Class::MakeMethods::Autoload - Declare generated subs with AUTOLOAD
package MyObject;
use Class::MakeMethods::Autoload 'Standard::Hash::scalar';
package main;
my $obj = bless {}, 'MyObject';
$obj->foo("Foozle");
print $obj->foo();
This package provides a generate-on-demand interface to Class::MakeMethods.
When your class uses this package, it imports an AUTOLOAD function
that resolves missing methods by using Class::MakeMethods to generate and
install a standard type of method.
You must specify the type of method to be generated by passing a
single argument to your use Class::MakeMethods::Autoload statement, which
can take any of these forms:
- A Class::MakeMethods generator name and method type.
Here are three examples:
use Class::MakeMethods::Autoload 'Standard::Hash:scalar';
use Class::MakeMethods::Autoload 'Basic::Universal::no_op';
use Class::MakeMethods::Autoload
'::Class::MakeMethod::Composite::Global:array';
- A reference to a subroutine which will be called for each requested
function name and which is expected to return the name of the method
generator to use.
Here's a contrived example which generates scalar accessors
for methods except those with a digit in their name, which are treated
as globals.
use Class::MakeMethods::Autoload sub {
my $name = shift;
( $name =~ /\d/ ) ? 'Standard::Global::scalar'
: 'Standard::Hash::scalar'
};
- A reference to a hash which defines which method type to use based on the
name of the requested method. If a key exists which is an exact match for
the requested function name, the associated value is used; otherwise, each
of the keys is used as a regular expression, and the value of the first
one that matches the function name is used. (For regular expression
matching, the keys are tested in reverse length order, longest to
shortest.)
Here's an example which provides a new() constructor, a
DESTROY() method that does nothing, and a wildcard match that
provides scalar accessors for all other Autoloaded methods:
use Class::MakeMethods::Autoload {
'new' => 'Standard::Hash::new',
'.*' => 'Standard::Hash::scalar',
'DESTROY' => 'Standard::Universal::no_op',
};
Here's a more sophisticated example which causes
all-upper-case method names to be generated as globals, those with a
leading upper-case letter to be generated as inheritable data methods,
and others to be normal accessors:
use Class::MakeMethods::Autoload {
'new' => 'Standard::Hash::new',
'.*' => 'Standard::Hash::scalar',
'[A-Z].*' => 'Standard::Inheritable::scalar',
'[A-Z0-9]+' => 'Standard::Global::scalar',
'DESTROY' => 'Standard::Universal::no_op',
};
The following warnings and errors may be produced when using
Class::MakeMethods::Attribute to generate methods. (Note that this list does
not include run-time messages produced by calling the generated methods, or
the standard messages produced by Class::MakeMethods.)
- No default method type; can't autoload
- You must declare a default method type, generally by passing its name to a
"use Class::MakeMethods::Autoload"
statement, prior to autoloading any methods.
- Construction of %s method %s failed to produce usable method
- Indicates that Autoload succesfully called Class::MakeMethods->make to
generate the requested method, but afterwards was not able to invoke the
generated method. You may have selected an incompatible method type, or
the method may not have been installed sucesfully.
See Class::MakeMethods for general information about this distribution.
For distribution, installation, support, copyright and license
information, see Class::MakeMethods::Docs::ReadMe.