package Perl::Critic::Policy::ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitLongChainsOfMethodCalls; use 5.010001; use strict; use warnings; use Readonly; use Perl::Critic::Utils qw{ :characters :severities }; use Perl::Critic::Utils::PPI qw{ is_ppi_expression_or_generic_statement }; use parent 'Perl::Critic::Policy'; our $VERSION = '1.152'; #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Readonly::Scalar my $EXPL => q{Long chains of method calls indicate code that is too tightly coupled}; #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- sub supported_parameters { return ( { name => 'max_chain_length', description => 'The number of chained calls to allow.', default_string => '3', behavior => 'integer', integer_minimum => 1, }, ); } sub default_severity { return $SEVERITY_LOW } sub default_themes { return qw( core maintenance ) } sub applies_to { return qw{ PPI::Statement }; } #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- sub _max_chain_length { my ( $self ) = @_; return $self->{_max_chain_length}; } #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- sub violates { my ( $self, $elem, undef ) = @_; return if not is_ppi_expression_or_generic_statement($elem); my $chain_length = 0; my $max_chain_length = $self->_max_chain_length(); my @children = $elem->schildren(); my $child = shift @children; while ($child) { # if it looks like we've got a subroutine call, drop the parameter # list. if ( $child->isa('PPI::Token::Word') and @children and $children[0]->isa('PPI::Structure::List') ) { shift @children; } if ( $child->isa('PPI::Token::Word') or $child->isa('PPI::Token::Symbol') ) { if ( @children ) { if ( $children[0]->isa('PPI::Token::Operator') ) { if ( q{->} eq $children[0]->content() ) { $chain_length++; shift @children; } } elsif ( not $children[0]->isa('PPI::Token::Structure') ) { $chain_length = 0; } } } else { if ($chain_length > $max_chain_length) { return $self->violation( "Found method-call chain of length $chain_length.", $EXPL, $elem, ); } $chain_length = 0; } $child = shift @children; } if ($chain_length > $max_chain_length) { return $self->violation( "Found method-call chain of length $chain_length.", $EXPL, $elem, ); } return; } 1; __END__ #----------------------------------------------------------------------------- =pod =for stopwords MSCHWERN =head1 NAME Perl::Critic::Policy::ValuesAndExpressions::ProhibitLongChainsOfMethodCalls - Long chains of method calls indicate tightly coupled code. =head1 AFFILIATION This Policy is part of the core L distribution. =head1 DESCRIPTION A long chain of method calls usually indicates that the code knows too much about the interrelationships between objects. If the code is able to directly navigate far down a network of objects, then when the network changes structure in the future, the code will need to be modified to deal with the change. The code is too tightly coupled and is brittle. $x = $y->a; #ok $x = $y->a->b; #ok $x = $y->a->b->c; #questionable, but allowed by default $x = $y->a->b->c->d; #not ok =head1 CONFIGURATION This policy has one option: C which controls how far the code is allowed to navigate. The default value is 3. =head1 TO DO Add a C option to allow for things like File::Find::Rule ->name('*.blah') ->not_name('thingy') ->readable() ->directory() ->in(@roots); =head1 AUTHOR Elliot Shank C<< >> =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (c) 2007-2011 Elliot Shank. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. The full text of this license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module. =cut # Local Variables: # mode: cperl # cperl-indent-level: 4 # fill-column: 78 # indent-tabs-mode: nil # c-indentation-style: bsd # End: # ex: set ts=8 sts=4 sw=4 tw=78 ft=perl expandtab shiftround :