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问题:
I keep the name of the subroutine I want to call at runtime in a variable called $action. Then I use this to call that sub at the right time:
&{\&{$action}}();
Works fine. The only thing I don't like is that it's ugly and every time I do it, I feel beholden to add a comment for the next developer:
# call the sub by the name of $action
Anyone know a prettier way of doing this?
UPDATE: The idea here was to avoid having to maintain a dispatch table every time I added a new callable sub, since I am the sole developer, I'm not worried about other programmers following or not following the 'rules'. Sacrificing a bit of security for my convenience. Instead my dispatch module would check $action to make sure that 1) it is the name of a defined subroutine and not malicious code to run with eval, and 2) that it wouldn't run any sub prefaced by an underscore, which would be marked as internal-only subs by this naming convention.
Any thoughts on this approach? Whitelisting subroutines in the dispatch table is something I will forget all the time, and my clients would rather me err on the side of "it works" than "it's wicked secure". (very limited time to develop apps)
FINAL UPDATE: I think I've decided on a dispatch table after all. Although I'd be curious if anyone who reads this question has ever tried to do away with one and how they did it, I have to bow to the collective wisdom here. Thanks to all, many great responses.
回答1:
Rather than storing subroutine names in a variable and calling them, a better way to do this is to use a hash of subroutine references (otherwise known as a dispatch table.)
my %actions = ( foo => \&foo, bar => \&bar, baz => sub { print 'baz!' } ... );
Then you can call the right one easily:
$actions{$action}->();
You can also add some checking to make sure $action
is a valid key in the hash, and so forth.
In general, you should avoid symbolic references (what you're doing now) as they cause all kinds of problems. In addition, using real subroutine references will work with strict
turned on.
回答2:
Just &$action()
, but usually it's nicer to use coderefs from the beginning, or use a dispatcher hash. For example:
my $disp = {foo => \&some_sub, bar => \&some_other_sub }; $disp->{'foo'}->();
回答3:
Huh? You can just say
$action->()
Example:
sub f { return 11 } $action = 'f'; print $action->(); $ perl subfromscalar.pl 11
Constructions like
'f'->() # equivalent to &f()
also work.
回答4:
I'm not sure I understand what you mean. (I think this is another in a recent group of "How can I use a variable as a variable name?" questions, but maybe not.)
In any case, you should be able to assign an entire subroutine to a variable (as a reference), and then call it straightforwardly:
# create the $action variable - a reference to the subroutine my $action = \&preach_it; # later - perhaps much later - I call it $action->(); sub preach_it { print "Can I get an amen!\n" }
回答5:
The most important thing is: why do you want to use variable as function name. What will happen if it will be 'eval'? Is there a list of functions that can be used? Or can it be any function? If list exists - how long it is?
Generally, the best way to handle such cases is to use dispatch tables:
my %dispatch = ( 'addition' => \&some_addition_function, 'multiplication' => sub { $self->call_method( @_ ) }, );
And then just:
$dispatch{ $your_variable }->( 'any', 'args' );
回答6:
I do something similar. I split it into two lines to make it slightly more identifiable, but it's not a lot prettier.
my $sub = \&{$action}; $sub->();
I do not know of a more correct or prettier way of doing it. For what it's worth, we have production code that does what you are doing, and it works without having to disable use strict
.
回答7:
__PACKAGE__->can($action)->(@args);
For more info on can(): http://perldoc.perl.org/UNIVERSAL.html
回答8:
Every package in Perl is already a hash table. You can add elements and reference them by the normal hash operations. In general it is not necessary to duplicate the functionality by an additional hash table.
#! /usr/bin/perl -T use strict; use warnings; my $tag = 'HTML'; *::->{$tag} = sub { print '<html>', @_, '</html>', "\n" }; HTML("body1"); *::->{$tag}("body2");
The code prints:
<html>body1</html> <html>body2</html>
If you need a separate name space, you can define a dedicated package.
See perlmod for further information.
回答9:
Either use
&{\&{$action}}();
Or use eval to execute the function:
eval("$action()");
回答10:
I did it in this way:
@func = qw(cpu mem net disk); foreach my $item (@func){ $ret .= &$item(1); }
回答11:
If it's only in one program, write a function that calls a subroutine using a variable name, and only have to document it/apologize once?
回答12:
I used this: it works for me.
(\$action)->();
Or you can use 'do', quite similar with previous posts:
$p = do { \&$conn;}; $p->();