TAP::Parser::Iterator(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | TAP::Parser::Iterator(3pm) |
TAP::Parser::Iterator - Base class for TAP source iterators
Version 3.44
# to subclass: use TAP::Parser::Iterator (); use base 'TAP::Parser::Iterator'; sub _initialize { # see TAP::Object... } sub next_raw { ... } sub wait { ... } sub exit { ... }
This is a simple iterator base class that defines TAP::Parser's iterator API. Iterators are typically created from TAP::Parser::SourceHandlers.
"new"
Create an iterator. Provided by TAP::Object.
"next"
while ( my $item = $iter->next ) { ... }
Iterate through it, of course.
"next_raw"
Note: this method is abstract and should be overridden.
while ( my $item = $iter->next_raw ) { ... }
Iterate raw input without applying any fixes for quirky input syntax.
"handle_unicode"
If necessary switch the input stream to handle unicode. This only has any effect for I/O handle based streams.
The default implementation does nothing.
"get_select_handles"
Return a list of filehandles that may be used upstream in a select() call to signal that this Iterator is ready. Iterators that are not handle-based should return an empty list.
The default implementation does nothing.
"wait"
Note: this method is abstract and should be overridden.
my $wait_status = $iter->wait;
Return the "wait" status for this iterator.
"exit"
Note: this method is abstract and should be overridden.
my $wait_status = $iter->exit;
Return the "exit" status for this iterator.
Please see "SUBCLASSING" in TAP::Parser for a subclassing overview.
You must override the abstract methods as noted above.
TAP::Parser::Iterator::Array is probably the easiest example to follow. There's not much point repeating it here.
TAP::Object, TAP::Parser, TAP::Parser::Iterator::Array, TAP::Parser::Iterator::Stream, TAP::Parser::Iterator::Process,
2022-04-21 | perl v5.34.0 |