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问题:
I have a hash with a few values that are not scalar data but rather anonymous subroutines that return scalar data. I want to make this completely transparent to the part of the code that looks up values in the hash, so that it doesn't have to be aware that some of the hash values may be anonymous subroutines that return scalar data rather than just plain old scalar data.
To that effect, is there any way to have the anonymous subroutines executed when their keys are accessed, without using any special syntax? Here's a simplified example that illustrates the goal and the problem:
#!/usr/bin/perl
my %hash = (
key1 => "value1",
key2 => sub {
return "value2"; # In the real code, this value can differ
},
);
foreach my $key (sort keys %hash) {
print $hash{$key} . "\n";
}
The output I would like is:
perl ./test.pl
value1
value2
Instead, this is what I get:
perl ./test.pl
value1
CODE(0x7fb30282cfe0)
回答1:
There's a feature called "magic" that allows code to be called when variables are accessed.
Adding magic to a variable greatly slows down access to that variable, but some are more expensive than others.
- There's no need to make access to every element of the hash magical, just some values.
tie
is an more expensive form of magic, and it's not needed here.
As such, the most efficient solution is the following:
use Time::HiRes qw( time );
use Variable::Magic qw( cast wizard );
{
my $wiz = wizard(
data => sub { my $code = $_[1]; $code },
get => sub { ${ $_[0] } = $_[1]->(); },
);
sub make_evaluator { cast($_[0], $wiz, $_[1]) }
}
my %hash;
$hash{key1} = 'value1';
make_evaluator($hash{key2}, sub { 'value2@'.time });
print("$hash{$_}\n") for qw( key1 key2 key2 );
Output:
value1
value2@1462548850.76715
value2@1462548850.76721
Other examples:
my %hash; make_evaluator($hash{key}, sub { ... });
my $hash; make_evaluator($hash->{$key}, sub { ... });
my $x; make_evaluator($x, sub { ... });
make_evaluator(my $x, sub { ... });
make_evaluator(..., sub { ... });
make_evaluator(..., \&some_sub);
You can also "fix up" an existing hash. In your hash-of-hashes scenario,
my $hoh = {
{
key1 => 'value1',
key2 => sub { ... },
...
},
...
);
for my $h (values(%$hoh)) {
for my $v (values(%$h)) {
if (ref($v) eq 'CODE') {
make_evaluator($v, $v);
}
}
}
回答2:
As noted by Oleg, it's possible to do this using various more or less arcane tricks like tie
, overloading or magic variables. However, this would be both needlessly complicated and pointlessly obfuscated. As cool as such tricks are, using them in real code would be a mistake at least 99% of the time.
In practice, the simplest and cleanest solution is probably to write a helper subroutine that takes a scalar and, if it's a code reference, executes it and returns the result:
sub evaluate {
my $val = shift;
return $val->() if ref($val) eq 'CODE';
return $val; # otherwise
}
and use it like this:
foreach my $key (sort keys %hash) {
print evaluate($hash{$key}) . "\n";
}
回答3:
I don't believe that the words that others have written in disapproval of the tie
mechanism are warranted. None of the authors seem to properly understand how it works and what core library backup is available
Here's a tie
example based on Tie::StdHash
If you tie a hash to the Tie::StdHash
class then it works exactly as a normal hash. That means there's nothing left to write except for methods that you may want to override
In this case I've overridden TIEHASH
so that I could specify the initialisation list in the same statement as the tie
command, and FETCH
, which calls the superclass's FETCH and then makes a call to it if it happens to be a subroutine reference
Your tied hash will work as normal except for the change that you have asked for. I hope it is obvious that there is no longer a direct way to retrieve a subroutine reference if you have stored it as a hash value. Such a value will always be replaced by the result of calling it without any parameters
SpecialHash.pm
package SpecialHash;
use Tie::Hash;
use base 'Tie::StdHash';
sub TIEHASH {
my $class = shift;
bless { @_ }, $class;
}
sub FETCH {
my $self = shift;
my $val = $self->SUPER::FETCH(@_);
ref $val eq 'CODE' ? $val->() : $val;
}
1;
main.pl
use strict;
use warnings 'all';
use SpecialHash;
tie my %hash, SpecialHash => (
key1 => "value1",
key2 => sub {
return "value2"; # In the real code, this value can differ
},
);
print "$hash{$_}\n" for sort keys %hash;
output
value1
value2
Update
It sounds like your real situation is with an existing hash that looks something like this
my %hash = (
a => {
key_a1 => 'value_a1',
key_a2 => sub { 'value_a2' },
},
b => {
key_b1 => sub { 'value_b1' },
key_b2 => 'value_b2',
},
);
Using tie
on already-populated variables isn't so neat as tying then at the point of declaration and then inserting the values as the data must be copied to the tied object. However the way I have written the TIEHASH
method in the SpecialHash
class makes this simple to do in the tie
statement
If possible, it would be much better to tie
each hash before you put data into it and add it to the primary hash
This program ties every value of %hash
that happens to be a hash reference. The core of this is the statement
tie %$val, SpecialHash => ( %$val )
which functions identically to
tie my %hash, SpecialHash => ( ... )
in the previous code but dereferences $val
to make the syntax valid, and also uses the current contents of the hash as the initialisation data for the tied hash. That is how the data gets copied
After that there is just a couple of nested loops that dump the whole of %hash
to verify that the ties are working
use strict;
use warnings 'all';
use SpecialHash;
my %hash = (
a => {
key_a1 => 'value_a1',
key_a2 => sub { 'value_a2' },
},
b => {
key_b1 => sub { 'value_b1' },
key_b2 => 'value_b2',
},
);
# Tie all the secondary hashes that are hash references
#
for my $val ( values %hash ) {
tie %$val, SpecialHash => ( %$val ) if ref $val eq 'HASH';
}
# Dump all the elements of the second-level hashes
#
for my $k ( sort keys %hash ) {
my $v = $hash{$k};
next unless ref $v eq 'HASH';
print "$k =>\n";
for my $kk ( sort keys %$v ) {
my $vv = $v->{$kk};
print " $kk => $v->{$kk}\n"
}
}
output
a =>
key_a1 => value_a1
key_a2 => value_a2
b =>
key_b1 => value_b1
key_b2 => value_b2
回答4:
Yes you can. You can either tie
hash to implementation that will resolve coderefs to their return values or you can use blessed scalars as values with overload
ed mehods for stringification, numification and whatever else context you want to resolve automatically.
回答5:
One of perl's special features for just such a use case is tie
. This allows you to attach object oriented style methods, to a scalar or hash.
It should be used with caution, because it can mean that your code is doing really strange things, in unexpected ways.
But as an example:
#!/usr/bin/env perl
package RandomScalar;
my $random_range = 10;
sub TIESCALAR {
my ( $class, $range ) = @_;
my $value = 0;
bless \$value, $class;
}
sub FETCH {
my ($self) = @_;
return rand($random_range);
}
sub STORE {
my ( $self, $range ) = @_;
$random_range = $range;
}
package main;
use strict;
use warnings;
tie my $random_var, 'RandomScalar', 5;
for ( 1 .. 10 ) {
print $random_var, "\n";
}
$random_var = 100;
for ( 1 .. 10 ) {
print $random_var, "\n";
}
As you can see - this lets you take an 'ordinary' scalar, and do fruity things with it. You can use a very similar mechanism with a hash
- an example might be to do database lookups.
However, you also need to be quite cautious - because you're creating action at a distance by doing so. Future maintenance programmers might well not expect your $random_var
to actually change each time you run it, and a value assignment to not actually 'set'.
It can be really useful for e.g. testing though, which is why I give an example.
In your example - you could potentially 'tie' the hash:
#!/usr/bin/env perl
package MagicHash;
sub TIEHASH {
my ($class) = @_;
my $self = {};
return bless $self, $class;
}
sub FETCH {
my ( $self, $key ) = @_;
if ( ref( $self->{$key} ) eq 'CODE' ) {
return $self->{$key}->();
}
else {
return $self->{$key};
}
}
sub STORE {
my ( $self, $key, $value ) = @_;
$self->{$key} = $value;
}
sub CLEAR {
my ($self) = @_;
$self = {};
}
sub FIRSTKEY {
my ($self) = @_;
my $null = keys %$self; #reset iterator
return each %$self;
}
sub NEXTKEY {
my ($self) = @_;
return each %$self;
}
package main;
use strict;
use warnings;
use Data::Dumper;
tie my %magic_hash, 'MagicHash';
%magic_hash = (
key1 => 2,
key2 => sub { return "beefcake" },
);
$magic_hash{random} = sub { return rand 10 };
foreach my $key ( keys %magic_hash ) {
print "$key => $magic_hash{$key}\n";
}
foreach my $key ( keys %magic_hash ) {
print "$key => $magic_hash{$key}\n";
}
foreach my $key ( keys %magic_hash ) {
print "$key => $magic_hash{$key}\n";
}
This is slightly less evil, because future maintenance programmers can use your 'hash' normally. But dynamic eval can shoot the unwary in the foot, so still - caution is advised.
And alternative is to do it 'proper' object oriented - create a 'storage object' that's ... basically like the above - only it creates an object, rather than using tie
. This should be much clearer for long term usage, because you won't get unexpected behaviour. (It's an object doing magic, which is normal, not a hash that 'works funny').
回答6:
You need to identify when a code ref is present, then execute it as an actual call:
foreach my $key (sort keys %hash) {
if (ref $hash{$key} eq 'CODE'){
print $hash{$key}->() . "\n";
}
else {
print "$hash{$key}\n";
}
}
Note that you may consider making all of the hash values subs (a true dispatch table) instead of having some that return non-coderefs and some that return refs.
However, if you define the hash as such, you don't have to do any special trickery when it comes time to use the hash. It calls the sub and returns the value directly when the key is looked up.
key2 => sub {
return "value2";
}->(),
回答7:
No, not without some ancillary code. You are asking for a simple scalar value and a code reference to behave in the same way. The code that would do that is far from simple and also injects complexity between your hash and its use. You might find the following approach simpler and cleaner.
You can make all values code references, making the hash a dispatch table, for uniform invocation
my %hash = (
key1 => sub { return "value1" },
key2 => sub {
# carry on some processing ...
return "value2"; # In the real code, this value can differ
},
);
print $hash{$_}->() . "\n" for sort keys %hash;
But of course there is a minimal overhead to this approach.