Config::General::Extended - Extended access to Config files
use Config::General;
$conf = new Config::General( -ConfigFile => 'configfile', -ExtendedAccess => 1 );
Normally you don't call it directly.
<individual> <martin> age 23 </martin> <joseph> age 56 </joseph> </individual> <other> blah blubber blah gobble leer </other>
and already read it in using Config::General::Extended::new(), then you can get a new object from the ``individual'' block this way:
$individual = $conf->obj("individual");
Now if you call getall on $individual (just for reference) you would get:
$VAR1 = ( martin => { age => 13 } );
Or, here is another use:
my $individual = $conf->obj("individual"); foreach my $person ($conf->keys("individual")) { $man = $individual->obj($person); print "$person is " . $man->value("age") . " years old\n"; }
See the discussion on hash() and value() below.
If the key from which you want to create a new object is empty, an empty object will be returned. If you run the following on the above config:
$obj = $conf->obj("other")->obj("leer");
Then $obj will be empty, just like if you have had run this:
$obj = new Config::General::Extended( () );
Read operations on this empty object will return nothing or even fail. But you can use an empty object for creating a new config using write operations, i.e.:
$obj->someoption("value");
See the discussion on AUTOLOAD METHODS below.
my %sub_hash = $conf->hash("individual"); print Dumper(\%sub_hash); $VAR1 = { martin => { age => 13 } };
$other = $conf->obj("other"); my @blahs = $other->array("blah"); print Dumper(\@blahs); $VAR1 = [ "blubber", "gobble" ];
name = arthur age = 23
you could do something like that:
print $conf->value("name") . " is " . $conf->value("age") . " years old\n";
You can use this method also to set the value of ``key'' to something if you give over a hash reference, array reference or a scalar in addition to the key. An example:
$conf->value("key", \%somehash); # or $conf->value("key", \@somearray); # or $conf->value("key", $somescalar);
Please note, that this method does not complain about existing values within ``key''!
To avoid such behavior you can use one of the methods is_hash() is_array() is_scalar() to check if the value of ``key'' is really what you expect it to be.
An example(based on the config example from above):
if($conf->is_hash("individual") { $individual = $conf->obj("individual"); } else { die "You need to configure a "individual" block!\n"; }
print Dumper($conf->keys("individual"); $VAR1 = [ "martin", "joseph" ];
If no key name was supplied, then the keys of the object itself will be returned.
You can use this method in foreach loops as seen in an example above(obj() ).
We assume the following config:
<person> name = Moser prename = Peter birth = 12.10.1972 </person>
Now we read it in and process it:
my $conf = new Config::General::Extended("configfile"); my $person = $conf->obj("person"); print $person->prename . " " . $person->name . " is " . $person->age . " years old\n";
This notation supports only scalar values! You need to make sure, that the block <person> does not contain any subblock or multiple identical options(which will become an array after parsing)!
If you access a non-existent key this way, Config::General will croak an error. You can turn this behavior off by setting -StrictObjects to 0 or ``no''. In this case undef will be returned.
Of course you can use this kind of methods for writing data too:
$person->name("Neustein");
This changes the value of the ``name'' key to ``Neustein''. This feature behaves exactly like value(), which means you can assign hash or array references as well and that existing values under the given key will be overwritten.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
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