Is there a standard CPAN way of finding out all the superclasses of a Perl class (or better yet entire superclass tree, up to UNIVERSAL)?
Or is the best practice to simply examine @{"${$class}::ISA"} for each class, class's parents etc...?
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Is there a standard CPAN way of finding out all the superclasses of a Perl class (or better yet entire superclass tree, up to UNIVERSAL)? Or is the best practice to simply examine |
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There is no "standard way" because this is not a standard thing you want to do. For anything other than visualization it is an OO red flag to want to inspect your inheritance tree. In addition to Class::ISA, there is mro::get_linear_isa(). Both have been in core for a while so they could be considered "standard" for some definition. Both of those show inheritance as a flat list, not a tree, which is useful mostly for deep magic. The perl5i meta object provides both linear_isa(), like mro (it just calls mro), and ISA() which returns the class'
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Most likely these days you want to use one of the functions from
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I think Class::ISA is something like you are looking for
Prints:
However, it's not some kind of "best practice" since the whole task isn't something Perl programmers do every day. |
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I don't believe that there is something like a "standard CPAN way". Examining |
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