CONTENTS

NAME

Ref::Util - Utility functions for checking references

VERSION

version 0.204

SYNOPSIS

use Ref::Util qw( is_plain_arrayref is_plain_hashref );

if ( is_plain_arrayref( $something ) ) {
    print for @{ $something };
} elsif ( is_plain_hashref( $something ) ) {
    print for sort values %{ $something };
}

DESCRIPTION

Ref::Util introduces several functions to help identify references in a smarter (and usually faster) way. In short:

# conventional approach             # with Ref::Util

ref( $foo ) eq 'ARRAY'              is_plain_arrayref( $foo )

use Scalar::Util qw( reftype );
reftype( $foo ) eq 'ARRAY'          is_arrayref( $foo )

The difference:

EXPORT

Nothing is exported by default. You can ask for specific subroutines (described below) or ask for all subroutines at once:

use Ref::Util qw<is_scalarref is_arrayref is_hashref ...>;

# or

use Ref::Util ':all';

SUBROUTINES

is_ref($ref)

Check for a reference to anything.

is_ref([]);

is_scalarref($ref)

Check for a scalar reference.

is_scalarref(\"hello");
is_scalarref(\30);
is_scalarref(\$value);

Note that, even though a reference is itself a type of scalar value, a reference to another reference is not treated as a scalar reference:

!is_scalarref(\\1);

The rationale for this is two-fold. First, callers that want to decide how to handle inputs based on their reference type will usually want to treat a ref-ref and a scalar-ref differently. Secondly, this more closely matches the behavior of the ref built-in and of "reftype" in Scalar::Util, which report a ref-ref as REF rather than SCALAR.

is_arrayref($ref)

Check for an array reference.

is_arrayref([]);

is_hashref($ref)

Check for a hash reference.

is_hashref({});

is_coderef($ref)

Check for a code reference.

is_coderef( sub {} );

is_regexpref($ref)

Check for a regular expression (regex, regexp) reference.

is_regexpref( qr// );

is_globref($ref)

Check for a glob reference.

is_globref( \*STDIN );

is_formatref($ref)

Check for a format reference.

# set up format in STDOUT
format STDOUT =
.

# now we can test it
is_formatref( *main::STDOUT{'FORMAT'} );

This function is not available in Perl 5.6 and will trigger a croak().

is_ioref($ref)

Check for an IO reference.

is_ioref( *STDOUT{IO} );

is_refref($ref)

Check for a reference to a reference.

is_refref( \[] ); # reference to array reference

is_plain_scalarref($ref)

Check for an unblessed scalar reference.

is_plain_scalarref(\"hello");
is_plain_scalarref(\30);
is_plain_scalarref(\$value);

is_plain_ref($ref)

Check for an unblessed reference to anything.

is_plain_ref([]);

is_plain_arrayref($ref)

Check for an unblessed array reference.

is_plain_arrayref([]);

is_plain_hashref($ref)

Check for an unblessed hash reference.

is_plain_hashref({});

is_plain_coderef($ref)

Check for an unblessed code reference.

is_plain_coderef( sub {} );

is_plain_globref($ref)

Check for an unblessed glob reference.

is_plain_globref( \*STDIN );

is_plain_formatref($ref)

Check for an unblessed format reference.

# set up format in STDOUT
format STDOUT =
.

# now we can test it
is_plain_formatref(bless *main::STDOUT{'FORMAT'} );

is_plain_refref($ref)

Check for an unblessed reference to a reference.

is_plain_refref( \[] ); # reference to array reference

is_blessed_scalarref($ref)

Check for a blessed scalar reference.

is_blessed_scalarref(bless \$value);

is_blessed_ref($ref)

Check for a blessed reference to anything.

is_blessed_ref(bless [], $class);

is_blessed_arrayref($ref)

Check for a blessed array reference.

is_blessed_arrayref(bless [], $class);

is_blessed_hashref($ref)

Check for a blessed hash reference.

is_blessed_hashref(bless {}, $class);

is_blessed_coderef($ref)

Check for a blessed code reference.

is_blessed_coderef( bless sub {}, $class );

is_blessed_globref($ref)

Check for a blessed glob reference.

is_blessed_globref( bless \*STDIN, $class );

is_blessed_formatref($ref)

Check for a blessed format reference.

# set up format for FH
format FH =
.

# now we can test it
is_blessed_formatref(bless *FH{'FORMAT'}, $class );

is_blessed_refref($ref)

Check for a blessed reference to a reference.

is_blessed_refref( bless \[], $class ); # reference to array reference

BENCHMARKS

Here is a benchmark comparing similar checks.

my $bench = Dumbbench->new(
    target_rel_precision => 0.005,
    initial_runs         => 20,
);

my $amount = 1e7;
my $ref    = [];
$bench->add_instances(
    Dumbbench::Instance::PerlSub->new(
        name => 'Ref::Util::is_plain_arrayref (CustomOP)',
        code => sub {
            Ref::Util::is_plain_arrayref($ref) for ( 1 .. $amount )
        },
    ),

    Dumbbench::Instance::PerlSub->new(
        name => 'ref(), reftype(), !blessed()',
        code => sub {
            ref $ref
                && Scalar::Util::reftype($ref) eq 'ARRAY'
                && !Scalar::Util::blessed($ref)
                for ( 1 .. $amount );
        },
    ),

    Dumbbench::Instance::PerlSub->new(
        name => 'ref()',
        code => sub { ref($ref) eq 'ARRAY' for ( 1 .. $amount ) },
    ),

    Dumbbench::Instance::PerlSub->new(
        name => 'Data::Util::is_array_ref',
        code => sub { is_array_ref($ref) for ( 1 .. $amount ) },
    ),

);

The results:

ref():                                   5.335e+00 +/- 1.8e-02 (0.3%)
ref(), reftype(), !blessed():            1.5545e+01 +/- 3.1e-02 (0.2%)
Ref::Util::is_plain_arrayref (CustomOP): 2.7951e+00 +/- 6.2e-03 (0.2%)
Data::Util::is_array_ref:                5.9074e+00 +/- 7.5e-03 (0.1%)

(Rounded run time per iteration)

A benchmark against Data::Util:

Ref::Util::is_plain_arrayref: 3.47157e-01 +/- 6.8e-05 (0.0%)
Data::Util::is_array_ref:     6.7562e-01 +/- 7.5e-04 (0.1%)

SEE ALSO

THANKS

The following people have been invaluable in their feedback and support.

AUTHORS

LICENSE

This software is made available under the MIT Licence as stated in the accompanying LICENSE file.

AUTHORS

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is Copyright (c) 2017 by Sawyer X.

This is free software, licensed under:

The MIT (X11) License