You want to create a way for your users to generate new objects.
Make a constructor. In Perl, the constructor method must not only initialize its object, but must also first allocate memory for it, typically using an anonymous hash. C++ constructors, on the other hand, are called with memory already allocated. The rest of the object-oriented world would call C++'s constructors initializers.
Here's the canonical object constructor in Perl:
sub new { my $class = shift; my $self = { }; bless($self, $class); return $self; }
This is the equivalent one-liner:
sub new { bless( { }, shift ) }
Any method that allocates and initializes a new object acts as a constructor. The most important thing to remember is that a reference isn't an object until bless
has been called on it. The simplest possible constructor, although not particularly useful, is the following:
sub new { bless({}) }
Let's add some initialization:
sub new { my $self = { }; # allocate anonymous hash bless($self); # init two sample attributes/data members/fields $self->{START} = time(); $self->{AGE} = 0; return $self; }
This constructor isn't very useful because it uses the single-argument form of bless
, which always blesses the object into the current package. This means it can't be usefully inherited from; objects it constructs will always be blessed into the class that the new
function was compiled into. In the case of inheritance, this is not necessarily the class on whose behalf the method was invoked.
To solve this, have the constructor heed its first argument. For a class method, this is the package name. Pass this class name as the second argument to bless
:
sub new { my $classname = shift; # What class are we constructing? my $self = {}; # Allocate new memory bless($self, $classname); # Mark it of the right type $self->{START} =time();
# init data fields $self->{AGE} =0;
return $self; # And give it back }
Now the constructor can be correctly inherited by a derived class.
You might also want to separate the memory allocation and blessing step from the instance data initialization step. Simple classes won't need this, but it makes inheritance easier; see Recipe 13.10.
sub new {
my $classname = shift; # What class are we constructing?
my $self = {}; # Allocate new memory
bless($self, $classname); # Mark it of the right type
$self->_init(@_); # Call _init with remaining args
return $self;
}
# "private" method to initialize fields. It always sets START to
# the current time, and AGE to 0. If called with arguments, _init
# interprets them as key+value pairs to initialize the object with.
sub _init {
my $self = shift;
$self->{START} = time();
$self->{AGE} = 0;
if (@_) {
my %extra = @_;
@$self{keys %extra} = values %extra;
}
}
perltoot (1) and perlobj (1); Chapter 5 of Programming Perl; Recipe 13.6; Recipe 13.9; Recipe 13.10
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