1307When Perl tries to call an undefined function in a particular package
1308and that function is not defined, it looks for a function in
1309that same package called AUTOLOAD. If one exists, it's called
1310with the same arguments as the original function would have had.
1311The fully-qualified name of the function is stored in that package's
1312global variable $AUTOLOAD. Once called, the function can do anything
1313it would like, including defining a new function by the right name, and
1314then doing a really fancy kind of C<goto> right to it, erasing itself
1315from the call stack.
1316
1317What does this have to do with objects? After all, we keep talking about
1318functions, not methods. Well, since a method is just a function with
1319an extra argument and some fancier semantics about where it's found,
1320we can use autoloading for methods, too. Perl doesn't start looking
1321for an AUTOLOAD method until it has exhausted the recursive hunt up
1322through @ISA, though. Some programmers have even been known to define
1323a UNIVERSAL::AUTOLOAD method to trap unresolved method calls to any
1324kind of object.
1325
1326=head2 Autoloaded Data Methods
1327
1328You probably began to get a little suspicious about the duplicated
1329code way back earlier when we first showed you the Person class, and
1330then later the Employee class. Each method used to access the
1331hash fields looked virtually identical. This should have tickled
1332that great programming virtue, Impatience, but for the time,
1333we let Laziness win out, and so did nothing. Proxy methods can cure
1334this.
1335
1336Instead of writing a new function every time we want a new data field,
1337we'll use the autoload mechanism to generate (actually, mimic) methods on
1338the fly. To verify that we're accessing a valid member, we will check
1339against an C<_permitted> (pronounced "under-permitted") field, which
1340is a reference to a file-scoped lexical (like a C file static) hash of permitted fields in this record
1341called %fields. Why the underscore? For the same reason as the _CENSUS
1342field we once used: as a marker that means "for internal use only".
1343
1344Here's what the module initialization code and class
1345constructor will look like when taking this approach:
1346
1347 package Person;
1348 use Carp;
77ca0c92 1349 our $AUTOLOAD; # it's a package global
5f05dabc 1350
1351 my %fields = (
1352 name => undef,
1353 age => undef,
1354 peers => undef,
1355 );
1356
1357 sub new {
eac7fe86 1358 my $class = shift;
5f05dabc 1359 my $self = {
1360 _permitted => \%fields,
1361 %fields,
1362 };
1363 bless $self, $class;
1364 return $self;
1365 }
1366
1367If we wanted our record to have default values, we could fill those in
1368where current we have C<undef> in the %fields hash.
1369
1370Notice how we saved a reference to our class data on the object itself?
1371Remember that it's important to access class data through the object
1372itself instead of having any method reference %fields directly, or else
1373you won't have a decent inheritance.
1374
1375The real magic, though, is going to reside in our proxy method, which
1376will handle all calls to undefined methods for objects of class Person
1377(or subclasses of Person). It has to be called AUTOLOAD. Again, it's
1378all caps because it's called for us implicitly by Perl itself, not by
1379a user directly.
1380
1381 sub AUTOLOAD {
1382 my $self = shift;
1383 my $type = ref($self)
1384 or croak "$self is not an object";
1385
1386 my $name = $AUTOLOAD;
1387 $name =~ s/.*://; # strip fully-qualified portion
1388
1389 unless (exists $self->{_permitted}->{$name} ) {
1390 croak "Can't access `$name' field in class $type";
1391 }
1392
1393 if (@_) {
1394 return $self->{$name} = shift;
1395 } else {
1396 return $self->{$name};
1397 }
1398 }
1399
1400Pretty nifty, eh? All we have to do to add new data fields
1401is modify %fields. No new functions need be written.
1402
1403I could have avoided the C<_permitted> field entirely, but I
1404wanted to demonstrate how to store a reference to class data on the
54310121 1405object so you wouldn't have to access that class data
5f05dabc 1406directly from an object method.
1407
1408=head2 Inherited Autoloaded Data Methods
1409
1410But what about inheritance? Can we define our Employee
1411class similarly? Yes, so long as we're careful enough.
1412
1413Here's how to be careful:
1414
1415 package Employee;
1416 use Person;
1417 use strict;
77ca0c92 1418 our @ISA = qw(Person);
5f05dabc 1419
1420 my %fields = (
1421 id => undef,
1422 salary => undef,
1423 );
1424
1425 sub new {
eac7fe86
CP
1426 my $class = shift;
1427 my $self = $class->SUPER::new();
5f05dabc 1428 my($element);
1429 foreach $element (keys %fields) {
1430 $self->{_permitted}->{$element} = $fields{$element};
1431 }
1432 @{$self}{keys %fields} = values %fields;
1433 return $self;
1434 }
1435
1436Once we've done this, we don't even need to have an
1437AUTOLOAD function in the Employee package, because
1438we'll grab Person's version of that via inheritance,
1439and it will all work out just fine.
1440
1441=head1 Metaclassical Tools
1442
1443Even though proxy methods can provide a more convenient approach to making
1444more struct-like classes than tediously coding up data methods as
1445functions, it still leaves a bit to be desired. For one thing, it means
1446you have to handle bogus calls that you don't mean to trap via your proxy.
1447It also means you have to be quite careful when dealing with inheritance,
1448as detailed above.
1449
1450Perl programmers have responded to this by creating several different
1451class construction classes. These metaclasses are classes
1452that create other classes. A couple worth looking at are
8cc95fdb 1453Class::Struct and Alias. These and other related metaclasses can be
5f05dabc 1454found in the modules directory on CPAN.
1455
8cc95fdb 1456=head2 Class::Struct
5f05dabc 1457
8cc95fdb 1458One of the older ones is Class::Struct. In fact, its syntax and
5f05dabc 1459interface were sketched out long before perl5 even solidified into a
8d9aa5e0
TC
1460real thing. What it does is provide you a way to "declare" a class
1461as having objects whose fields are of a specific type. The function
1462that does this is called, not surprisingly enough, struct(). Because
1463structures or records are not base types in Perl, each time you want to
1464create a class to provide a record-like data object, you yourself have
1465to define a new() method, plus separate data-access methods for each of
1466that record's fields. You'll quickly become bored with this process.
8cc95fdb 1467The Class::Struct::struct() function alleviates this tedium.
5f05dabc 1468
1469Here's a simple example of using it:
1470
8cc95fdb 1471 use Class::Struct qw(struct);
5f05dabc 1472 use Jobbie; # user-defined; see below
1473
1474 struct 'Fred' => {
1475 one => '$',
1476 many => '@',
0184c62d 1477 profession => 'Jobbie', # does not call Jobbie->new()
5f05dabc 1478 };
1479
0184c62d 1480 $ob = Fred->new(profession => Jobbie->new());
5f05dabc 1481 $ob->one("hmmmm");
1482
1483 $ob->many(0, "here");
1484 $ob->many(1, "you");
1485 $ob->many(2, "go");
1486 print "Just set: ", $ob->many(2), "\n";
1487
1488 $ob->profession->salary(10_000);
1489
1490You can declare types in the struct to be basic Perl types, or
1491user-defined types (classes). User types will be initialized by calling
1492that class's new() method.
1493
0184c62d
PZ
1494Take care that the C<Jobbie> object is not created automatically by the
1495C<Fred> class's new() method, so you should specify a C<Jobbie> object
1496when you create an instance of C<Fred>.
1497
5f05dabc 1498Here's a real-world example of using struct generation. Let's say you
1499wanted to override Perl's idea of gethostbyname() and gethostbyaddr() so
1500that they would return objects that acted like C structures. We don't
1501care about high-falutin' OO gunk. All we want is for these objects to
1502act like structs in the C sense.
1503
1504 use Socket;
1505 use Net::hostent;
1506 $h = gethostbyname("perl.com"); # object return
1507 printf "perl.com's real name is %s, address %s\n",
1508 $h->name, inet_ntoa($h->addr);
1509
8cc95fdb 1510Here's how to do this using the Class::Struct module.
5f05dabc 1511The crux is going to be this call:
1512
1513 struct 'Net::hostent' => [ # note bracket
1514 name => '$',
1515 aliases => '@',
1516 addrtype => '$',
1517 'length' => '$',
1518 addr_list => '@',
1519 ];
1520
1521Which creates object methods of those names and types.
1522It even creates a new() method for us.
1523
1524We could also have implemented our object this way:
1525
1526 struct 'Net::hostent' => { # note brace
1527 name => '$',
1528 aliases => '@',
1529 addrtype => '$',
1530 'length' => '$',
1531 addr_list => '@',
1532 };
1533
8cc95fdb 1534and then Class::Struct would have used an anonymous hash as the object
5f05dabc 1535type, instead of an anonymous array. The array is faster and smaller,
1536but the hash works out better if you eventually want to do inheritance.
1537Since for this struct-like object we aren't planning on inheritance,
1538this time we'll opt for better speed and size over better flexibility.
1539
1540Here's the whole implementation:
1541
1542 package Net::hostent;
1543 use strict;
1544
1545 BEGIN {
1546 use Exporter ();
77ca0c92
LW
1547 our @EXPORT = qw(gethostbyname gethostbyaddr gethost);
1548 our @EXPORT_OK = qw(
1549 $h_name @h_aliases
1550 $h_addrtype $h_length
1551 @h_addr_list $h_addr
1552 );
1553 our %EXPORT_TAGS = ( FIELDS => [ @EXPORT_OK, @EXPORT ] );
5f05dabc 1554 }
77ca0c92 1555 our @EXPORT_OK;
5f05dabc 1556
8cc95fdb 1557 # Class::Struct forbids use of @ISA
1558 sub import { goto &Exporter::import }
1559
1560 use Class::Struct qw(struct);
5f05dabc 1561 struct 'Net::hostent' => [
1562 name => '$',
1563 aliases => '@',
1564 addrtype => '$',
1565 'length' => '$',
1566 addr_list => '@',
1567 ];
1568
1569 sub addr { shift->addr_list->[0] }
1570
1571 sub populate (@) {
1572 return unless @_;
8cc95fdb 1573 my $hob = new(); # Class::Struct made this!
5f05dabc 1574 $h_name = $hob->[0] = $_[0];
1575 @h_aliases = @{ $hob->[1] } = split ' ', $_[1];
1576 $h_addrtype = $hob->[2] = $_[2];
1577 $h_length = $hob->[3] = $_[3];
1578 $h_addr = $_[4];
1579 @h_addr_list = @{ $hob->[4] } = @_[ (4 .. $#_) ];
1580 return $hob;
1581 }
1582
1583 sub gethostbyname ($) { populate(CORE::gethostbyname(shift)) }
1584
1585 sub gethostbyaddr ($;$) {
1586 my ($addr, $addrtype);
1587 $addr = shift;
1588 require Socket unless @_;
1589 $addrtype = @_ ? shift : Socket::AF_INET();
1590 populate(CORE::gethostbyaddr($addr, $addrtype))
1591 }
1592
1593 sub gethost($) {
1594 if ($_[0] =~ /^\d+(?:\.\d+(?:\.\d+(?:\.\d+)?)?)?$/) {
1595 require Socket;
1596 &gethostbyaddr(Socket::inet_aton(shift));
1597 } else {
1598 &gethostbyname;
1599 }
1600 }
1601
1602 1;
1603
1604We've snuck in quite a fair bit of other concepts besides just dynamic
1605class creation, like overriding core functions, import/export bits,
8cc95fdb 1606function prototyping, short-cut function call via C<&whatever>, and
1607function replacement with C<goto &whatever>. These all mostly make
1608sense from the perspective of a traditional module, but as you can see,
1609we can also use them in an object module.
5f05dabc 1610
1611You can look at other object-based, struct-like overrides of core
1612functions in the 5.004 release of Perl in File::stat, Net::hostent,
1613Net::netent, Net::protoent, Net::servent, Time::gmtime, Time::localtime,
1614User::grent, and User::pwent. These modules have a final component
68dc0745 1615that's all lowercase, by convention reserved for compiler pragmas,
54310121 1616because they affect the compilation and change a builtin function.
5f05dabc 1617They also have the type names that a C programmer would most expect.
1618
1619=head2 Data Members as Variables
1620
1621If you're used to C++ objects, then you're accustomed to being able to
1622get at an object's data members as simple variables from within a method.
1623The Alias module provides for this, as well as a good bit more, such
1624as the possibility of private methods that the object can call but folks
1625outside the class cannot.
1626
1627Here's an example of creating a Person using the Alias module.
1628When you update these magical instance variables, you automatically
1629update value fields in the hash. Convenient, eh?
1630
1631 package Person;
1632
1633 # this is the same as before...
1634 sub new {
eac7fe86 1635 my $class = shift;
5f05dabc 1636 my $self = {
1637 NAME => undef,
1638 AGE => undef,
1639 PEERS => [],
1640 };
1641 bless($self, $class);
1642 return $self;
1643 }
1644
1645 use Alias qw(attr);
77ca0c92 1646 our ($NAME, $AGE, $PEERS);
5f05dabc 1647
1648 sub name {
1649 my $self = attr shift;
1650 if (@_) { $NAME = shift; }
1651 return $NAME;
1652 }
1653
1654 sub age {
1655 my $self = attr shift;
1656 if (@_) { $AGE = shift; }
1657 return $AGE;
1658 }
1659
1660 sub peers {
1661 my $self = attr shift;
1662 if (@_) { @PEERS = @_; }
1663 return @PEERS;
1664 }
1665
1666 sub exclaim {
1667 my $self = attr shift;
1668 return sprintf "Hi, I'm %s, age %d, working with %s",
1669 $NAME, $AGE, join(", ", @PEERS);
1670 }
1671
1672 sub happy_birthday {
1673 my $self = attr shift;
1674 return ++$AGE;
1675 }
1676
77ca0c92 1677The need for the C<our> declaration is because what Alias does
5f05dabc 1678is play with package globals with the same name as the fields. To use
54310121 1679globals while C<use strict> is in effect, you have to predeclare them.
5f05dabc 1680These package variables are localized to the block enclosing the attr()
1681call just as if you'd used a local() on them. However, that means that
1682they're still considered global variables with temporary values, just
1683as with any other local().
1684
1685It would be nice to combine Alias with
8cc95fdb 1686something like Class::Struct or Class::MethodMaker.
5f05dabc 1687
13a2d996 1688=head1 NOTES
5f05dabc 1689
1690=head2 Object Terminology
1691
1692In the various OO literature, it seems that a lot of different words
1693are used to describe only a few different concepts. If you're not
1694already an object programmer, then you don't need to worry about all
1695these fancy words. But if you are, then you might like to know how to
1696get at the same concepts in Perl.
1697
1698For example, it's common to call an object an I<instance> of a class
1699and to call those objects' methods I<instance methods>. Data fields
1700peculiar to each object are often called I<instance data> or I<object
1701attributes>, and data fields common to all members of that class are
1702I<class data>, I<class attributes>, or I<static data members>.
1703
1704Also, I<base class>, I<generic class>, and I<superclass> all describe
1705the same notion, whereas I<derived class>, I<specific class>, and
1706I<subclass> describe the other related one.
1707
1708C++ programmers have I<static methods> and I<virtual methods>,
1709but Perl only has I<class methods> and I<object methods>.
1710Actually, Perl only has methods. Whether a method gets used
1711as a class or object method is by usage only. You could accidentally
1712call a class method (one expecting a string argument) on an
1713object (one expecting a reference), or vice versa.
1714
aaa2bbb1 1715From the C++ perspective, all methods in Perl are virtual.
5f05dabc 1716This, by the way, is why they are never checked for function
54310121 1717prototypes in the argument list as regular builtin and user-defined
5f05dabc 1718functions can be.
1719
1720Because a class is itself something of an object, Perl's classes can be
1721taken as describing both a "class as meta-object" (also called I<object
1722factory>) philosophy and the "class as type definition" (I<declaring>
1723behaviour, not I<defining> mechanism) idea. C++ supports the latter
1724notion, but not the former.
1725
1726=head1 SEE ALSO
1727
54310121 1728The following manpages will doubtless provide more
5f05dabc 1729background for this one:
1730L<perlmod>,
1731L<perlref>,
1732L<perlobj>,
1733L<perlbot>,
1734L<perltie>,
1735and
1736L<overload>.
1737
8257a158
MS
1738L<perlboot> is a kinder, gentler introduction to object-oriented
1739programming.
1740
890a53b9 1741L<perltooc> provides more detail on class data.
8257a158
MS
1742
1743Some modules which might prove interesting are Class::Accessor,
1744Class::Class, Class::Contract, Class::Data::Inheritable,
1745Class::MethodMaker and Tie::SecureHash
1746
1747
5a964f20
TC
1748=head1 AUTHOR AND COPYRIGHT
1749
1750Copyright (c) 1997, 1998 Tom Christiansen
1751All rights reserved.
1752
5a7beb56
JH
1753This documentation is free; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
1754under the same terms as Perl itself.
5f05dabc 1755
5a964f20
TC
1756Irrespective of its distribution, all code examples in this file
1757are hereby placed into the public domain. You are permitted and
1758encouraged to use this code in your own programs for fun
1759or for profit as you see fit. A simple comment in the code giving
1760credit would be courteous but is not required.
1761
1762=head1 COPYRIGHT
5f05dabc 1763
1764=head2 Acknowledgments
1765
1766Thanks to
1767Larry Wall,
1768Roderick Schertler,
1769Gurusamy Sarathy,
1770Dean Roehrich,
1771Raphael Manfredi,
1772Brent Halsey,
1773Greg Bacon,
1774Brad Appleton,
1775and many others for their helpful comments.