# Class name interface use aliased 'My::Company::Namespace::Customer'; my $cust = Customer->new; use aliased 'My::Company::Namespace::Preferred::Customer' => 'Preferred'; my $pref = Preferred->new; # Variable interface use aliased; my $Customer = alias "My::Other::Namespace::Customer"; my $cust = $Customer->new; my $Preferred = alias "My::Other::Namespace::Preferred::Customer"; my $pref = $Preferred->new;
#use aliased 'Some::Annoyingly::Long::Module::Name::Customer'; use Some::Annoyingly::Long::Module::Name::Customer; sub Customer { return 'Some::Annoyingly::Long::Module::Name::Customer'; } my $cust = Customer->new;
This module is useful if you prefer a shorter name for a class. It's also handy if a class has been renamed.
(Some may object to the term ``aliasing'' because we're not aliasing one namespace to another, but it's a handy term. Just keep in mind that this is done with a subroutine and not with typeglobs and weird namespace munging.)
Note that this is only for "use"ing OO modules. You cannot use this to load procedural modules. See the ``Why OO Only?'' section. Also, don't let the version number fool you. This code is ridiculously simple and is just fine for most use.
use aliased 'Some::Module::name';
"aliased" will allow you to reference the class by the last part of the class name. Thus, "Really::Long::Name" becomes "Name". It does this by exporting a subroutine into your namespace with the same name as the aliased name. This subroutine returns the original class name.
For example:
use aliased "Acme::Company::Customer"; my $cust = Customer->find($id);
Note that any class method can be called on the shorter version of the class name, not just the constructor.
use aliased 'Original::Module::Name' => 'NewName';
Here's how we use "aliased" to avoid conflicts:
use aliased "Really::Long::Name"; use aliased "Another::Really::Long::Name" => "Aname"; my $name = Name->new; my $aname = Aname->new;
You can even alias to a different package:
use aliased "Another::Really::Long::Name" => "Another::Name"; my $aname = Another::Name->new;
Messing around with different namespaces is a really bad idea and you probably don't want to do this. However, it might prove handy if the module you are using has been renamed. If the interface has not changed, this allows you to use the new module by only changing one line of code.
use aliased "New::Module::Name" => "Old::Module::Name"; my $thing = Old::Module::Name->new;
Snippet 1:
use Some::Module::Name qw/foo bar/; my $o = Some::Module::Name->some_class_method;
Snippet 2 (equivalent to snippet 1):
use aliased 'Some::Module::Name' => 'Name', qw/foo bar/; my $o = Name->some_class_method;
Note: remember, you cannot use import lists with ``Implicit Aliasing''. As a result, you may simply prefer to only use ``Explicit Aliasing'' as a matter of style.
use aliased; my $alias = alias($class); my $alias = alias($class, @imports);
"alias()" is an alternative to "use aliased ..." which uses less magic and avoids some of the ambiguities.
Like "use aliased" it "use"s the $class (pass in @imports, if given) but instead of providing an "Alias" constant it simply returns a scalar set to the $class name.
my $thing = alias("Some::Thing::With::A::Long::Name"); # Just like Some::Thing::With::A::Long::Name->method $thing->method;
The use of a scalar instead of a constant avoids any possible ambiguity when aliasing two similar names:
# No ambiguity despite the fact that they both end with "Name" my $thing = alias("Some::Thing::With::A::Long::Name"); my $other = alias("Some::Other::Thing::With::A::Long::Name");
and there is no magic constant exported into your namespace.
The only caveat is loading of the $class happens at run time. If $class exports anything you might want to ensure it is loaded at compile time with:
my $thing; BEGIN { $thing = alias("Some::Thing"); }
However, since OO classes rarely export this should not be necessary.
use aliased;
Sometimes you find you have a ton of packages in the same top-level namespace and you want to alias them, but only use them on demand. For example:
# instead of: MailVerwaltung::Client::Exception::REST::Response->throw() my $error = prefix('MailVerwaltung::Client::Exception'); $error->('REST::Response')->throw(); # same as above $error->()->throw; # same as MailVerwaltung::Client::Exception->throw
use aliased 'Some::Really::Long::Module::Name'; my $data = Name::data();
That causes a serious problem. The only (reasonable) way it can be done is to handle the aliasing via typeglobs. Thus, instead of a subroutine that provides the class name, we alias one package to another (as the namespace module does.) However, we really don't want to simply alias one package to another and wipe out namespaces willy-nilly. By merely exporting a single subroutine to a namespace, we minimize the issue.
Fortunately, this doesn't seem to be that much of a problem. Non-OO modules generally support exporting of the functions you need and this eliminates the need for a module such as this.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.