package PPI::Statement::Package; =pod =head1 NAME PPI::Statement::Package - A package statement =head1 INHERITANCE PPI::Statement::Package isa PPI::Statement isa PPI::Node isa PPI::Element =head1 DESCRIPTION Most L subclasses are assigned based on the value of the first token or word found in the statement. When PPI encounters a statement starting with 'package', it converts it to a C object. When working with package statements, please remember that packages only exist within their scope, and proper support for scoping has yet to be completed in PPI. However, if the immediate parent of the package statement is the top level L object, then it can be considered to define everything found until the next top-level "file scoped" package statement. A file may, however, contain nested temporary package, in which case you are mostly on your own :) =head1 METHODS C has a number of methods in addition to the standard L, L and L methods. =cut use strict; use PPI::Statement (); use vars qw{$VERSION @ISA}; BEGIN { $VERSION = '1.236'; @ISA = 'PPI::Statement'; } # Lexer clues sub __LEXER__normal() { '' } =pod =head2 namespace Most package declarations are simple, and just look something like package Foo::Bar; The C method returns the name of the declared package, in the above case 'Foo::Bar'. It returns this exactly as written and does not attempt to clean up or resolve things like ::Foo to main::Foo. If the package statement is done any different way, it returns false. =cut sub namespace { my $self = shift; my $namespace = $self->schild(1) or return ''; $namespace->isa('PPI::Token::Word') ? $namespace->content : ''; } =pod =head2 version Some package declarations may include a version: package Foo::Bar 1.23; package Baz v1.23; The C method returns the stringified version as seen in the document (if any), otherwise the empty string. =cut sub version { my $self = shift; my $version = $self->schild(2) or return ''; $version->isa('PPI::Token::Structure') ? '' : $version->content; } =pod =head2 file_scoped Regardless of whether it is named or not, the C method will test to see if the package declaration is a top level "file scoped" statement or not, based on its location. In general, returns true if it is a "file scoped" package declaration with an immediate parent of the top level Document, or false if not. Note that if the PPI DOM tree B have a PPI::Document object at as the root element, this will return false. Likewise, it will also return false if the root element is a L, as a fragment of a file does not represent a scope. =cut sub file_scoped { my $self = shift; my ($Parent, $Document) = ($self->parent, $self->top); $Parent and $Document and $Parent == $Document and $Document->isa('PPI::Document') and ! $Document->isa('PPI::Document::Fragment'); } 1; =pod =head1 SUPPORT See the L in the main module. =head1 AUTHOR Adam Kennedy Eadamk@cpan.orgE =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright 2001 - 2011 Adam Kennedy. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module. =cut