How can I conditionally import a package in Perl?

2019-02-25 13:17发布

I have a Perl script which uses a not-so-common module, and I want it to be usable without that module being installed, although with limited functionality. Is it possible?

I thought of something like this:

my $has_foobar;
if (has_module "foobar") {
    << use it >>
    $has_foobar = true;
} else {
    print STDERR "Warning: foobar not found. Not using it.\n";
    $has_foobar = false;
}

4条回答
ら.Afraid
2楼-- · 2019-02-25 13:53

You can use require to load modules at runtime, and eval to trap possible exceptions:

eval {
    require Foobar;
    Foobar->import();
};  
if ($@) {
    warn "Error including Foobar: $@";
}

See also perldoc use.

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疯言疯语
3楼-- · 2019-02-25 13:57

Another approach is to use Class::MOP's load_class method. You can use it like:

Class::MOP::load_class( 'foobar', $some_options )

It throws an exception so you'll have to catch that. More info here.

Also, while this isn't necessarily on every system Class::MOP is awfully useful to have and with Moose becoming more prevalent every day it likely is on your system.

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Melony?
4楼-- · 2019-02-25 14:02

Consider the if pragma.

use if CONDITION, MODULE => ARGUMENTS;
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萌系小妹纸
5楼-- · 2019-02-25 14:08

I recommend employing Module::Load so that the intention is made clear.

Edit: disregard the comments, Module::Load is in core.

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