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Welcome to the new Tigris! There have been some changes to the administration of mail lists. Project and list owners should check out the Discussion Services release notes.
Perl::Critic::Utils - General utility subroutines and constants for Perl::Critic and derivative distributions.
This module provides several static subs and variables that are useful
for developing Perl::Critic::Policy
subclasses. Unless you are writing Policy modules, you probably don't
care about this package.
find_keywords( $doc, $keyword )
-
DEPRECATED: Since version 0.11, every Policy is evaluated at each
element of the document. So you shouldn't need to go looking for a
particular keyword. If you do want to use this, please import it
via the :deprecated tag, rather than directly, to mark the module
as needing updating.
Given a PPI::Document as $doc, returns a reference
to an array containing all the PPI::Token::Word
elements that match $keyword. This can be used to find any
built-in function, method call, bareword, or reserved keyword. It
will not match variables, subroutine names, literal strings, numbers,
or symbols. If the document doesn't contain any matches, returns
undef.
is_perl_global( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Symbol or a string, returns
true if that token represents one of the global variables provided by
the English module, or one of the builtin global variables
like
%SIG, %ENV, or @ARGV. The sigil on the symbol is
ignored, so things like $ARGV or $ENV will still return true.
is_perl_builtin( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word,
PPI::Statement::Sub, or string, returns true if
that token represents a call to any of the builtin functions defined
in Perl 5.8.8.
is_perl_bareword( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word,
PPI::Statement::Sub, or string, returns true if
that token represents a bareword (e.g. "if", "else", "sub", "package")
defined in Perl 5.8.8.
is_perl_filehandle( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word, or string, returns true
if that token represents one of the global filehandles (e.g.
STDIN,
STDERR, STDOUT, ARGV) that are defined in Perl 5.8.8. Note
that this function will return false if given a filehandle that is
represented as a typeglob (e.g. *STDIN)
is_perl_builtin_with_list_context( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word,
PPI::Statement::Sub, or string, returns true if
that token represents a call to any of the builtin functions defined
in Perl 5.8.8 that provide a list context to the following tokens.
is_perl_builtin_with_multiple_arguments( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word,
PPI::Statement::Sub, or string, returns true if
that token represents a call to any of the builtin functions defined
in Perl 5.8.8 that can take multiple arguments.
is_perl_builtin_with_no_arguments( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word,
PPI::Statement::Sub, or string, returns true if
that token represents a call to any of the builtin functions defined
in Perl 5.8.8 that cannot take any arguments.
is_perl_builtin_with_one_argument( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word,
PPI::Statement::Sub, or string, returns true if
that token represents a call to any of the builtin functions defined
in Perl 5.8.8 that takes one and only one argument.
is_perl_builtin_with_optional_argument( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word,
PPI::Statement::Sub, or string, returns true if
that token represents a call to any of the builtin functions defined
in Perl 5.8.8 that takes no more than one argument.
The sets of values for which
is_perl_builtin_with_multiple_arguments(),
is_perl_builtin_with_no_arguments(),
is_perl_builtin_with_one_argument(), and
is_perl_builtin_with_optional_argument() return true are disjoint
and their union is precisely the set of values that
is_perl_builtin() will return true for.
is_perl_builtin_with_zero_and_or_one_arguments( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word,
PPI::Statement::Sub, or string, returns true if
that token represents a call to any of the builtin functions defined
in Perl 5.8.8 that takes no and/or one argument.
Returns true if any of is_perl_builtin_with_no_arguments(),
is_perl_builtin_with_one_argument(), and
is_perl_builtin_with_optional_argument() returns true.
is_qualified_name( $name )
-
Given a string, PPI::Token::Word, or
PPI::Token::Symbol, answers whether it has a
module component, i.e. contains "::".
precedence_of( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Operator or a string,
returns the precedence of the operator, where 1 is the highest
precedence. Returns undef if the precedence can't be determined
(which is usually because it is not an operator).
is_hash_key( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Element, returns true if the element is a
literal hash key. PPI doesn't distinguish between regular barewords
(like keywords or subroutine calls) and barewords in hash subscripts
(which are considered literal). So this subroutine is useful if your
Policy is searching for PPI::Token::Word elements
and you want to filter out the hash subscript variety. In both of the
following examples, "foo" is considered a hash key:
$hash1{foo} = 1;
%hash2 = (foo => 1);
But if the bareword is followed by an argument list, then perl treats
it as a function call. So in these examples, "foo" is not
considered a hash key:
$hash1{ foo() } = 1;
&hash2 = (foo() => 1);
is_included_module_name( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word, returns true if the
element is the name of a module that is being included via
use,
require, or no.
is_integer( $value )
-
Answers whether the parameter, as a string, looks like an integral
value.
is_class_name( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word, returns true if the
element that immediately follows this element is the dereference
operator "->". When a bareword has a "->" on the right side, it
usually means that it is the name of the class (from which a method is
being called).
is_label_pointer( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word, returns true if the
element is the label in a
next, last, redo, or goto
statement. Note this is not the same thing as the label declaration.
is_method_call( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word, returns true if the
element that immediately precedes this element is the dereference
operator "->". When a bareword has a "->" on the left side, it
usually means that it is the name of a method (that is being called
from a class).
is_package_declaration( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word, returns true if the
element is the name of a package that is being declared.
is_subroutine_name( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word, returns true if the
element is the name of a subroutine declaration. This is useful for
distinguishing barewords and from function calls from subroutine
declarations.
is_function_call( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Token::Word returns true if the
element appears to be call to a static function. Specifically, this
function returns true if
is_hash_key, is_method_call,
is_subroutine_name, is_included_module_anme,
is_package_declaration, is_perl_bareword, is_perl_filehandle,
is_label_pointer and is_subroutine_name all return false for the
given element.
first_arg( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Element that is presumed to be a function
call (which is usually a PPI::Token::Word), return
the first argument. This is similar of parse_arg_list() and
follows the same logic. Note that for the code:
int($x + 0.5)
this function will return just the $x, not the whole expression.
This is different from the behavior of parse_arg_list(). Another
caveat is:
int(($x + $y) + 0.5)
which returns ($x + $y) as a
PPI::Structure::List instance.
parse_arg_list( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Element that is presumed to be a function
call (which is usually a PPI::Token::Word), splits
the argument expressions into arrays of tokens. Returns a list
containing references to each of those arrays. This is useful because
parentheses are optional when calling a function, and PPI parses them
very differently. So this method is a poor-man's parse tree of PPI
nodes. It's not bullet-proof because it doesn't respect precedence.
In general, I don't like the way this function works, so don't count
on it to be stable (or even present).
split_nodes_on_comma( @nodes )
-
This has the same return type as parse_arg_list() but expects to be
passed the nodes that represent the interior of a list, like:
'foo', 1, 2, 'bar'
is_script( $document )
-
Given a PPI::Document, test if it starts with
/#!.*/. If so, it is judged to be a script instead of a module.
See shebang_line().
is_in_void_context( $token )
-
Given a PPI::Token, answer whether it appears to be in a
void context.
policy_long_name( $policy_name )
-
Given a policy class name in long or short form, return the long form.
policy_short_name( $policy_name )
-
Given a policy class name in long or short form, return the short
form.
all_perl_files( @directories )
-
Given a list of directories, recursively searches through all the
directories (depth first) and returns a list of paths for all the
files that are Perl code files. Any administrative files for CVS or
Subversion are skipped, as are things that look like temporary or
backup files.
A Perl code file is:
- * Any file that ends in .PL, .pl, .pm, or .t
-
- * Any file that has a first line with a shebang containing 'perl'
-
severity_to_number( $severity )
-
If
$severity is given as an integer, this function returns
$severity but normalized to lie between $SEVERITY_LOWEST and
$SEVERITY_HIGHEST. If $severity is given as a string, this
function returns the corresponding severity number. If the string
doesn't have a corresponding number, this function will throw an
exception.
is_valid_numeric_verbosity( $severity )
-
Answers whether the argument has a translation to a Violation format.
verbosity_to_format( $verbosity_level )
-
Given a verbosity level between 1 and 10, returns the corresponding
predefined format string. These formats are suitable for passing to
the
set_format method in
Perl::Critic::Violation. See the
perlcritic documentation for a listing of the predefined
formats.
hashify( @list )
-
Given
@list, return a hash where @list is in the keys and each
value is 1. Duplicate values in @list are silently squished.
interpolate( $literal )
-
Given a $literal string that may contain control characters (e.g..
'\t' '\n'), this function does a double interpolation on the string
and returns it as if it had been declared in double quotes. For
example:
'foo \t bar \n' ...becomes... "foo \t bar \n"
shebang_line( $document )
-
Given a PPI::Document, test if it starts with
#!.
If so, return that line. Otherwise return undef.
words_from_string( $str )
-
Given config string $str, return all the words from the string.
This is safer than splitting on whitespace.
is_unchecked_call( $element )
-
Given a PPI::Element, test to see if it contains a
function call whose return value is not checked.
$COMMA
-
$FATCOMMA
-
$COLON
-
$SCOLON
-
$QUOTE
-
$DQUOTE
-
$BACKTICK
-
$PERIOD
-
$PIPE
-
$EMPTY
-
$SPACE
-
$SLASH
-
$BSLASH
-
$LEFT_PAREN
-
$RIGHT_PAREN
-
These character constants give clear names to commonly-used strings
that can be hard to read when surrounded by quotes and other
punctuation. Can be imported in one go via the
:characters tag.
$SEVERITY_HIGHEST
-
$SEVERITY_HIGH
-
$SEVERITY_MEDIUM
-
$SEVERITY_LOW
-
$SEVERITY_LOWEST
-
These numeric constants define the relative severity of violating each
Perl::Critic::Policy. The
get_severity and
default_severity methods of every Policy subclass must return one
of these values. Can be imported via the :severities tag.
$DEFAULT_VERBOSITY
-
The default numeric verbosity.
$DEFAULT_VERBOSITY_WITH_FILE_NAME
-
The numeric verbosity that corresponds to the format indicated by
$DEFAULT_VERBOSITY, but with the file name prefixed to it.
$TRUE
-
$FALSE
-
These are simple booleans. 1 and 0 respectively. Be mindful of using
these with string equality.
$FALSE ne $EMPTY. Can be imported via
the :booleans tag.
The following groups of functions and constants are available as
parameters to a use Perl::Critic::Util statement.
:all
-
The lot.
:booleans
-
Includes:
$TRUE, $FALSE
:severities
-
Includes:
$SEVERITY_HIGHEST,
$SEVERITY_HIGH,
$SEVERITY_MEDIUM,
$SEVERITY_LOW,
$SEVERITY_LOWEST,
@SEVERITY_NAMES
:characters
-
Includes:
$COLON,
$COMMA,
$DQUOTE,
$EMPTY,
$FATCOMMA,
$PERIOD,
$PIPE,
$QUOTE,
$BACKTICK,
$SCOLON,
$SPACE,
$SLASH,
$BSLASH
$LEFT_PAREN
$RIGHT_PAREN
:classification
-
Includes:
is_function_call,
is_hash_key,
is_included_module_name,
is_integer,
is_method_call,
is_package_declaration,
is_perl_builtin,
is_perl_global,
is_perl_builtin_with_list_context
is_perl_builtin_with_multiple_arguments
is_perl_builtin_with_no_arguments
is_perl_builtin_with_one_argument
is_perl_builtin_with_optional_argument
is_perl_builtin_with_zero_and_or_one_arguments
is_script,
is_subroutine_name,
is_unchecked_call
is_valid_numeric_verbosity
See also Perl::Critic::Utils::PPI.
:data_conversion
-
Generic manipulation, not having anything specific to do with
Perl::Critic.
Includes:
hashify,
words_from_string,
interpolate
:ppi
-
Things for dealing with PPI, other than classification.
Includes:
first_arg,
parse_arg_list
See also Perl::Critic::Utils::PPI.
:internal_lookup
-
Translations between internal representations.
Includes:
severity_to_number,
verbosity_to_format
:language
-
Information about Perl not programmatically available elsewhere.
Includes:
precedence_of
:deprecated
-
Not surprisingly, things that are deprecated. It is preferred to use
this tag to get to these functions, rather than the function names
themselves, so as to mark any module using them as needing cleanup.
Includes:
find_keywords
Perl::Critic::Utils::Constants,
Perl::Critic::Utils::McCabe,
Perl::Critic::Utils::PPI,
Jeffrey Ryan Thalhammer <thaljef@cpan.org>
Copyright (c) 2005-2008 Jeffrey Ryan Thalhammer. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of this license
can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.
|