fokSyf Eye R is a screen environment reader system which has been designed as a Linux system add-on to provide enhanced user interface accessibility for a blind or visually impaired user. It uses the underlying functionality of yasr, speech-dispatcher, and speech synthesis, along with a hierarchical hot-key driven user interface and help system called foksy, to provide instant voice-guided access to a wide range of specially pre-configured yasr-compatible commandline applications. It also includes console font magnification facilities.
Graph::Reader(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Graph::Reader(3pm)NAME
Graph::Reader - base class for Graph file format readers
SYNOPSIS
package Graph::Reader::MyFormat;
use Graph::Reader;
use vars qw(@ISA);
@ISA = qw(Graph::Reader);
sub _read_graph
{
my ($self, $graph, $FILE) = @_;
# read $FILE and populate $graph
}
DESCRIPTION
Graph::Reader is a base class for Graph file format readers. A particular subclass of Graph::Reader will handle a specific file format,
and generate a Graph, represented using Jarkko Hietaniemi's Graph class.
You should never create an instance of this class yourself, it is only meant for subclassing. If you try to create an instance of
Graph::Reader, the constructor will throw an exception.
METHODS
new()
Constructor - generate a new reader instance. This is a virtual method, or whatever the correct lingo is. You're not meant to call this on
the base class, it is inherited by the subclasses. Ie if you do something like:
$reader = Graph::Reader->new();
It will throw an exception.
read_graph()
Read a graph from the specified file:
$graph = $reader->read_graph($file);
The $file argument can either be a filename, or a filehandle for a previously opened file.
SUBCLASSING
To create your own graph format reader, create a module which subclasses Graph::Reader. For example, suppose DGF is a directed graph format
- create a Graph::Reader::DGF module, with the following structure:
package Graph::Reader::DGF;
use Graph::Reader;
use vars qw(@ISA);
@ISA = qw(Graph::Reader);
sub _read_graph
{
my $self = shift;
my $graph = shift;
my $FILE = shift;
while (<$FILE>)
{
}
return 1;
}
1;
Note the leading underscore on the _read_graph() method. The base class provides the public method, and invokes the private method which
you're expected to provide, as above.
If you want to perform additional initialisation at construction time, you can provide an _init() method, which will be invoked by the base
class's constructor. You should invoke the superclass's initialiser as well, as follows:
sub _init
{
my $self = shift;
$self->SUPER::_init();
# your initialisation here
}
Someone can then use your class as follows:
use Graph::Reader::DGF;
$reader = Graph::Reader::DGF->new();
$graph = $reader->read_graph('foo.dgf');
SEE ALSO
Graph
Jarkko Hietaniemi's modules for representing directed graphs, available from CPAN under modules/by-module/Graph/
Algorithms in Perl
This O'Reilly book has a chapter on directed graphs, which is based around Jarkko's modules.
Graph::Reader::XML
A simple subclass of this class for reading a simple XML format for directed graphs.
Graph::Writer
A baseclass for Graph file format writers.
AUTHOR
Neil Bowers <neil@bowers.com>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2001-2012, Neil Bowers. All rights reserved. Copyright (c) 2001, Canon Research Centre Europe. All rights reserved.
This script is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.14.2 2012-02-14 Graph::Reader(3pm)