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Direktori : /proc/thread-self/root/proc/self/root/proc/thread-self/root/usr/local/share/perl5/IO/ |
Current File : //proc/thread-self/root/proc/self/root/proc/thread-self/root/usr/local/share/perl5/IO/Lines.pm |
package IO::Lines; use strict; use Carp; use IO::ScalarArray; # The package version, both in 1.23 style *and* usable by MakeMaker: our $VERSION = '2.113'; # Inheritance: our @ISA = qw(IO::ScalarArray); ### also gets us new_tie :-) =head1 NAME IO::Lines - IO:: interface for reading/writing an array of lines =head1 SYNOPSIS use IO::Lines; ### See IO::ScalarArray for details =head1 DESCRIPTION This class implements objects which behave just like FileHandle (or IO::Handle) objects, except that you may use them to write to (or read from) an array of lines. C<tiehandle> capable as well. This is a subclass of L<IO::ScalarArray|IO::ScalarArray> in which the underlying array has its data stored in a line-oriented-format: that is, every element ends in a C<"\n">, with the possible exception of the final element. This makes C<getline()> I<much> more efficient; if you plan to do line-oriented reading/printing, you want this class. The C<print()> method will enforce this rule, so you can print arbitrary data to the line-array: it will break the data at newlines appropriately. See L<IO::ScalarArray> for full usage and warnings. =cut #------------------------------ # # getline # # Instance method, override. # Return the next line, or undef on end of data. # Can safely be called in an array context. # Currently, lines are delimited by "\n". # sub getline { my $self = shift; if (!defined $/) { return join( '', $self->_getlines_for_newlines ); } elsif ($/ eq "\n") { if (!*$self->{Pos}) { ### full line... return *$self->{AR}[*$self->{Str}++]; } else { ### partial line... my $partial = substr(*$self->{AR}[*$self->{Str}++], *$self->{Pos}); *$self->{Pos} = 0; return $partial; } } else { croak 'unsupported $/: must be "\n" or undef'; } } #------------------------------ # # getlines # # Instance method, override. # Return an array comprised of the remaining lines, or () on end of data. # Must be called in an array context. # Currently, lines are delimited by "\n". # sub getlines { my $self = shift; wantarray or croak("can't call getlines in scalar context!"); if ((defined $/) and ($/ eq "\n")) { return $self->_getlines_for_newlines(@_); } else { ### slow but steady return $self->SUPER::getlines(@_); } } #------------------------------ # # _getlines_for_newlines # # Instance method, private. # If $/ is newline, do fast getlines. # This CAN NOT invoke getline! # sub _getlines_for_newlines { my $self = shift; my ($rArray, $Str, $Pos) = @{*$self}{ qw( AR Str Pos ) }; my @partial = (); if ($Pos) { ### partial line... @partial = (substr( $rArray->[ $Str++ ], $Pos )); *$self->{Pos} = 0; } *$self->{Str} = scalar @$rArray; ### about to exhaust @$rArray return (@partial, @$rArray[ $Str .. $#$rArray ]); ### remaining full lines... } #------------------------------ # # print ARGS... # # Instance method, override. # Print ARGS to the underlying line array. # sub print { if (defined $\ && $\ ne "\n") { croak 'unsupported $\: must be "\n" or undef'; } my $self = shift; ### print STDERR "\n[[ARRAY WAS...\n", @{*$self->{AR}}, "<<EOF>>\n"; my @lines = split /^/, join('', @_); @lines or return 1; ### Did the previous print not end with a newline? ### If so, append first line: if (@{*$self->{AR}} and (*$self->{AR}[-1] !~ /\n\Z/)) { *$self->{AR}[-1] .= shift @lines; } push @{*$self->{AR}}, @lines; ### add the remainder ### print STDERR "\n[[ARRAY IS NOW...\n", @{*$self->{AR}}, "<<EOF>>\n"; 1; } #------------------------------ 1; __END__ =head1 VERSION $Id: Lines.pm,v 1.3 2005/02/10 21:21:53 dfs Exp $ =head1 AUTHOR Eryq (F<eryq@zeegee.com>). President, ZeeGee Software Inc (F<http://www.zeegee.com>). =head1 CONTRIBUTORS Dianne Skoll (F<dfs@roaringpenguin.com>). =head1 COPYRIGHT & LICENSE Copyright (c) 1997 Erik (Eryq) Dorfman, ZeeGee Software, Inc. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =cut