| Perl-Critic documentation | view source | Contained in the Perl-Critic distribution. |
is_ppi_expression_or_generic_statement( $element )is_ppi_generic_statement( $element )is_ppi_statement_subclass( $element )is_ppi_simple_statement( $element )is_ppi_constant_element( $element )is_subroutine_declaration( $element )is_in_subroutine( $element )get_constant_name_element_from_declaring_statement($statement)get_next_element_in_same_simple_statement( $element )get_previous_module_used_on_same_line( $element )
Perl::Critic::Utils::PPI - Utility functions for dealing with PPI objects.
Provides classification of PPI::Elements (PPI::Elements).
This is considered to be a public module. Any changes to its interface will go through a deprecation cycle.
is_ppi_expression_or_generic_statement( $element )Answers whether the parameter is an expression or an undifferentiated
statement. I.e. the parameter either is a
PPI::Statement::Expression or the class
of the parameter is PPI::Statement and not one of
its subclasses other than Expression.
is_ppi_generic_statement( $element )Answers whether the parameter is an undifferentiated statement, i.e. the parameter is a PPI::Statement but not one of its subclasses.
is_ppi_statement_subclass( $element )Answers whether the parameter is a specialized statement, i.e. the parameter is a PPI::Statement but the class of the parameter is not PPI::Statement.
is_ppi_simple_statement( $element )Answers whether the parameter represents a simple statement, i.e. whether the parameter is a PPI::Statement, PPI::Statement::Break, PPI::Statement::Include, PPI::Statement::Null, PPI::Statement::Package, or PPI::Statement::Variable.
is_ppi_constant_element( $element )Answers whether the parameter represents a constant value, i.e. whether the parameter is a PPI::Token::Number, PPI::Token::Quote::Literal, PPI::Token::Quote::Single, or PPI::Token::QuoteLike::Words, or is a PPI::Token::Quote::Double or PPI::Token::Quote::Interpolate which does not in fact contain any interpolated variables.
This subroutine does not interpret any form of here document as a constant value, and may not until PPI::Token::HereDoc acquires the relevant portions of the PPI::Token::Quote interface.
This subroutine also does not interpret entities created by the Readonly module or the constant pragma as constants, because the infrastructure to detect these appears not to be present, and the author of this subroutine (not Mr. Shank or Mr. Thalhammer) lacks the knowledge/expertise/gumption to put it in place.
is_subroutine_declaration( $element )Is the parameter a subroutine declaration, named or not?
is_in_subroutine( $element )Is the parameter a subroutine or inside one?
get_constant_name_element_from_declaring_statement($statement)This subroutine is deprecated. You should use get_constant_name_elements_from_declaring_statement() in PPIx::Utilities::Statement instead.
Given a PPI::Statement, if the statement is a use
constant or Readonly declaration statement, return the name of
the thing being defined.
Given
use constant 1.16 FOO => 'bar';
this will return "FOO". Similarly, given
Readonly::Hash my %FOO => ( bar => 'baz' );
this will return "%FOO".
Caveat: in the case where multiple constants are declared using the same
use constant statement (e.g. use constant { FOO => 1, BAR => 2 };,
this subroutine will return the declaring
PPI::Structure::Constructor. In the case of
use constant 1.16 { FOO => 1, BAR => 2 }; it may return a
PPI::Structure::Block instead of a
PPI::Structure::Constructor, due to a parse
error in PPI.
get_next_element_in_same_simple_statement( $element )Given a PPI::Element|PPI::Element, this subroutine returns the next element
in the same simple statement as defined by is_ppi_simple_statement(). If no
next element can be found, this subroutine simply returns.
If the $element is undefined or unblessed, we simply return.
If the $element satisfies is_ppi_simple_statement(), we return, unless
it has a parent which is a PPI::Structure::List.
If the $element is the last significant element in its PPI::Node, we replace it with its parent and iterate again.
Otherwise, we return $element->snext_sibling().
get_previous_module_used_on_same_line( $element )Given a PPI::Element, returns the PPI::Element
representing the name of the module included by the previous use or
require on the same line as the $element. If none is found, simply returns.
For example, with the line
use version; our $VERSION = ...;
given the PPI::Token::Symbol instance for $VERSION, this will return
"version".
If the given element is in a use or <require>, the return is from the
previous use or require on the line, if any.
Elliot Shank <perl@galumph.com>
Copyright (c) 2007-2011 Elliot Shank.
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.
| Perl-Critic documentation | view source | Contained in the Perl-Critic distribution. |