NOTE
This is being merged in from Template::TT3::Type. The documentation still refers to the old name and relates to TT-specific use.
NAME
Badger::Data - base class for data object
SYNOPSIS
# defining a subclass data type
package Badger::Data::Thing;
use base 'Badger::Data';
our $METHODS = {
wibble => \&wibble,
wobble => \&wobble,
};
sub wibble {
my $self = shift;
# some wibble code...
}
sub wobble {
my $self = shift;
# some wobble code...
}
PLEASE NOTE
This module is being merged in from the prototype Template-TT3
code. The implementation is subject to change and the documentation may be incomplete or incorrect in places.
DESCRIPTION
The Badger::Data
module implements a base class for the Badger::Data::Text, Badger::Data::List and Badger::Data::Hash data objects.
METHODS
The following methods are defined in addition to those inherited from Badger::Prototype and Badger::Base.
init(\%config)
Initialialisation method to handle any per-object initialisation. This is called by the new() method inherited from Badger::Base . In this base class, the method simply copies all items in the $config
hash array into the $self
object.
clone()
Create a copy of the current object.
my $clone = $object->clone();
Additional named parameters can be provided. These are merged with the items defined in the parent object and passed to the cloned object's init() method.
my $clone = $object->clone( g => 0.577 );
methods()
Returns a reference to a hash array containing the content of the $METHODS
package variable in the current class and any base classes.
my $methods = $object->methods;
method($name)
Returns a reference to a particular method from the hash reference returned by the methods() method.
my $method = $object->method('ref');
When called without any arguments, it returns a reference to the entire hash reference, as per methods().
my $method = $object->method->{ foo };
metadata($name,$value)
This method provides access to an out-of-band (i.e. stored separately from the data itself) hash array of metadata for the data item. It returns a reference to a hash array when called without arguments.
# fetch metadata hash and add an entry
my $metadata = $data->metadata;
$metadata->{ author } = 'Arthur Dent';
# later... print the metadata
print $data->metadata->{ author };
It returns the value of an item in the metadata hash when called with a single argument.
print $data->metadata('author');
It sets the value of an item when called with two arguments.
$data->metadata( author => 'Ford Prefect' );
ref()
Returns the name of the object type, e.g. Template::TT3::Type
, Template::TT3::Type::Text
, Template::TT3::Type::List, etc., exactly as Perl's ref()
function does.
defined()
Returns a true/false (1
/0
) value to indicate if the target data is defined.
undefined()
Returns a true/false (1
/0
) value to indicate if the target data is undefined.
true()
Returns a true/false (1
/0
) value to indicate if the target data has a true value (using by Perl's definition of what constitutes truth).
false()
Returns a true/false (1
/0
) value to indicate if the target data has a false value (using by Perl's definition of what constitutes truth).
AUTHOR
Andy Wardley https://wardley.org/
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1996-2008 Andy Wardley. All Rights Reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO.
Template::TT3::Type::Text, Template::TT3::Type::List and Template::TT3::Type::Hash.