GIF89a;
Direktori : /usr/share/perl5/vendor_perl/ExtUtils/Typemaps/ |
Current File : //usr/share/perl5/vendor_perl/ExtUtils/Typemaps/Type.pm |
package ExtUtils::Typemaps::Type; use 5.006001; use strict; use warnings; require ExtUtils::Typemaps; our $VERSION = '3.18'; =head1 NAME ExtUtils::Typemaps::Type - Entry in the TYPEMAP section of a typemap =head1 SYNOPSIS use ExtUtils::Typemaps; ... my $type = $typemap->get_type_map('char*'); my $input = $typemap->get_input_map($type->xstype); =head1 DESCRIPTION Refer to L<ExtUtils::Typemaps> for details. Object associates C<ctype> with C<xstype>, which is the index into the in- and output mapping tables. =head1 METHODS =cut =head2 new Requires C<xstype> and C<ctype> parameters. Optionally takes C<prototype> parameter. =cut sub new { my $prot = shift; my $class = ref($prot)||$prot; my %args = @_; if (!ref($prot)) { if (not defined $args{xstype} or not defined $args{ctype}) { die("Need xstype and ctype parameters"); } } my $self = bless( (ref($prot) ? {%$prot} : {proto => ''}) => $class ); $self->{xstype} = $args{xstype} if defined $args{xstype}; $self->{ctype} = $args{ctype} if defined $args{ctype}; $self->{tidy_ctype} = ExtUtils::Typemaps::_tidy_type($self->{ctype}); $self->{proto} = $args{'prototype'} if defined $args{'prototype'}; return $self; } =head2 proto Returns or sets the prototype. =cut sub proto { $_[0]->{proto} = $_[1] if @_ > 1; return $_[0]->{proto}; } =head2 xstype Returns the name of the XS type that this C type is associated to. =cut sub xstype { return $_[0]->{xstype}; } =head2 ctype Returns the name of the C type as it was set on construction. =cut sub ctype { return defined($_[0]->{ctype}) ? $_[0]->{ctype} : $_[0]->{tidy_ctype}; } =head2 tidy_ctype Returns the canonicalized name of the C type. =cut sub tidy_ctype { return $_[0]->{tidy_ctype}; } =head1 SEE ALSO L<ExtUtils::Typemaps> =head1 AUTHOR Steffen Mueller C<<smueller@cpan.org>> =head1 COPYRIGHT & LICENSE Copyright 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012 Steffen Mueller This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. =cut 1;