
autovivification - Lexically disable autovivification.

Version 0.11

no autovivification;
my $hashref;
my $a = $hashref->{key_a}; # $hashref stays undef
if (exists $hashref->{option}) { # Still undef
...
}
delete $hashref->{old}; # Still undef again
$hashref->{new} = $value; # Vivifies to { new => $value }

When an undefined variable is dereferenced, it gets silently upgraded to an array or hash reference (depending of the type of the dereferencing). This behaviour is called autovivification and usually does what you mean (e.g. when you store a value) but it may be unnatural or surprising because your variables gets populated behind your back. This is especially true when several levels of dereferencing are involved, in which case all levels are vivified up to the last, or when it happens in intuitively read-only constructs like exists.
This pragma lets you disable autovivification for some constructs and optionally throws a warning or an error when it would have happened.

unimport no autovivification; # defaults to qw<fetch exists delete>
no autovivification qw<fetch store exists delete>;
no autovivification 'warn';
no autovivification 'strict';
Magically called when no autovivification @opts is encountered. Enables the features given in @opts, which can be :
'fetch'
Turns off autovivification for rvalue dereferencing expressions, such as :
$value = $arrayref->[$idx]
$value = $hashref->{$key}
keys %$hashref
values %$hashref
Starting from perl 5.11, it also covers keys and values on array references :
keys @$arrayref
values @$arrayref
When the expression would have autovivified, undef is returned for a plain fetch, while keys and values return 0 in scalar context and the empty list in list context.
'exists'
Turns off autovivification for dereferencing expressions that are parts of an exists, such as :
exists $arrayref->[$idx]
exists $hashref->{$key}
'' is returned when the expression would have autovivified.
'delete'
Turns off autovivification for dereferencing expressions that are parts of a delete, such as :
delete $arrayref->[$idx]
delete $hashref->{$key}
undef is returned when the expression would have autovivified.
'store'
Turns off autovivification for lvalue dereferencing expressions, such as :
$arrayref->[$idx] = $value
$hashref->{$key} = $value
for ($arrayref->[$idx]) { ... }
for ($hashref->{$key}) { ... }
function($arrayref->[$idx])
function($hashref->{$key})
An exception is thrown if vivification is needed to store the value, which means that effectively you can only assign to levels that are already defined. In the example, this would require $arrayref (resp. $hashref) to already be an array (resp. hash) reference.
'warn'
Emits a warning when an autovivification is avoided.
'strict'
Throws an exception when an autovivification is avoided.
Each call to unimport adds the specified features to the ones already in use in the current lexical scope.
When @opts is empty, it defaults to qw<fetch exists delete>.
import use autovivification; # default Perl behaviour
use autovivification qw<fetch store exists delete>;
Magically called when use autovivification @opts is encountered. Disables the features given in @opts, which can be the same as for "unimport".
Each call to import removes the specified features to the ones already in use in the current lexical scope.
When @opts is empty, it defaults to restoring the original Perl autovivification behaviour.

A_THREADSAFETrue if and only if the module could have been built with thread-safety features enabled. This constant only has a meaning when your perl is threaded, otherwise it will always be false.
A_FORKSAFETrue if and only if this module could have been built with fork-safety features enabled. This constant will always be true, except on Windows where it is false for perl 5.10.0 and below.

The pragma doesn't apply when one dereferences the returned value of an array or hash slice, as in @array[$id]->{member} or @hash{$key}->{member}. This syntax is valid Perl, yet it is discouraged as the slice is here useless since the dereferencing enforces scalar context. If warnings are turned on, Perl will complain about one-element slices.

perl 5.8.3.
A C compiler. This module may happen to build with a C++ compiler as well, but don't rely on it, as no guarantee is made in this regard.
XSLoader (standard since perl 5.006).


Vincent Pit, <perl at profvince.com>, http://www.profvince.com.
You can contact me by mail or on irc.perl.org (vincent).

Please report any bugs or feature requests to bug-autovivification at rt.cpan.org, or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=autovivification. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes.

You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc autovivification
Tests code coverage report is available at http://www.profvince.com/perl/cover/autovivification.

Matt S. Trout asked for it.

Copyright 2009,2010,2011,2012,2013 Vincent Pit, all rights reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.