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perl-Lexical-Persistence-1.023-bp154.1.17 RPM for noarch

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Name: perl-Lexical-Persistence Distribution: SUSE Linux Enterprise 15 SP4
Version: 1.023 Vendor: openSUSE
Release: bp154.1.17 Build date: Mon May 9 11:36:54 2022
Group: Development/Libraries/Perl Build host: goat07
Size: 71190 Source RPM: perl-Lexical-Persistence-1.023-bp154.1.17.src.rpm
Packager: https://bugs.opensuse.org
Url: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Lexical-Persistence/
Summary: Persistent lexical variable values for arbitrary calls.
Lexical::Persistence does a few things, all related. Note that all the
behaviors listed here are the defaults. Subclasses can override nearly
every aspect of Lexical::Persistence's behavior.

Lexical::Persistence lets your code access persistent data through lexical
variables. This example prints "some value" because the value of $x
persists in the $lp object between setter() and getter().

	use Lexical::Persistence;

	my $lp = Lexical::Persistence->new();
	$lp->call(\&setter);
	$lp->call(\&getter);

	sub setter { my $x = "some value" }
	sub getter { print my $x, "\n" }

Lexicals with leading underscores are not persistent.

By default, Lexical::Persistence supports accessing data from multiple
sources through the use of variable prefixes. The set_context() member sets
each data source. It takes a prefix name and a hash of key/value pairs. By
default, the keys must have sigils representing their variable types.

	use Lexical::Persistence;

	my $lp = Lexical::Persistence->new();
	$lp->set_context( pi => { '$member' => 3.141 } );
	$lp->set_context( e => { '@member' => [ 2, '.', 7, 1, 8 ] } );
	$lp->set_context(
		animal => {
			'%member' => { cat => "meow", dog => "woof" }
		}
	);

	$lp->call(\&display);

	sub display {
		my ($pi_member, @e_member, %animal_member);

		print "pi = $pi_member\n";
		print "e = @e_member\n";
		while (my ($animal, $sound) = each %animal_member) {
			print "The $animal goes... $sound!\n";
		}
	}

And the corresponding output:

	pi = 3.141
	e = 2 . 7 1 8
	The cat goes... meow!
	The dog goes... woof!

By default, call() takes a single subroutine reference and an optional list
of named arguments. The arguments will be passed directly to the called
subroutine, but Lexical::Persistence also makes the values available from
the "arg" prefix.

	use Lexical::Persistence;

	my %animals = (
		snake => "hiss",
		plane => "I'm Cartesian",
	);

	my $lp = Lexical::Persistence->new();
	while (my ($animal, $sound) = each %animals) {
		$lp->call(\&display, animal => $animal, sound => $sound);
	}

	sub display {
		my ($arg_animal, $arg_sound);
		print "The $arg_animal goes... $arg_sound!\n";
	}

And the corresponding output:

	The plane goes... I'm Cartesian!
	The snake goes... hiss!

Sometimes you want to call functions normally. The wrap() method will wrap
your function in a small thunk that does the call() for you, returning a
coderef.

	use Lexical::Persistence;

	my $lp = Lexical::Persistence->new();
	my $thunk = $lp->wrap(\&display);

	$thunk->(animal => "squirrel", sound => "nuts");

	sub display {
		my ($arg_animal, $arg_sound);
		print "The $arg_animal goes... $arg_sound!\n";
	}

And the corresponding output:

	The squirrel goes... nuts!

Prefixes are the characters leading up to the first underscore in a lexical
variable's name. However, there's also a default context named underscore.
It's literally "_" because the underscore is not legal in a context name by
default. Variables without prefixes, or with prefixes that have not been
previously defined by set_context(), are stored in that context.

The get_context() member returns a hash for a named context. This allows
your code to manipulate the values within a persistent context.

	use Lexical::Persistence;

	my $lp = Lexical::Persistence->new();
	$lp->set_context(
		_ => {
			'@mind' => [qw(My mind is going. I can feel it.)]
		}
	);

	while (1) {
		$lp->call(\&display);
		my $mind = $lp->get_context("_")->{'@mind'};
		splice @$mind, rand(@$mind), 1;
		last unless @$mind;
	}

	sub display {
		my @mind;
		print "@mind\n";
	}

Displays something like:

	My mind is going. I can feel it.
	My is going. I can feel it.
	My is going. I feel it.
	My going. I feel it.
	My going. I feel
	My I feel
	My I
	My

It's possible to create multiple Lexical::Persistence objects, each with a
unique state.

	use Lexical::Persistence;

	my $lp_1 = Lexical::Persistence->new();
	$lp_1->set_context( _ => { '$foo' => "context 1's foo" } );

	my $lp_2 = Lexical::Persistence->new();
	$lp_2->set_context( _ => { '$foo' => "the foo in context 2" } );

	$lp_1->call(\&display);
	$lp_2->call(\&display);

	sub display {
		print my $foo, "\n";
	}

Gets you this output:

	context 1's foo
	the foo in context 2

You can also compile and execute perl code contained in plain strings in a
a lexical environment that already contains the persisted variables.

	use Lexical::Persistence;

	my $lp = Lexical::Persistence->new();

	$lp->do( 'my $message = "Hello, world" );

	$lp->do( 'print "$message\n"' );

Which gives the output:

	Hello, world

If you come up with other fun uses, let us know.

Provides

Requires

License

Artistic-1.0 or GPL-1.0+

Changelog

* Mon Nov 25 2013 coolo@suse.com
  - updated to 1.023, they forgot to update their changelog
* Wed Sep 12 2012 coolo@suse.com
  - use perl_requires macro
* Mon Nov 29 2010 coolo@novell.com
  - remove /var/adm/perl-modules
* Tue May 11 2010 pascal.bleser@opensuse.org
  - initial package (1.020)

Files

/usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.26.1/Lexical
/usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.26.1/Lexical/Persistence.pm
/usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.26.1/x86_64-linux-thread-multi
/usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Lexical-Persistence
/usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Lexical-Persistence/CHANGES
/usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Lexical-Persistence/LICENSE
/usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Lexical-Persistence/README
/usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Lexical-Persistence/README.mkdn
/usr/share/man/man3/Lexical::Persistence.3pm.gz


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Fabrice Bellet, Tue Apr 9 17:06:41 2024