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package PPI::Statement::Sub;

=pod

=head1 NAME

PPI::Statement::Sub - Subroutine declaration

=head1 INHERITANCE

  PPI::Statement::Sub
  isa PPI::Statement
      isa PPI::Node
          isa PPI::Element

=head1 DESCRIPTION

Except for the special BEGIN, CHECK, UNITCHECK, INIT, and END subroutines
(which are part of L<PPI::Statement::Scheduled>) all subroutine declarations
are lexed as a PPI::Statement::Sub object.

Primarily, this means all of the various C<sub foo {}> statements, but also
forward declarations such as C<sub foo;> or C<sub foo($);>. It B<does not>
include anonymous subroutines, as these are merely part of a normal statement.

=head1 METHODS

C<PPI::Statement::Sub> has a number of methods in addition to the standard
L<PPI::Statement>, L<PPI::Node> and L<PPI::Element> methods.

=cut

use strict;
use List::Util     ();
use Params::Util   qw{_INSTANCE};
use PPI::Statement ();

use vars qw{$VERSION @ISA};
BEGIN {
	$VERSION = '1.220';
	@ISA     = 'PPI::Statement';
}

# Lexer clue
sub __LEXER__normal() { '' }

sub _complete {
	my $child = $_[0]->schild(-1);
	return !! (
		defined $child
		and
		$child->isa('PPI::Structure::Block')
		and
		$child->complete
	);
}





#####################################################################
# PPI::Statement::Sub Methods

=pod

=head2 name

The C<name> method returns the name of the subroutine being declared.

In some rare cases such as a naked C<sub> at the end of the file, this may return
false.

=cut

sub name {
	my ($self) = @_;

	# Usually the second token is the name.
	my $token = $self->schild(1);
	return $token->content
	  if defined $token and $token->isa('PPI::Token::Word');

	# In the case of special subs whose 'sub' can be omitted (AUTOLOAD
	# or DESTROY), the name will be the first token.
	$token = $self->schild(0);
	return $token->content
	  if defined $token and $token->isa('PPI::Token::Word');
	return '';
}

=pod

=head2 prototype

If it has one, the C<prototype> method returns the subroutine's prototype.
It is returned in the same format as L<PPI::Token::Prototype/prototype>,
cleaned and removed from its brackets.

Returns the subroutine's prototype, or undef if the subroutine does not
define one. Note that when the sub has an empty prototype (C<()>) the
return is an empty string.

=cut

sub prototype {
	my $self      = shift;
	my $Prototype = List::Util::first {
		_INSTANCE($_, 'PPI::Token::Prototype')
	} $self->children;
	defined($Prototype) ? $Prototype->prototype : undef;
}

=pod

=head2 block

With its name and implementation shared with L<PPI::Statement::Scheduled>,
the C<block> method finds and returns the actual Structure object of the
code block for this subroutine.

Returns false if this is a forward declaration, or otherwise does not have a
code block.

=cut

sub block {
	my $self = shift;
	my $lastchild = $self->schild(-1) or return '';
	$lastchild->isa('PPI::Structure::Block') and $lastchild;
}

=pod

=head2 forward

The C<forward> method returns true if the subroutine declaration is a
forward declaration.

That is, it returns false if the subroutine has a code block, or true
if it does not.

=cut

sub forward {
	! shift->block;
}

=pod

=head2 reserved

The C<reserved> method provides a convenience method for checking to see
if this is a special reserved subroutine. It does not check against any
particular list of reserved sub names, but just returns true if the name
is all uppercase, as defined in L<perlsub>.

Note that in the case of BEGIN, CHECK, UNITCHECK, INIT and END, these will be
defined as L<PPI::Statement::Scheduled> objects, not subroutines.

Returns true if it is a special reserved subroutine, or false if not.

=cut

sub reserved {
	my $self = shift;
	my $name = $self->name or return '';
	$name eq uc $name;
}

1;

=pod

=head1 TO DO

- Write unit tests for this package

=head1 SUPPORT

See the L<support section|PPI/SUPPORT> in the main module.

=head1 AUTHOR

Adam Kennedy E<lt>adamk@cpan.orgE<gt>

=head1 COPYRIGHT

Copyright 2001 - 2011 Adam Kennedy.

This program is free software; you can redistribute
it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

The full text of the license can be found in the
LICENSE file included with this module.

=cut