Difference between revisions of "Tie::RefHash"
From Organic Design wiki
(Useful example for using references as keys) |
m |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | {{legacy}} | ||
+ | <source lang="perl"> | ||
+ | # Tie::RefHash allows hashes to use object references as hash keys | ||
package Tie::RefHash; | package Tie::RefHash; | ||
Line 169: | Line 172: | ||
1; | 1; | ||
+ | </source> | ||
+ | [[Category:PERL]] |
Latest revision as of 08:34, 4 May 2020
# Tie::RefHash allows hashes to use object references as hash keys
package Tie::RefHash;
our $VERSION = 1.32;
=head1 NAME
Tie::RefHash - use references as hash keys
=head1 SYNOPSIS
require 5.004;
use Tie::RefHash;
tie HASHVARIABLE, 'Tie::RefHash', LIST;
tie HASHVARIABLE, 'Tie::RefHash::Nestable', LIST;
untie HASHVARIABLE;
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This module provides the ability to use references as hash keys if you
first C<tie> the hash variable to this module. Normally, only the
keys of the tied hash itself are preserved as references; to use
references as keys in hashes-of-hashes, use Tie::RefHash::Nestable,
included as part of Tie::RefHash.
It is implemented using the standard perl TIEHASH interface. Please
see the C<tie> entry in perlfunc(1) and perltie(1) for more information.
The Nestable version works by looking for hash references being stored
and converting them to tied hashes so that they too can have
references as keys. This will happen without warning whenever you
store a reference to one of your own hashes in the tied hash.
=head1 EXAMPLE
use Tie::RefHash;
tie %h, 'Tie::RefHash';
$a = [];
$b = {};
$c = \*main;
$d = \"gunk";
$e = sub { 'foo' };
%h = ($a => 1, $b => 2, $c => 3, $d => 4, $e => 5);
$a->[0] = 'foo';
$b->{foo} = 'bar';
for (keys %h) {
print ref($_), "\n";
}
tie %h, 'Tie::RefHash::Nestable';
$h{$a}->{$b} = 1;
for (keys %h, keys %{$h{$a}}) {
print ref($_), "\n";
}
=head1 AUTHOR
Gurusamy Sarathy gsar@activestate.com
'Nestable' by Ed Avis ed@membled.com
=head1 VERSION
Version 1.32
=head1 SEE ALSO
perl(1), perlfunc(1), perltie(1)
=cut
use Tie::Hash;
use vars '@ISA';
@ISA = qw(Tie::Hash);
use strict;
require overload; # to support objects with overloaded ""
sub TIEHASH {
my $c = shift;
my $s = [];
bless $s, $c;
while (@_) {
$s->STORE(shift, shift);
}
return $s;
}
sub FETCH {
my($s, $k) = @_;
if (ref $k) {
my $kstr = overload::StrVal($k);
if (defined $s->[0]{$kstr}) {
$s->[0]{$kstr}[1];
}
else {
undef;
}
}
else {
$s->[1]{$k};
}
}
sub STORE {
my($s, $k, $v) = @_;
if (ref $k) {
$s->[0]{overload::StrVal($k)} = [$k, $v];
}
else {
$s->[1]{$k} = $v;
}
$v;
}
sub DELETE {
my($s, $k) = @_;
(ref $k)
? (delete($s->[0]{overload::StrVal($k)}) || [])->[1]
: delete($s->[1]{$k});
}
sub EXISTS {
my($s, $k) = @_;
(ref $k) ? exists($s->[0]{overload::StrVal($k)}) : exists($s->[1]{$k});
}
sub FIRSTKEY {
my $s = shift;
keys %{$s->[0]}; # reset iterator
keys %{$s->[1]}; # reset iterator
$s->[2] = 0; # flag for iteration, see NEXTKEY
$s->NEXTKEY;
}
sub NEXTKEY {
my $s = shift;
my ($k, $v);
if (!$s->[2]) {
if (($k, $v) = each %{$s->[0]}) {
return $v->[0];
}
else {
$s->[2] = 1;
}
}
return each %{$s->[1]};
}
sub CLEAR {
my $s = shift;
$s->[2] = 0;
%{$s->[0]} = ();
%{$s->[1]} = ();
}
package Tie::RefHash::Nestable;
use vars '@ISA';
@ISA = 'Tie::RefHash';
sub STORE {
my($s, $k, $v) = @_;
if (ref($v) eq 'HASH' and not tied %$v) {
my @elems = %$v;
tie %$v, ref($s), @elems;
}
$s->SUPER::STORE($k, $v);
}
1;