package ExtUtils::XSpp::Node::Module;
use strict;
use warnings;
use base 'ExtUtils::XSpp::Node';
=head1 NAME
ExtUtils::XSpp::Node::Module - Node representing an XS++/XS MODULE declaration
=head1 DESCRIPTION
An L<ExtUtils::XSpp::Node> subclass representing a module declaration.
For example, this XS++
%module{Some::Perl::Namespace}
would turn into this XS:
MODULE=Some::Perl::Namespace
See also: L<ExtUtils::XSpp::Node::Package>.
In a nutshell, the module that your XS++/XS code belongs to is
the main Perl package of your wrapper. A single module can (and usually does)
have several packages (respectively C++ classes).
=head1 METHODS
=head2 new
Creates a new C<ExtUtils::XSpp::Node::Module>.
Named parameters: C<module> indicating the name
of the module.
=cut
sub init {
my $this = shift;
my %args = @_;
$this->{MODULE} = $args{module};
}
sub to_string { 'MODULE=' . $_[0]->module }
sub print { return $_[0]->to_string . "\n" }
=head1 ACCESSORS
=head2 module
Returns the name of the module.
=cut
sub module { $_[0]->{MODULE} }
1;