GSP
Quick Navigator

Search Site

Unix VPS
A - Starter
B - Basic
C - Preferred
D - Commercial
MPS - Dedicated
Previous VPSs
* Sign Up! *

Support
Contact Us
Online Help
Handbooks
Domain Status
Man Pages

FAQ
Virtual Servers
Pricing
Billing
Technical

Network
Facilities
Connectivity
Topology Map

Miscellaneous
Server Agreement
Year 2038
Credits
 

USA Flag

 

 

Man Pages
MakeMethods::Utility::ArraySplicer(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation MakeMethods::Utility::ArraySplicer(3)

Class::MakeMethods::Utility::ArraySplicer - Common array ops

  use Class::MakeMethods::Utility::ArraySplicer;
  
  # Get one or more values
  $value = array_splicer( $array_ref, $index );
  @values = array_splicer( $array_ref, $index_array_ref );
  
  # Set one or more values
  array_splicer( $array_ref, $index => $new_value, ... );
  
  # Splice selected values in or out
  array_splicer( $array_ref, [ $start_index, $end_index], [ @values ]);

This module provides a utility function and several associated constants which support a general purpose array-splicer interface, used by several of the Standard and Composite method generators.

This is a general-purpose array accessor function. Depending on the arguments passed to it, it will get, set, slice, splice, or otherwise modify your array.
  • If called without any arguments, returns the contents of the array in list context, or an array reference in scalar context (or undef).

      # Get all values
      $value_ref = array_splicer( $array_ref );
      @values = array_splicer( $array_ref );
        
  • If called with a single numeric argument, uses that argument as an index to retrieve from the referenced array, and returns that value (or undef).

      # Get one value
      $value = array_splicer( $array_ref, $index );
        
  • If called with a single array ref argument, sets the contents of the array to match the contents of the provided one.

      # Set contents of array
      array_splicer( $array_ref, [ $value1, $value2, ... ] );
    
      # Reset the array contents to empty
      array_splicer( $array_ref, [] );
        
  • If called with a two arguments, the first undefined and the second an array ref argument, uses that array's contents as a list of indexes to return a slice of the referenced array.

      # Get slice of values
      @values = array_splicer( $array_ref, undef, [ $index1, $index2, ... ] );
        
  • If called with a list of argument pairs, each with a numeric index and an associated value, stores the value at the given index in the referenced array. The current value in each position will be overwritten, and later arguments with the same index will override earlier ones. Returns the current array-ref value.

      # Set one or more values by index
      array_splicer( $array_ref, $index1 => $value1, $index2 => $value2, ... );
        
  • If called with a list of argument pairs, each with the first item being a reference to an array of up to two numbers, loops over each pair and uses those numbers to splice the value array.

      # Splice selected values in or out
      array_splicer( $array_ref, [ $start_index, $count], [ @values ]);
        

    The first controlling number is the position at which the splice will begin. Zero will start before the first item in the list. Negative numbers count backwards from the end of the array.

    The second number is the number of items to be removed from the list. If it is omitted, or undefined, or zero, no items are removed. If it is a positive integer, that many items will be returned.

    If both numbers are omitted, or are both undefined, they default to containing the entire value array.

    If the second argument is undef, no values will be inserted; if it is a non-reference value, that one value will be inserted; if it is an array-ref, its values will be copied.

    The method returns the items that removed from the array, if any.

    Here are some examples of common splicing operations.

      # Insert an item at position in the array
      $obj->bar([3], 'Potatoes' );  
      
      # Remove 1 item from position 3 in the array
      $obj->bar([3, 1], undef );  
      
      # Set a new value at position 2, and return the old value 
      print $obj->bar([2, 1], 'Froth' );
    
      # Unshift an item onto the front of the list
      array_splicer( $array_ref, [0], 'Bubbles' );
    
      # Shift the first item off of the front of the list
      print array_splicer( $array_ref, [0, 1], undef );
    
      # Push an item onto the end of the list
      array_splicer( $array_ref, [undef], 'Bubbles' );
    
      # Pop the last item off of the end of the list
      print array_splicer( $array_ref, [undef, 1], undef );
        

There are also constants symbols to facilitate some common combinations of splicing arguments:

  # Reset the array contents to empty
  array_splicer( $array_ref, array_clear );
  
  # Set the array contents to provided values
  array_splicer( $array_ref, array_splice, [ 2, 3 ] );
  
  # Unshift an item onto the front of the list
  array_splicer( $array_ref, array_unshift, 'Bubbles' );
  
  # Shift it back off again
  print array_splicer( $array_ref, array_shift );
  
  # Push an item onto the end of the list
  array_splicer( $array_ref, array_push, 'Bubbles' );
  
  # Pop it back off again
  print array_splicer( $array_ref, array_pop );

See Class::MakeMethods for general information about this distribution.

See Class::MakeMethods::Standard::Hash and numerous other classes for examples of usage.

2004-09-06 perl v5.32.1

Search for    or go to Top of page |  Section 3 |  Main Index

Powered by GSP Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface.
Output converted with ManDoc.