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NAMEReadonly - Facility for creating read-only scalars, arrays, hashesSynopsisuse Readonly; # Deep Read-only scalar Readonly::Scalar $sca => $initial_value; Readonly::Scalar my $sca => $initial_value; # Deep Read-only array Readonly::Array @arr => @values; Readonly::Array my @arr => @values; # Deep Read-only hash Readonly::Hash %has => (key => value, key => value, ...); Readonly::Hash my %has => (key => value, key => value, ...); # or: Readonly::Hash %has => {key => value, key => value, ...}; # You can use the read-only variables like any regular variables: print $sca; $something = $sca + $arr[2]; next if $has{$some_key}; # But if you try to modify a value, your program will die: $sca = 7; push @arr, 'seven'; delete $has{key}; # The error message is "Modification of a read-only value attempted" # Alternate form (Perl 5.8 and later) Readonly $sca => $initial_value; Readonly my $sca => $initial_value; Readonly @arr => @values; Readonly my @arr => @values; Readonly %has => (key => value, key => value, ...); Readonly my %has => (key => value, key => value, ...); Readonly my $sca; # Implicit undef, readonly value # Alternate form (for Perls earlier than v5.8) Readonly \$sca => $initial_value; Readonly \my $sca => $initial_value; Readonly \@arr => @values; Readonly \my @arr => @values; Readonly \%has => (key => value, key => value, ...); Readonly \my %has => (key => value, key => value, ...); DescriptionThis is a facility for creating non-modifiable variables. This is useful for configuration files, headers, etc. It can also be useful as a development and debugging tool for catching updates to variables that should not be changed.Variable DepthReadonly has the ability to create both deep and shallow readonly variables.If you pass a $ref, an @array or a %hash to corresponding functions "::Scalar()", "::Array()" and "::Hash()", then those functions recurse over the data structure, marking everything as readonly. The entire structure is then non-modifiable. This is normally what you want. If you want only the top level to be readonly, use the alternate (and poorly named) "::Scalar1()", "::Array1()", and "::Hash1()" functions. Plain "Readonly()" creates what the original author calls a "shallow" readonly variable, which is great if you don't plan to use it on anything but only one dimensional scalar values. "Readonly::Scalar()" makes the variable 'deeply' readonly, so the following snippet kills over as you expect: use Readonly; Readonly::Scalar my $ref => { 1 => 'a' }; $ref->{1} = 'b'; $ref->{2} = 'b'; While the following snippet does not make your structure 'deeply' readonly: use Readonly; Readonly my $ref => { 1 => 'a' }; $ref->{1} = 'b'; $ref->{2} = 'b'; The PastThe following sections are updated versions of the previous authors documentation.Comparison with "use constant"Perl provides a facility for creating constant values, via the constant pragma. There are several problems with this pragma.
Comparison with typeglob constantsAnother popular way to create read-only scalars is to modify the symbol table entry for the variable by using a typeglob:*a = \'value'; This works fine, but it only works for global variables ("my" variables have no symbol table entry). Also, the following similar constructs do not work: *a = [1, 2, 3]; # Does NOT create a read-only array *a = { a => 'A'}; # Does NOT create a read-only hash ProsReadonly.pm, on the other hand, will work with global variables and with lexical ("my") variables. It will create scalars, arrays, or hashes, all of which look and work like normal, read-write Perl variables. You can use them in scalar context, in list context; you can take references to them, pass them to functions, anything.Readonly.pm also works well with complex data structures, allowing you to tag the whole structure as nonmodifiable, or just the top level. Also, Readonly variables may not be reassigned. The following code will die: Readonly::Scalar $pi => 3.14159; ... Readonly::Scalar $pi => 2.71828; ConsReadonly.pm used to impose a performance penalty. It was pretty slow. How slow? Run the "eg/benchmark.pl" script that comes with Readonly. On my test system, "use constant" (const), typeglob constants (tglob), regular read/write Perl variables (normal/literal), and the new Readonly (ro/ro_simple) are all about the same speed, the old, tie based Readonly.pm constants were about 1/22 the speed.However, there is relief. There is a companion module available, Readonly::XS. You won't need this if you're using Perl 5.8.x or higher. I repeat, you do not need Readonly::XS if your environment has perl 5.8.x or higher. Please see section entitled Internals for more. Functions
CloningWhen cloning using Storable or Clone you will notice that the value stays readonly, which is correct. If you want to clone the value without copying the readonly flag, use the "Clone" function:Readonly::Scalar my $scalar => {qw[this that]}; # $scalar->{'eh'} = 'foo'; # Modification of a read-only value attempted my $scalar_clone = Readonly::Clone $scalar; $scalar_clone->{'eh'} = 'foo'; # $scalar_clone is now {this => 'that', eh => 'foo'}; The new variable ($scalar_clone) is a mutable clone of the original $scalar. ExamplesThese are a few very simple examples:ScalarsA plain old read-only valueReadonly::Scalar $a => "A string value"; The value need not be a compile-time constant: Readonly::Scalar $a => $computed_value; Arrays/ListsA read-only array:Readonly::Array @a => (1, 2, 3, 4); The parentheses are optional: Readonly::Array @a => 1, 2, 3, 4; You can use Perl's built-in array quoting syntax: Readonly::Array @a => qw/1 2 3 4/; You can initialize a read-only array from a variable one: Readonly::Array @a => @computed_values; A read-only array can be empty, too: Readonly::Array @a => (); Readonly::Array @a; # equivalent HashesTypical usage:Readonly::Hash %a => (key1 => 'value1', key2 => 'value2'); A read-only hash can be initialized from a variable one: Readonly::Hash %a => %computed_values; A read-only hash can be empty: Readonly::Hash %a => (); Readonly::Hash %a; # equivalent If you pass an odd number of values, the program will die: Readonly::Hash %a => (key1 => 'value1', "value2"); # This dies with "May not store an odd number of values in a hash" ExportsHistorically, this module exports the "Readonly" symbol into the calling program's namespace by default. The following symbols are also available for import into your program, if you like: "Scalar", "Scalar1", "Array", "Array1", "Hash", and "Hash1".InternalsSome people simply do not understand the relationship between this module and Readonly::XS so I'm adding this section. Odds are, they still won't understand but I like to write so...In the past, Readonly's "magic" was performed by "tie()"-ing variables to the "Readonly::Scalar", "Readonly::Array", and "Readonly::Hash" packages (not to be confused with the functions of the same names) and acting on "WRITE", "READ", et. al. While this worked well, it was slow. Very slow. Like 20-30 times slower than accessing variables directly or using one of the other const-related modules that have cropped up since Readonly was released in 2003. To 'fix' this, Readonly::XS was written. If installed, Readonly::XS used the internal methods "SvREADONLY" and "SvREADONLY_on" to lock simple scalars. On the surface, everything was peachy but things weren't the same behind the scenes. In edge cases, code performed very differently if Readonly::XS was installed and because it wasn't a required dependency in most code, it made downstream bugs very hard to track. In the years since Readonly::XS was released, the then private internal methods have been exposed and can be used in pure perl. Similar modules were written to take advantage of this and a patch to Readonly was created. We no longer need to build and install another module to make Readonly useful on modern builds of perl.
RequirementsPlease note that most users of Readonly no longer need to install the companion module Readonly::XS which is recommended but not required for perl 5.6.x and under. Please do not force it as a requirement in new code and do not use the package variable $Readonly::XSokay in code/tests. For more, see "Internals" in the section on Readonly's new internals.There are no non-core requirements. Bug ReportsIf email is better for you, my address is mentioned below but I would rather have bugs sent through the issue tracker found at http://github.com/sanko/readonly/issues.AcknowledgementsThanks to Slaven Rezic for the idea of one common function (Readonly) for all three types of variables (13 April 2002).Thanks to Ernest Lergon for the idea (and initial code) for deeply-Readonly data structures (21 May 2002). Thanks to Damian Conway for the idea (and code) for making the Readonly function work a lot smoother under perl 5.8+. AuthorSanko Robinson <sanko@cpan.org> - http://sankorobinson.com/CPAN ID: SANKO Original author: Eric J. Roode, roode@cpan.org License and LegalCopyright (C) 2013-2016 by Sanko Robinson <sanko@cpan.org>Copyright (c) 2001-2004 by Eric J. Roode. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
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