NAME
Data::Hopen::Scope::Hash - a hash-based nested key-value store
SYNOPSIS
This class implements Data::Hopen::Scope using a single hash table as the storage. It only supports one set of data ("$set" in Data::Hopen::Scope), which is named 0.
ATTRIBUTES
outer
The fallback Scope for looking up names not found in this Scope. If non is provided, it is undef, and no fallback will happen.
name
Not used, but provided so you can use "hnew" in Data::Hopen to make Scopes.
METHODS
See also "add", below, which is part of the public API.
Several of the functions receive a $levels parameter. Its meaning is:
If
$levelsis provided and nonzero, go up that many more levels (i.e.,$levels==0means only return this scope's local names).If
$levelsis not provided or not defined, go all the way to the outermost Scope.
FUNCTIONS TO BE OVERRIDDEN IN SUBCLASSES
To implement a Scope with a different data-storage model than the hash this class uses, subclass Scope and override these functions. Only "add" is part of the public API.
add
Add key-value pairs to this scope. Returns the scope so you can chain. Example usage:
my $scope = Data::Hopen::Scope::Hash->new()->add(foo => 1);
add is responsible for handling any conflicts that may occur. In this particular implementation, the last-added value for a particular key wins.
TODO add $set option
adopt_hash
Takes over the given hash to be the new contents of the Scope::Hash. Usage example:
$scope->adopt_hash({ foo => 42 });
The scope uses exactly the hash passed, not a clone of it. If this is not applicable to a subclass, that subclass should override it as ... or an express die.
_names_here
Populates a Set::Scalar with the names of the items stored in this Scope, but not any outer Scope. Called as:
$scope->_names_here($retval[, $set]);
No return value.
_find_here
Looks for a given item in this scope, but not any outer scope. Called as:
$scope->_find_here($name[, $set])
Returns the value, or undef if not found.