A singleton is even easier to do in Perl. You don't even need a reference. Because in Perl you can say
my $class = "Singleton";
$class->method();
you only need to return a string with the package name in a singleton's constructor.
package Singleton;
my ($various, %instance, @variables);
sub new {
my $class = shift;
# object initialization here ...
*new = sub { shift }
return $class;
}
1;
Here we also avoid the need to check whether the object is initialized by using a glob to replace &new. None of the further calls to the constructor will execute its initial code.
All of your methods can just ignore the $self too, since there's a single instance which stores its data in file lexicals.
Makeshifts last the longest.
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