If you find yourself doing lots of "classical" Perl OO (with blessed hashes or arrays), you may want to take a look at Class::Struct. It provides a simple, but somewhat limited, way of producing your attribute methods. The nice things about Class::Struct are: it is a core module, and it is easy to understand.
If you really want to do OO with all the goodies, all the cool kids are using Moose. I haven't tried it in a project myself, but many people who I respect are using it with good success.
You can easily check to see if an argument is supplied to your setter methods:
use Carp qw(croak); sub set_colour { my $this = shift croak 'set_colour requires an argument' unless @_; $this->{colour} = shift; } # if you like combined setter/getters use Scalar::Util qw(reftype); sub colour { my $this = shift; if ( @_ ) { my $arg = shift; croak 'Illegal value for method colour' unless reftype $arg eq 'ARRAY'; $this->{colour} = $arg; } return @{ $this->{colour}||[] }; }
Some people prefer 'duck-typing' to checking reftype of a value. The basic idea is that if it quacks, it's a duck. So, to test if something is an array, we try treating it like one. If it works, then it's an array (even if it's really a tied hash behind the scenes).
sub colour { my $this = shift; if ( @_ ) { my $arg = shift; local $@; croak 'Illegal value for method colour' unless eval { @$arg; 1 }; $this->{colour} = $arg; } return @{ $this->{colour}||[] }; }
TGI says moo
In reply to Re: array as attributes in OO perl
by TGI
in thread array as attributes in OO perl
by IL_MARO
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