NAME
Acme::Damn - 'Unbless' Perl objects.
SYNOPSIS
use Acme::Damn;
my $ref = ... some reference ...
my $obj = bless $ref , 'Some::Class';
... do something with your object ...
$ref = damn $obj; # recover the original reference (unblessed)
... neither $ref nor $obj are Some::Class objects ...
DESCRIPTION
Acme::Damn provides a single routine, damn(), which takes a blessed reference (a Perl object), and unblesses it, to return the original reference.
EXPORT
By default, Acme::Damn exports the method damn() into the current namespace. Aliases for damn() (see below) may be imported upon request.
Methods
- damn object
-
damn() accepts a single blessed reference as its argument, and returns that reference unblessed. If object is not a blessed reference, then damn() will
die
with an error. - bless reference
- bless reference [ , package ]
- bless reference [ , undef ]
-
Optionally, Acme::Damn will modify the behaviour of
bless
to allow the passing of an explicitundef
as the target package to invoke damn():use Acme::Damn qw( bless ); my $obj = ... some blessed reference ...; # the following statements are equivalent my $ref = bless $obj , undef; my $ref = damn $obj;
NOTE: The modification of
bless
is lexically scoped to the current package, and is not global.
Method Aliases
Not everyone likes to damn the same way or in the same language, so Acme::Damn offers the ability to specify any alias on import, provided that alias is a valid Perl subroutine name (i.e. all characters match \w
).
use Acme::Damn qw( unbless );
use Acme::Damn qw( foo );
use Acme::Damn qw( unblessthyself );
use Acme::Damn qw( recant );
Version 0.02 supported a defined list of aliases, and this has been replaced in v0.03 by the ability to import any alias for damn()
.
WARNING
Just as bless
doesn't call an object's initialisation code, damn
doesn't invoke an object's DESTROY
method. For objects that need to be DESTROY
ed, either don't damn
them, or call DESTROY
before judgement is passed.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks to Claes Jacobsson <[email protected]> for suggesting the use of aliases, and Bo Lindbergh <[email protected]> for the suggested modification of bless
.
SEE ALSO
bless, perlboot, perltoot, perltooc, perlbot, perlobj.
AUTHOR
Ian Brayshaw, <[email protected]>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2003-2016 Ian Brayshaw
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.