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Dynamic variables in perl

I am wondering about how I can do in Perl what I commonly do in lisp:

(defvar *verbose-level* 0)
(defun my-function (... &key ((:verbose-level *verbose-level*) *verbose-level*) ...) ...)

this means that my-function is run at the current level of verbosity, but I can pass it a different level which will affect all its calls too:

(defun f1 (&key ((:verbose-level *verbose-level*) *verbose-level*))
  (format t "~S: ~S=~S~%" 'f1 '*verbose-level* *verbose-level*)
  (f2 :verbose-level 1)
  (format t "~S: ~S=~S~%" 'f1 '*verbose-level* *verbose-level*)
  (f2 :verbose-level (1+ *verbose-level*))
  (format t "~S: ~S=~S~%" 'f1 '*verbose-level* *verbose-level*))
(defun f2 (&key ((:verbose-level *verbose-level*) *verbose-level*))
  (format t "~S: ~S=~S~%" 'f2 '*verbose-level* *verbose-level*))
[17]> (f1)
F1: *VERBOSE-LEVEL*=0
F2: *VERBOSE-LEVEL*=1
F1: *VERBOSE-LEVEL*=0
F2: *VERBOSE-LEVEL*=1
F1: *VERBOSE-LEVEL*=0
NIL
[18]> (f1 :verbose-level 4)
F1: *VERBOSE-LEVEL*=4
F2: *VERBOSE-LEVEL*=1
F1: *VERBOSE-LEVEL*=4
F2: *VERBOSE-LEVEL*=5
F1: *VERBOSE-LEVEL*=4

(note that the variable bindings are restored on exit - even abnormal - from functions).

How can I do something like that in Perl?

E.g., in misc.pm, I have our $verbose=0;. How do I write a function which would bind $verbose to a value of its argument and restore its value on return?

like image 882
sds Avatar asked Jun 20 '13 15:06

sds


2 Answers

Perl's concept of global variables is quite similar to special variables in CL.

You can “shadow” the value of a global variable with local:

our $var = 1;

func("before");

{
  # a block creates a new scope
  local $var = 2;
  func("inside");
}

func("after");

sub func { say "@_: $var" }

Output:

before: 1
inside: 2
after: 1

If you local a value, the new value is visible throughout the whole dynamic scope, i.e. in all functions that are called. The old value is restored once the lexical scope is left by any means (errors, returns, etc). Tail calls do not extend the dynamic scope, but count as scope exit.

Note that global variables have a fully qualified name. From a different package, you would do something like

local $Other::Package::var = 3;
Other::Package::func("from a package far, far away");

This is commonly used to provide configuration for packages with a functional (non-OO) interface. Important examples are Carp and Data::Dumper.

like image 95
amon Avatar answered Sep 27 '22 20:09

amon


If I understand you correctly, you need to locally override a global variable inside a function.

package my_package;
our $verbose = 0;

sub function {
    my ($arg1, $arg2) = @_; # getting function arguments.
    local $verbose = $arg1;
}

It will restore old state of $verbose on return.

like image 25
Karsten S. Avatar answered Sep 27 '22 19:09

Karsten S.