Ace::Browser::SiteDefs(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Ace::Browser::SiteDefs(3pm) |
Ace::Browser::SiteDefs - Access to AceBrowser configuration files
use Ace; use Ace::Browser::AceSubs; use CGI qw(:standard); my $configuration = Configuration; my $docroot = $configuration->Docroot; my @pictures = @{$configuration->Pictures}; my %displays = %{$configuration->Displays}; my $coderef = $configuration->Url_mapper; $coderef->($param1,$param2);
Ace::Browser::SiteDefs evaluates an AceBrowser configuration file and returns a configuration object ("config object" for short). A config object is a bag of dynamically-generated methods, derived from the scalar variables, arrays, hashes and subroutines in the configuration file.
The config object methods are a canonicalized form of the configuration file variables, in which the first character of the method is uppercase, and subsequent characters are lower case. For example, if the configuration variable was $ROOT, the method will be $config_object->Root.
To fetch a configuration object, use the Ace::Browser::AceSubs Configuration() function. This will return a configuration object for the current database:
$config_object = Configuration();
Thereafter, it's just a matter of making the proper method calls.
If the Configuration file is a.... The method call returns a... ---------------------------------- ---------------------------- Scalar variable Scalar Array variable Array reference Hash variable Hash reference Subroutine Code reference
If a variable is not defined, the corresponding method will return undef.
Please report them.
Ace::Object, Ace::Browser::AceSubs, Ace::Browsr::SearchSubs, the README.ACEBROWSER file.
Lincoln Stein <lstein@cshl.org>.
Copyright (c) 2001 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See DISCLAIMER.txt for disclaimers of warranty.
2022-10-19 | perl v5.36.0 |