Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Is a Perl method defined?
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Is a Perl method defined? Post 302358350 by jim mcnamara on Friday 2nd of October 2009 08:07:50 AM
Old 10-02-2009
Code:
my $method = 'Some::Sub';
if (defined(&$method)) {
    print("ok\n");
} else {
    print("oops\n");
}

Does that work for you?
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Perl, FilePropStore Method

Guys, anyone familiar with this FileProp Store Method.. Im having Compilation Error whenever a value is stored into the tied hash. Run time error sub STORE { my ($self, $key, $value) = @_; my $name = $self ->{name}; unless ($PROPS{$key} and -w $name){ croak "Can't... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: killerserv
1 Replies

2. Programming

Best Method for installing Perl Modules

Which is the perferred method of installing Perl modules on a Unix system? Is is CPAN or manually installing them via a tar file? Also can anyone point me in the right direction to a decent "how to" on configuring CPAN and how to perform custom installs from a tar? thanks:b: (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: metallica1973
2 Replies

3. Infrastructure Monitoring

diffrence between method call and function call in perl

Hello, I have a problem with package and name space. require "/Mehran/DSGateEngineLib/general.pl"; use strict; sub System_Status_Main_Service_Status_Intrusion_Prevention { my %idpstatus; my @result; &General_ReadHash("/var/dsg/idp/settings",\%idpstatus); #print... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Zaxon
4 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Method isSuccess not working right perl

Good morning all.... I have been learning Perl for about 2 months now and I guess I am getting there as much as I can however I am really stuck. I have a Perl script called postEvent.pl which uses a package called event.pm. PostEvent.pl depends on a meithod inside event.pm called isSuccess to... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: LRoberts
0 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

perl : question about defined()

Hi there rather than doing this if (defined($new)) { unless (defined($hostname)) { print "ERROR: If using --new, you must define a hostname\n"; exit 1; } } is there some way of doing a "notdefined" (i appreciate there is no such thing :)) if... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: hcclnoodles
5 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

method bless perl

Hi, I am using perl with some EDA tool. There is an API function that can be iterate. I try to check the ref and get that it is a string. I assume that it is a hash sub aaa { my $obj = shift; $name = $obj->name; print ref $obj,"\n"; foreach my $var(keys %{$obj}) { my... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: zivsegal
0 Replies

7. Solaris

svc:/network/physical:default: Method "/lib/svc/method/net-physical" failed with exit status 96. [ n

After a memory upgrade all network interfaces are misconfigued. How do i resolve this issue. Below are some out puts.thanks. ifconfig: plumb: SIOCLIFADDIF: eg000g0:2: no such interface # ifconfig eg1000g0:2 plumb ifconfig: plumb: SIOCLIFADDIF: eg1000g0:2: no such interface # ifconfig... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: andersonedouard
2 Replies

8. Emergency UNIX and Linux Support

Perl error: Can't call method "value" on an undefined value

Hi, I am running a perl script to automate a process and I keep running into a error can't find the "value" Can't call method "value" on an undefined value at process_file.pl line 44. file is CVS cell is ifdfdxrfmp.ksh Here is the script I have also attached it as well: ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vpundit
2 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Looping in Perl based on defined keys in Map

Hello All, I am writing the below script where it will connect to database and returns the results. #!/sw/gcm/perl510/bin/perl use SybaseC; &openConnection; &loadvalues; sub openConnection { $dbproc = new SybaseC(SYDB}, $ENV{DBDFLTUSR}, $ENV{DBDFLTPWD}); if... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: filter
2 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Need an automated pre-defined file pickup method

Hi Gurus, I need to develop a script which picks the files in a pre-defined order. The files from monday-friday will be named as abc_01_20130923 as monday's file and abc_02_20130924 as tuesday's..so..so forth till friday's which will be named as abc_05_20130927.It repeats over for the... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vikramgk9
3 Replies
NEXT(3pm)						 Perl Programmers Reference Guide						 NEXT(3pm)

NAME
NEXT.pm - Provide a pseudo-class NEXT that allows method redispatch SYNOPSIS
use NEXT; package A; sub A::method { print "$_[0]: A method "; $_[0]->NEXT::method() } sub A::DESTROY { print "$_[0]: A dtor "; $_[0]->NEXT::DESTROY() } package B; use base qw( A ); sub B::AUTOLOAD { print "$_[0]: B AUTOLOAD "; $_[0]->NEXT::AUTOLOAD() } sub B::DESTROY { print "$_[0]: B dtor "; $_[0]->NEXT::DESTROY() } package C; sub C::method { print "$_[0]: C method "; $_[0]->NEXT::method() } sub C::AUTOLOAD { print "$_[0]: C AUTOLOAD "; $_[0]->NEXT::AUTOLOAD() } sub C::DESTROY { print "$_[0]: C dtor "; $_[0]->NEXT::DESTROY() } package D; use base qw( B C ); sub D::method { print "$_[0]: D method "; $_[0]->NEXT::method() } sub D::AUTOLOAD { print "$_[0]: D AUTOLOAD "; $_[0]->NEXT::AUTOLOAD() } sub D::DESTROY { print "$_[0]: D dtor "; $_[0]->NEXT::DESTROY() } package main; my $obj = bless {}, "D"; $obj->method(); # Calls D::method, A::method, C::method $obj->missing_method(); # Calls D::AUTOLOAD, B::AUTOLOAD, C::AUTOLOAD # Clean-up calls D::DESTROY, B::DESTROY, A::DESTROY, C::DESTROY DESCRIPTION
NEXT.pm adds a pseudoclass named "NEXT" to any program that uses it. If a method "m" calls "$self-"NEXT::m()>, the call to "m" is redis- patched as if the calling method had not originally been found. In other words, a call to "$self-"NEXT::m()> resumes the depth-first, left-to-right search of $self's class hierarchy that resulted in the original call to "m". Note that this is not the same thing as "$self-"SUPER::m()>, which begins a new dispatch that is restricted to searching the ancestors of the current class. "$self-"NEXT::m()> can backtrack past the current class -- to look for a suitable method in other ancestors of $self -- whereas "$self-"SUPER::m()> cannot. A typical use would be in the destructors of a class hierarchy, as illustrated in the synopsis above. Each class in the hierarchy has a DESTROY method that performs some class-specific action and then redispatches the call up the hierarchy. As a result, when an object of class D is destroyed, the destructors of all its parent classes are called (in depth-first, left-to-right order). Another typical use of redispatch would be in "AUTOLOAD"'ed methods. If such a method determined that it was not able to handle a particu- lar call, it might choose to redispatch that call, in the hope that some other "AUTOLOAD" (above it, or to its left) might do better. By default, if a redispatch attempt fails to find another method elsewhere in the objects class hierarchy, it quietly gives up and does nothing (but see "Enforcing redispatch"). This gracious acquiesence is also unlike the (generally annoying) behaviour of "SUPER", which throws an exception if it cannot redispatch. Note that it is a fatal error for any method (including "AUTOLOAD") to attempt to redispatch any method that does not have the same name. For example: sub D::oops { print "oops! "; $_[0]->NEXT::other_method() } Enforcing redispatch It is possible to make "NEXT" redispatch more demandingly (i.e. like "SUPER" does), so that the redispatch throws an exception if it cannot find a "next" method to call. To do this, simple invoke the redispatch as: $self->NEXT::ACTUAL::method(); rather than: $self->NEXT::method(); The "ACTUAL" tells "NEXT" that there must actually be a next method to call, or it should throw an exception. "NEXT::ACTUAL" is most commonly used in "AUTOLOAD" methods, as a means to decline an "AUTOLOAD" request, but preserve the normal exception- on-failure semantics: sub AUTOLOAD { if ($AUTOLOAD =~ /foo|bar/) { # handle here } else { # try elsewhere shift()->NEXT::ACTUAL::AUTOLOAD(@_); } } By using "NEXT::ACTUAL", if there is no other "AUTOLOAD" to handle the method call, an exception will be thrown (as usually happens in the absence of a suitable "AUTOLOAD"). Avoiding repetitions If "NEXT" redispatching is used in the methods of a "diamond" class hierarchy: # A B # / / # C D # / # E use NEXT; package A; sub foo { print "called A::foo "; shift->NEXT::foo() } package B; sub foo { print "called B::foo "; shift->NEXT::foo() } package C; @ISA = qw( A ); sub foo { print "called C::foo "; shift->NEXT::foo() } package D; @ISA = qw(A B); sub foo { print "called D::foo "; shift->NEXT::foo() } package E; @ISA = qw(C D); sub foo { print "called E::foo "; shift->NEXT::foo() } E->foo(); then derived classes may (re-)inherit base-class methods through two or more distinct paths (e.g. in the way "E" inherits "A::foo" twice -- through "C" and "D"). In such cases, a sequence of "NEXT" redispatches will invoke the multiply inherited method as many times as it is inherited. For example, the above code prints: called E::foo called C::foo called A::foo called D::foo called A::foo called B::foo (i.e. "A::foo" is called twice). In some cases this may be the desired effect within a diamond hierarchy, but in others (e.g. for destructors) it may be more appropriate to call each method only once during a sequence of redispatches. To cover such cases, you can redispatch methods via: $self->NEXT::UNSEEN::method(); rather than: $self->NEXT::method(); This causes the redispatcher to skip any classes in the hierarchy that it has already visited in an earlier redispatch. So, for example, if the previous example were rewritten: package A; sub foo { print "called A::foo "; shift->NEXT::UNSEEN::foo() } package B; sub foo { print "called B::foo "; shift->NEXT::UNSEEN::foo() } package C; @ISA = qw( A ); sub foo { print "called C::foo "; shift->NEXT::UNSEEN::foo() } package D; @ISA = qw(A B); sub foo { print "called D::foo "; shift->NEXT::UNSEEN::foo() } package E; @ISA = qw(C D); sub foo { print "called E::foo "; shift->NEXT::UNSEEN::foo() } E->foo(); then it would print: called E::foo called C::foo called A::foo called D::foo called B::foo and omit the second call to "A::foo". Note that you can also use: $self->NEXT::UNSEEN::ACTUAL::method(); or: $self->NEXT::ACTUAL::UNSEEN::method(); to get both unique invocation and exception-on-failure. AUTHOR
Damian Conway (damian@conway.org) BUGS AND IRRITATIONS
Because it's a module, not an integral part of the interpreter, NEXT.pm has to guess where the surrounding call was found in the method look-up sequence. In the presence of diamond inheritance patterns it occasionally guesses wrong. It's also too slow (despite caching). Comment, suggestions, and patches welcome. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2000-2001, Damian Conway. All Rights Reserved. This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.8.0 2002-06-01 NEXT(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:56 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy