package PPI::Transform; =pod =head1 NAME PPI::Transform - Abstract base class for document transformation classes =head1 DESCRIPTION C provides an API for the creation of classes and objects that modify or transform PPI documents. =head1 METHODS =cut use strict; use Carp (); use List::Util (); use PPI::Document (); use Params::Util qw{_INSTANCE _CLASS _CODE _SCALAR0}; use vars qw{$VERSION}; BEGIN { $VERSION = '1.236'; } ##################################################################### # Apply Handler Registration my %HANDLER; my @ORDER; # Yes, you can use this yourself. # I'm just leaving it undocumented for now. sub register_apply_handler { my $class = shift; my $handler = _CLASS(shift) or Carp::croak("Invalid PPI::Transform->register_apply_handler param"); my $get = _CODE(shift) or Carp::croak("Invalid PPI::Transform->register_apply_handler param"); my $set = _CODE(shift) or Carp::croak("Invalid PPI::Transform->register_apply_handler param"); if ( $HANDLER{$handler} ) { Carp::croak("PPI::Transform->apply handler '$handler' already exists"); } # Register the handler $HANDLER{$handler} = [ $get, $set ]; unshift @ORDER, $handler; } # Register the default handlers __PACKAGE__->register_apply_handler( 'SCALAR', \&_SCALAR_get, \&_SCALAR_set ); __PACKAGE__->register_apply_handler( 'PPI::Document', sub { $_[0] }, sub() { 1 } ); ##################################################################### # Constructor =pod =head2 new my $transform = PPI::Transform->new( param1 => 'value1', param2 => 'value2', ); The C constructor creates a new object for your C subclass. A default constructor is provided for you which takes no params and creates a basic, empty, object. If you wish to have your transform constructor take params, these B be in the form of a list of key/value pairs. Returns a new C-compatible object, or returns C on error. =cut sub new { my $class = shift; bless { @_ }, $class; } =pod =head2 document The C method should be implemented by each subclass, and takes a single argument of a L object, modifying it B as appropriate for the particular transform class. That's right, this method B and B the document object. If you do not want the original to be modified, you need to clone it yourself before passing it in. Returns the numbers of changes made to the document. If the transform is unable to track the quantity (including the situation where it cannot tell B it made a change) it should return 1. Returns zero if no changes were made to the document, or C if an error occurs. By default this error is likely to only mean that you passed in something that wasn't a L, but may include additional errors depending on the subclass. =cut sub document { my $class = shift; die "$class does not implement the required ->document method"; } =pod =head2 apply The C method is used to apply the transform to something. The argument must be a L, or something which can be turned into one and then be written back to again. Currently, this list is limited to a C reference, although a handler registration process is available for you to add support for additional types of object should you wish (see the source for this module). Returns true if the transform was applied, false if there is an error in the transform process, or may die if there is a critical error in the apply handler. =cut sub apply { my $self = _SELF(shift); my $it = defined $_[0] ? shift : return undef; # Try to find an apply handler my $class = _SCALAR0($it) ? 'SCALAR' : List::Util::first { _INSTANCE($it, $_) } @ORDER or return undef; my $handler = $HANDLER{$class} or die("->apply handler for $class missing! Panic"); # Get, change, set my $Document = _INSTANCE($handler->[0]->($it), 'PPI::Document') or Carp::croak("->apply handler for $class failed to get a PPI::Document"); $self->document( $Document ) or return undef; $handler->[1]->($it, $Document) or Carp::croak("->apply handler for $class failed to save the changed document"); 1; } =pod =head2 file # Read from one file and write to another $transform->file( 'Input.pm' => 'Output.pm' ); # Change a file in place $transform->file( 'Change.pm' ); The C method modifies a Perl document by filename. If passed a single parameter, it modifies the file in-place. If provided a second parameter, it will attempt to save the modified file to the alternative filename. Returns true on success, or C on error. =cut sub file { my $self = _SELF(shift); # Where do we read from and write to my $input = defined $_[0] ? shift : return undef; my $output = @_ ? defined $_[0] ? "$_[0]" : undef : $input or return undef; # Process the file my $Document = PPI::Document->new( "$input" ) or return undef; $self->document( $Document ) or return undef; $Document->save( $output ); } ##################################################################### # Apply Hander Methods sub _SCALAR_get { PPI::Document->new( $_[0] ); } sub _SCALAR_set { my $it = shift; $$it = $_[0]->serialize; 1; } ##################################################################### # Support Functions sub _SELF { return shift if ref $_[0]; my $self = $_[0]->new or Carp::croak( "Failed to auto-instantiate new $_[0] object" ); $self; } 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