You even watch Mythbusters?
Although you see Adam and Jamie do really, really dangerous stuff, they warn you at the beginning of every program, "Don't do this at home." Think of Perl prototypes in the same way. If you use them, there's a good likelihood you'll get badly burned.
Okay, now who is calling your login
function? Or, maybe better, how is it called?
If I use your Perl module, do I call your login subroutine from my main program like this?
my $package_obj = Another_package->new;
$package_obj->login($user, $password);
Or, is this some subroutine that you use in your package for your convenience and you use it as a simple subroutine, and not a private method like this:
package Another_package;
sub new {
...
}
sub foo {
...
my $user = login ($user, $password);
}
If you're calling your login
subroutine as a simple subroutine inside your package as in the second example, everything should be fine.
However, if you're treating your login subroutine like a full fledge method (like I do in the first example), you must remember that methods pass their class object as the first parameter of the subroutine.
Thus, you'll need to do something like this:
sub login {
my $self = shift; #Pointer to the Another_package object I'm using
my $user = shift;
my $password = shift; #I just love lining things up!
$self->{USER} = $user; #Bad way of doing it.
$self->{PASSWD} = $password;
... #Some processing.
return $user;
}
Why the #Bad way of doing it
comment? Because you really want to keep your internals as separate as possible. That way, if you make a change to the structure of the Another_package
class, your changes are isolated in a very specific part of your code. It makes debugging much easier.
A better way of writing the login subroutine would be:
sub Login { #In standard Perl, methods are capitalized.
my $self = shift; #Pointer to Another_package object
my $user = shift; #Allow user to pass user and password in constructor
my $password = shift; #I just love lining things up!
$self->User($user); #Way better: This is a setter/getter method
$self->Password($password);
... #Some processing.
return $user;
}
In this example, I'm using setter/getter methods for setting my user name and password. This way, I don't have to worry how they're actually stored in my object.
Here's your Another_Package
module using setter/getter methods. I now allow the user to pass in the user and password when they call the new constructor if they'd like.
package Another_package;
sub new {
my $class = shift;
my $user = shift;
my $password = shift;
my $self = {};
bless $self, $class;
$self->User($user);
$self->Password($password);
...
return $self;
}
sub Login {
my $self = shift;
my $user = shift;
my $pass = shift;
$self->Password($pass);
if (not defined $self->User($user)) {
croak qq(Cannot log in without a user ID);
}
...
if ($login_successful) {
return $self->User; #Or maybe a session instant
else {
return;
}
}
Notice in my new constructor subroutine I create a $self
anonymous hash (my $self = {}
) and I immediately bless it. Now, $self
is already a package object, and I can call a bunch of setter/getter methods to set the various fields in my object. My new constructor has no idea what my actual Another_module object looks like.
In my Login method subroutine, I also use the same setter/getter methods to set user and password. Again, my Login method knows nothing on how these fields are stored in the object.
One more thing you might notice is that I'm setting a scalar called $login_successful
in my Login module to see whether or not my login was successful. In Perl, it is common to return nothing if the method fails, or return something on success. This way, the user's program can test to see if the call succeeded or failed. For example, maybe if the login fails, the user might want to try some default passwords before giving up:
my $package_obj = Another_package->new($user, $password);
my $foo = $package_obj->Login;
if (not defined $foo) {
foreach my $password qw(swordfish s3x mon3y 7ucky) {
$package_obj->Password($password);
last if $foo = $package_obj->Login;
}
if (not defined $foo) {
die "I don't know the password :-(";
}
}
So, what do my setter/getter methods look like? They're actually pretty simple:
sub User {
my $self = shift;
my $user = shift;
if(defined $user) {
$self->{USER_INFO}->{USER} = $user;
}
return $self->{USER_INFO}->{USER};
}
sub Password {
my $self = shift;
my $pass = shift;
if (defined $password) {
$self->{USER_INFO}->{PASSWORD} = $pass;
}
return $self->{USER_INFO}->{PASSWORD};
}
Why do I store $user
in $self->{USER_INFO}->{USER}
and not $self->{USER}
? No reason a at all. However, it does show that the rest of the Another_package
module doesn't care where or how I store the user and password.