HTML::Mason::Compiler::ToObject - A Compiler subclass that generates Mason
object code
my $compiler = HTML::Mason::Compiler::ToObject->new;
my $object_code =
$compiler->compile( comp_source => $source,
name => $comp_name,
comp_path => $comp_path,
);
This Compiler subclass generates Mason object code (Perl code). It is the
default Compiler class used by Mason.
All of these parameters are optional.
- comp_class
- The class into which component objects are blessed. This defaults to
HTML::Mason::Component.
- subcomp_class
- The class into which subcomponent objects are blessed. This defaults to
HTML::Mason::Component::Subcomponent.
- in_package
- This is the package in which a component's code is executed. For
historical reasons, this defaults to
"HTML::Mason::Commands".
- preamble
- Text given for this parameter is placed at the beginning of each
component, but after the execution of any
"<%once>" block. See also
postamble. The request will be available as $m in
preamble code.
- postamble
- Text given for this parameter is placed at the end of each component. See
also preamble. The request will be available as $m
in postamble code.
- use_strict
- True or false, default is true. Indicates whether or not a given component
should "use strict".
- use_warnings
- True or false, default is false. Indicates whether or not a given
component should "use warnings".
- named_component_subs
- When compiling a component, use uniquely named subroutines for the a
component's body, subcomponents, and methods. Doing this allows you to
effectively profile Mason components. Without this, all components simply
show up as __ANON__ or something similar in the profiler.
- define_args_hash
- One of "always", "auto", or "never". This
determines whether or not an %ARGS hash is created
in components. If it is set to "always", one is always defined.
If set to "never", it is never defined.
The default, "auto", will cause the hash to be
defined only if some part of the component contains the string
"ARGS". This is somewhat crude, and may result in some false
positives, but this is preferable to false negatives.
Not defining the args hash means that we can avoid copying
component arguments, which can save memory and slightly improve
execution speed.
All of the above properties have read-only accessor methods of the same name.
You cannot change any property of a compiler after it has been created (but
you can create multiple compilers with different properties).
This class is primarily meant to be used by the Interpreter object, and as such
has a very limited public API.
- compile(...)
- This method will take component source and return the compiled object code
for that source. See "compile(...)" in HTML::Mason::Compiler for
details on this method.
This subclass also accepts a
"comp_class" parameter, allowing you
to override the class into which the component is compiled.