In this answer I found a recommendation for a simple TO_JSON
method, which is needed for serializing blessed objects to JSON.
sub TO_JSON { return { %{ shift() } }; }
Could anybody please explain in detail how it works?
I changed it to:
sub TO_JSON {
my $self = shift; # the object itself – blessed ref
print STDERR Dumper $self;
my %h = %{ $self }; # Somehow unblesses $self. WHY???
print STDERR Dumper \%h; # same as $self, only unblessed
return { %h }; # Returns a hashref that contains a hash.
#return \%h; # Why not this? Works too…
}
Many questions… :( Simply, I’m unable to understand 3-liner Perl code. ;(
I need the TO_JSON
but it will filter out:
- unwanted attributes and
- unset attributes too (e.g. for those the
has_${attr}
predicate returns false)
This is my code – it works but I really don't understand why the unblessing works…
use 5.010;
use warnings;
use Data::Dumper;
package Some;
use Moo;
has $_ => ( is => 'rw', predicate => 1,) for (qw(a1 a2 nn xx));
sub TO_JSON {
my $self = shift;
my $href;
$href->{$_} = $self->$_ for( grep {!/xx/} keys %$self );
# Same mysterious unblessing. The `keys` automagically filters out
# “unset” attributes without the need of call of the has_${attr}
# predicate… WHY?
return $href;
}
package main;
use JSON;
use Data::Dumper;
my @objs = map { Some->new(a1 => "a1-$_", a2 => "a2-$_", xx=>"xx-$_") } (1..2);
my $data = {arr => \@objs};
#say Dumper $data;
say JSON->new->allow_blessed->convert_blessed->utf8->pretty->encode($data);
EDIT: To clarify the questions:
- The
%{ $hRef }
derefences the $hRef
(getting the hash pointed to by the reference), but why get a plain hash from a blessed object reference $self
?
- In other words, why the
$self
is a hashref?
I tried to make a hash slice like @{$self}{ grep {!/xx/} keys %$self}
but it didn't work. Therefore I created that horrible TO_JSON
.
- If the
$self
is a hashref, why the keys %$self
returns only attributes having a value, and not all declared attributes (e.g. the nn
too – see the has
)?
sub TO_JSON { return { %{ shift() } }; }
| | |
| | L_ 1. pull first parameter from `@_`
| | (hashref/blessed or not)
| |
| L____ 2. dereference hash (returns key/value list)
|
L______ 3. return hashref assembled out of list
In your TO_JSON()
function { %h }
returns a shallow hash copy, while \%h
returns a reference to %h
(no copying).
Perl implemented object orientation by simply making it possible for a reference to know which package it came from (with bless
). Knowing that a reference came from the Foo
package means that methods are really functions defined in that package.
Perl allows any kind of reference to get blessed; not just hash references. It's very common to bless hash references; a lot of documentation shows doing exactly that; and Moose
does it; but, it's possible to bless an array reference, or a subroutine reference, or a filehandle, or a reference to a scalar. The syntax %{$self}
only works on hash references (blessed or not). It takes the hash reference, and dereferences it as a hash. The fact that the original reference may have been blessed is lost.
I need the TO_JSON but what will filter out:
- unwanted attributes
- and unset attributes too (e.g. for those the has_${attr} predicate returns false.
Pre-5.20, hash slices only give you the values and not the keys from the original hash. You want both keys and values.
Assuming you have a hash, and want to filter out undef
values and keys not on a whitelist, there are a few options. Here's what I have, using the JSON
module:
use strict; # well, I used "use v5.18", but I don't know which version of Perl you're using
use warnings;
use JSON;
my $foo = { foo => undef, bar => 'baz', quux => 5 };
my %whitelist = map { $_, 1 } qw{foo bar};
my %bar = map { $_ => $foo->{$_} }
grep { defined $foo->{$_} && exists $whitelist{$_} }
keys %$foo;
print to_json(\%bar) . "\n";
# well, I used say() instead of print(), but I don't know which version of Perl you're using
The map
s and grep
s aren't necessarily pretty, but it's the simplest way I could think of to filter out keys not on the whitelist and elements without an undef
value.
You could use an array slice:
use strict;
use warnings;
use JSON;
my $foo = { foo => undef, bar => 'baz', quux => 5 };
my @whitelist = qw{foo bar};
my %filtered_on_keys;
@filtered_on_keys{@whitelist} = @$foo{@whitelist};
my %bar = map { $_ => $filtered_on_keys{$_} }
grep { defined $filtered_on_keys{$_} }
keys %filtered_on_keys;
print to_json(\%bar) . "\n";
Or if you like loops:
use strict;
use warnings;
use JSON;
my $foo = { foo => undef, bar => 'baz', quux => 5 };
my %whitelist = map { $_ => 1 } qw{foo bar};
my %bar;
while (my ($key, $value) = each %$foo) {
if (defined $value && exists $whitelist{$key}) {
$bar{$key} = $value;
}
}
print to_json(\%bar) . "\n";
It seems like a good time to bring up Larry wall's quote, "Perl is designed to give you several ways to do anything, so consider picking the most readable one."
However, I made a big point that not all objects are hashes. The appropriate way to get data from an object is through its getter functions:
use strict;
use warnings;
use JSON;
my $foo = Foo->new({ foo => undef, bar => 'baz', quux => 5 }); # as an example
my %filtered_on_keys;
@filtered_on_keys{qw{foo bar}} = ($foo->get_foo(), $foo->get_bar());
my %bar = map { $_ => $filtered_on_keys{$_} }
grep { defined $filtered_on_keys{$_} }
keys %filtered_on_keys;
print to_json(\%bar) . "\n";