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PERLMOD

PERLMOD

NAME DESCRIPTION SEE ALSO


NAME

perlmod - Perl modules (packages and symbol tables)

DESCRIPTION

Packages

Perl provides a mechanism for alternative namespaces to protect packages from stomping on each other's variables. In fact, there's really no such thing as a global variable in Perl. The package statement declares the compilation unit as being in the given namespace. The scope of the package declaration is from the declaration itself through the end of the enclosing block, eval, or file, whichever comes first (the same scope as the my() and local() operators). Unqualified dynamic identifiers will be in this namespace, except for those few identifiers that if unqualified, default to the main package instead of the current one as described below. A package statement affects only dynamic variables--including those you've used local() on--but not lexical variables created with my(). Typically it would be the first declaration in a file included by the do, require, or use operators. You can switch into a package in more than one place; it merely influences which symbol table is used by the compiler for the rest of that block. You can refer to variables and filehandles in other packages by prefixing the identifier with the package name and a double colon: $Package::Variable. If the package name is null, the main package is assumed. That is, $::sail is equivalent to $main::sail.

The old package delimiter was a single quote, but double colon is now the preferred delimiter, in part because it's more readable to humans, and in part because it's more readable to emacs macros. It also makes C

  • + programmers feel like they know what's

going on--as opposed to using the single quote as separator, which was there to make Ada programmers feel like they knew what's going on. Because the old-fashioned syntax is still supported for backwards compatibility, if you try to use a string like , you'll be accessing $owner::s; that is, the $s variable in package owner, which is probably not what you meant. Use braces to disambiguate, as in .

Packages may themselves contain package separators, as in $OUTER::INNER::var. This implies nothing about the order of name lookups, however. There are no relative packages: all symbols are either local to the current package, or must be fully qualified from the outer package name down. For instance, there is nowhere within package OUTER that $INNER::var refers to $OUTER::INNER::var. It would treat package INNER as a totally separate global package.

Only identifiers starting with letters (or underscore) are stored in a package's symbol table. All other symbols are kept in package main, including all punctuation variables, like $_. In addition, when unqualified, the identifiers STDIN , STDOUT , STDERR , ARGV , ARGVOUT , ENV , INC , and SIG are forced to be in package main, even when used for other purposes than their built-in one. If you have a package called m, s, or y, then you can't use the qualified form of an identifier because it would be instead interpreted as a pattern match, a substitution, or a transliteration.

Variables beginning with underscore used to be forced into package main, but we decided it was more useful for package writers to be able to use leading underscore to indicate private variables and method names. $_ is still global though. See also ``Technical Note on the Syntax of Variable Names'' in perlvar.

evaled strings are compiled in the package in which the eval() was compiled. (Assignments to $SIG{}, however, assume the signal handler specified is in the main package. Qualify the signal handler name if you wish to have a signal handler in a package.) For an example, examine perldb.pl in the Perl library. It initially switches to the DB package so that the debugger doesn't interfere with variables in the program you are trying to debug. At various points, however, it temporarily switches back to the main package to evaluate various expressions in the context of the main package (or wherever you came from). See perldebug.

The special symbol PACKAGE contains the current package, but cannot (easily) be used to construct variables.

See perlsub for other scoping issues related to my() and local(), and perlref regarding closures.

Symbol Tables

The symbol table for a package happens to be stored in the hash of that name with two colons appended. The main symbol table's name is thus %main::, or %:: for short. Likewise the symbol table for the nested package mentioned earlier is named %OUTER::INNER::.

The value in each entry of the hash is what you are referring to when you use the *name typeglob notation. In fact, the following have the same effect, though the first is more efficient because it does the

symbol table lookups at compile time
local *main::foo = *main::bar;

local $main::{foo} = $main::{bar}; (Be sure to note the vast difference between the second line above and local $main::foo = $main::bar. The former is accessing the hash %main::, which is the symbol table of package main. The latter is simply assigning scalar $bar in package main to scalar $foo of the same package.)

You can use this to print out all the variables in a package, for instance. The standard but antiquated dumpvar.pl library and the CPAN module Devel::Symdump make use of this.

Assignment to a typeglob performs an aliasing operation, i.e.,

  • dick = *richard;
causes variables, subroutines, formats, and file and directory handles accessible via the identifier richard also to be accessible via the identifier dick. If you want to alias only a particular variable or subroutine, assign a reference instead
  • dick = $richard;

Which makes $richard and $dick the same variable, but leaves @richard and @dick as separate arrays. Tricky, eh?

This mechanism may be used to pass and return cheap references into or from subroutines if you don't want to copy the whole thing. It only works when assigning to dynamic variables, not lexicals.

%some_hash = (); # can't be my()

  • some_hash = fn( %another_hash );

sub fn { local *hashsym = shift;

  1. now use %hashsym normally, and you
  2. will affect the caller's %another_hash

my %nhash = (); # do what you want return %nhash; } On return, the reference will overwrite the hash slot in the symbol table specified by the *some_hash typeglob. This is a somewhat tricky way of passing around references cheaply when you don't want to have to remember to dereference variables explicitly.

Another use of symbol tables is for making ``constant'' scalars.

  • PI = 3.14159265358979;

Now you cannot alter $PI, which is probably a good thing all in all. This isn't the same as a constant subroutine, which is subject to optimization at compile-time. A constant subroutine is one prototyped to take no arguments and to return a constant expression. See perlsub for details on these. The use constant pragma is a convenient shorthand for these.

You can say *foo{PACKAGE} and *foo{NAME} to find out what name and package the *foo symbol table entry comes from. This may be useful in a subroutine that

gets passed typeglobs as arguments
sub identify_typeglob {

my $glob = shift; print 'You gave me ', *{$glob}{PACKAGE}, '::', *{$glob}{NAME}, This prints

You gave me main::foo

You gave me bar::baz The *foo{THING} notation can also be used to obtain references to the individual elements of *foo. See perlref.

Subroutine definitions (and declarations, for that matter) need not necessarily be situated in the package whose symbol table they occupy. You can define a subroutine outside its package by explicitly qualifying the name of the

subroutine
package main;

sub Some_package::foo { ... } #

This is just a shorthand for a typeglob assignment at compile time
BEGIN { *Some_package::foo = sub { ... } }
and is not the same as writing
{

package Some_package; sub foo { ... } }

In the first two versions, the body of the subroutine is lexically in the main package, not in Some_package. So something like this
package main; $Some_package::name = sub Some_package::foo {

print

Some_package::foo();

prints
in main: $name is 'barney'
rather than
in Some_package: $name is 'fred'

This also has implications for the use of the SUPER:: qualifier (see perlobj).

Package Constructors and Destructors

Four special subroutines act as package constructors and destructors. These are the BEGIN, CHECK, INIT, and END routines. The sub is optional for these routines.

A BEGIN subroutine is executed as soon as possible, that is, the moment it is completely defined, even before the rest of the containing file is parsed. You may have multiple BEGIN blocks within a file--they will execute in order of definition. Because a BEGIN block executes immediately, it can pull in definitions of subroutines and such from other files in time to be visible to the rest of the file. Once a BEGIN has run, it is immediately undefined and any code it used is returned to Perl's memory pool. This means you can't ever explicitly call a BEGIN.

An END subroutine is executed as late as possible, that is, after perl has finished running the program and just before the interpreter is being exited, even if it is exiting as a result of a die() function. (But not if it's polymorphing into another program via exec, or being blown out of the water by a signal--you have to trap that yourself (if you can).) You may have multiple END blocks within a file--they will execute in reverse order of definition; that is: last in, first out ( LIFO ). END blocks are not executed when you run perl with the -c switch, or if compilation fails.

Inside an END subroutine, $? contains the value that the program is going to pass to exit(). You can modify $? to change the exit value of the program. Beware of changing $? by accident (e.g. by running something via system).

Similar to BEGIN blocks, INIT blocks are run just before the Perl runtime begins execution, in ``first in, first out'' ( FIFO ) order. For example, the code generators documented in perlcc make use of INIT blocks to initialize and resolve pointers to XSUBs.

Similar to END blocks, CHECK blocks are run just after the Perl compile phase ends and before the run time begins, in LIFO order. CHECK blocks are again useful in the Perl compiler suite to save the compiled state of the program.

When you use the -n and -p switches to Perl, BEGIN and END work just as they do in awk, as a degenerate case. Both BEGIN and CHECK blocks are run when you use the -c switch for a compile-only syntax check, although your main code is not.

Perl Classes

There is no special class syntax in Perl, but a package may act as a class if it provides subroutines to act as methods. Such a package may also derive some of its methods from another class (package) by listing the other package name(s) in its global @ISA array (which must be a package global, not a lexical).

For more on this, see perltoot and perlobj.

Perl Modules

A module is just a set of related functions in a library file, i.e., a Perl package with the same name as the file. It is specifically designed to be reusable by other modules or programs. It may do this by providing a mechanism for exporting some of its symbols into the symbol table of any package using it. Or it may function as a class definition and make its semantics available implicitly through method calls on the class and its objects, without explicitly exporting anything. Or it can do a little of both.

For example, to start a traditional, non-OO module called Some::Module, create a file called Some/Module.pm and

start with this template
package Some::Module; # assumes Some/Module.pm use strict;

use warnings;

BEGIN {

use Exporter (); our ($VERSION, @ISA, @EXPORT, @EXPORT_OK, %EXPORT_TAGS);

  1. set the version for version checking

$VERSION = 1.00;

  1. if using RCS/CVS, this may be preferred

$VERSION = do { my @r = (q$Revision: 2.21 $ = /d+/g); sprintf

@ISA = qw(Exporter);

@EXPORT = qw(

  1. your exported package globals go here,
  1. as well as any optionally exported functions

@EXPORT_OK = qw($Var1 %Hashit

  1. exported package globals go here

our $Var1; our %Hashit;

  1. non-exported package globals go here

our @more; our $stuff;

  1. initialize package globals, first exported ones

$Var1 = ''; %Hashit = ();

  1. then the others (which are still accessible as $Some::Module::stuff)

$stuff = ''; @more = ();

  1. all file-scoped lexicals must be created before
  2. the functions below that use them.

    1. file-private lexicals go here

my $priv_var = ''; my %secret_hash = ();

  1. here's a file-private function as a closure,
  2. callable as

    1. make all your functions, whether exported or not;
  3. remember to put something interesting in the {} stubs

sub func1 {} # no prototype sub func2() {} # proto'd void sub func3($$) {} # proto'd to 2 scalars

  1. this one isn't exported, but could be called!

sub func4(%) {} # proto'd to 1 hash ref

END { } # module clean-up code here (global destructor)

    1. YOUR CODE GOES HERE

1; # don't forget to return a true value from the file

Then go on to declare and use your variables in functions without any qualifications. See Exporter and the perlmodlib for details on mechanics and style issues in module creation.

Perl modules are included into your program by saying

use Module;

or

use Module LIST;

This is exactly equivalent to

BEGIN { require Module; import Module; }

or

BEGIN { require Module; import Module LIST; }

As a special case

use Module ();

is exactly equivalent to

BEGIN { require Module; }

All Perl module files have the extension .pm. The use operator assumes this so you don't have to spell out Module.pm.pl and .ph files. Module names are also capitalized unless they're functioning as pragmas; pragmas are in effect compiler directives, and are sometimes called ``pragmatic modules (or even ``pragmata'' if you're a classicist).

The two statements
require !SomeModule?;

require differ from each other in two ways. In the first case, any double colons in the module name, such as Some::Module, are translated into your system's directory separator, usually ``/. The second case does not, and would have to be specified literally. The other difference is that seeing the first require clues in the compiler that uses of indirect object notation involving ``!SomeModule?, as in $ob = purge !SomeModule?, are method calls, not function calls. (Yes, this really can make a difference.)

Because the use statement implies a BEGIN block, the importing of semantics happens as soon as the use statement is compiled, before the rest of the file is compiled. This is how it is able to function as a pragma mechanism, and also how modules are able to declare subroutines that are then visible as list or unary operators for the rest of the current file. This will not work if you use require instead of use. With

require you can get into this problem
require Cwd; # make Cwd:: accessible

$here = Cwd::getcwd();

use Cwd; # import names from Cwd::

$here = getcwd();

require Cwd; # make Cwd:: accessible

$here = getcwd(); # oops! no main::getcwd() In general, use Module () is recommended over require Module, because it determines module availability at compile time, not in the middle of your program's execution. An exception would be if two modules each tried to use each other, and each also called a function from that other module. In that case, it's easy to use requires instead.

Perl packages may be nested inside other package names, so we can have package names containing ::. But if we used that package name directly as a filename it would make for unwieldy or impossible filenames on some systems. Therefore, if a module's name is, say, Text::Soundex, then its definition is actually found in the library file Text/Soundex.pm.

Perl modules always have a .pm file, but there may also be dynamically linked executables (often ending in .so) or autoloaded subroutine definitions (often ending in .al) associated with the module. If so, these will be entirely transparent to the user of the module. It is the responsibility of the .pm file to load (or arrange to autoload) any additional functionality. For example, although the POSIX module happens to do both dynamic loading and autoloading, the user can say just use POSIX to get it all.

SEE ALSO

See perlmodlib for general style issues related to building Perl modules and classes, as well as descriptions of the standard library and CPAN , Exporter for how Perl's standard import/export mechanism works, perltoot and perltootc for an in-depth tutorial on creating classes, perlobj for a hard-core reference document on objects, perlsub for an explanation of functions and scoping, and perlxstut and perlguts for more information on writing extension modules.


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