
AppConfig::Exporter - Allow modules to import AppConfig sections from a shared configuration.

package MyConfig;
use base qw( AppConfig::Exporter );
__PACKAGE__->configure( Config_File => 'myfile.conf',
AppConfig_Options => { CASE => 0 },
AppConfig_Define => { Fun_Pickles => {ARGCOUNT => ARGCOUNT_LIST} } );
1;

AppConfig::Exporter is intended to be subclassed to specify your configuration file and any options. Then, you can request a hash of any section from the configuration file by specifying it as a symbol to be imported in the use statement:
# myfile.conf
[fruit]
oranges = 'tasty'
apples = 'sweet'
# some code elsewhere...
use MyConfig qw(fruit);
print "$fruit{oranges}!"; # tasty!
my $appconfig = MyConfig->AppConfig;

This is how your class is initialized. You must specify a Config_File, and you may specify a hashref of AppConfig_Options and AppConfig_Define.
Required - path to your AppConfig compatible config file
__PACKAGE__->configure( Config_File => 'myfile.conf' );
Hash ref that will be fed to AppConfig - you can override this module's defaults, which are:
CASE => 1,
CREATE => 1,
GLOBAL => {
ARGCOUNT => ARGCOUNT_ONE,
}
For example:
__PACKAGE__->configure( Config_File => 'myfile.conf',
AppConfig_Options => { CASE => 0 } );
Hash ref that will be fed to AppConfig as a define statement if you wish for a specific variable to have different properties than the global ones.
Note: So that you can use AppConfig's constants, this module automatically imports AppConfig's b<:argcount> tag into your package for you.
__PACKAGE__->configure( Config_File => 'myfile.conf',
AppConfig_Define => { Fun_Pickles => {ARGCOUNT => ARGCOUNT_LIST} } );
This does the heavy lifting using the Exporter. You don\'t call this directly - use will do it for you.
You can use this to access the the raw AppConfig object that the exporter sources for configuration.

Ben H Kram, <bkram at dce.harvard.edu>

Andy Wardley, for his excellent AppConfig module.

Copyright 2007 Harvard University and Fellows, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.