PadWalker(3)



PadWalker(3pm)        User Contributed Perl Documentation       PadWalker(3pm)

NAME
       PadWalker - play with other peoples' lexical variables

SYNOPSIS
         use PadWalker qw(peek_my peek_our peek_sub closed_over);
         ...

DESCRIPTION
       PadWalker is a module which allows you to inspect (and even change!)
       lexical variables in any subroutine which called you. It will only show
       those variables which are in scope at the point of the call.

       PadWalker is particularly useful for debugging. It's even used by
       Perl's built-in debugger. (It can also be used for evil, of course.)

       I wouldn't recommend using PadWalker directly in production code, but
       it's your call. Some of the modules that use PadWalker internally are
       certainly safe for and useful in production.

       peek_my LEVEL
       peek_our LEVEL
           The LEVEL argument is interpreted just like the argument to
           "caller".  So peek_my(0) returns a reference to a hash of all the
           "my" variables that are currently in scope; peek_my(1) returns a
           reference to a hash of all the "my" variables that are in scope at
           the point where the current sub was called, and so on.

           "peek_our" works in the same way, except that it lists the "our"
           variables rather than the "my" variables.

           The hash associates each variable name with a reference to its
           value. The variable names include the sigil, so the variable $x is
           represented by the string '$x'.

           For example:

             my $x = 12;
             my $h = peek_my (0);
             ${$h->{'$x'}}++;

             print $x;  # prints 13

           Or a more complex example:

             sub increment_my_x {
               my $h = peek_my (1);
               ${$h->{'$x'}}++;
             }

             my $x=5;
             increment_my_x;
             print $x;  # prints 6

       peek_sub SUB
           The "peek_sub" routine takes a coderef as its argument, and returns
           a hash of the "my" variables used in that sub. The values will
           usually be undefined unless the sub is in use (i.e. in the call-
           chain) at the time. On the other hand:

             my $x = "Hello!";
             my $r = peek_sub(sub {$x})->{'$x'};
             print "$$r\n";        # prints 'Hello!'

           If the sub defines several "my" variables with the same name,
           you'll get the last one. I don't know of any use for "peek_sub"
           that isn't broken as a result of this, and it will probably be
           deprecated in a future version in favour of some alternative
           interface.

       closed_over SUB
           "closed_over" is similar to "peek_sub", except that it only lists
           the "my" variables which are used in the subroutine but defined
           outside: in other words, the variables which it closes over. This
           does have reasonable uses: see Data::Dump::Streamer, for example (a
           future version of which may in fact use "closed_over").

       set_closed_over SUB, HASH_REF
           "set_closed_over" reassigns the pad variables that are closed over
           by the subroutine.

           The second argument is a hash of references, much like the one
           returned from "closed_over".

       var_name LEVEL, VAR_REF
       var_name SUB,   VAR_REF
           "var_name(sub, var_ref)" returns the name of the variable referred
           to by "var_ref", provided it is a "my" variable used in the sub.
           The "sub" parameter can be either a CODE reference or a number. If
           it's a number, it's treated the same way as the argument to
           "peek_my".

           For example,

             my $foo;
             print var_name(0, \$foo);    # prints '$foo'

             sub my_name {
               return var_name(1, shift);
             }
             print my_name(\$foo);        # ditto

AUTHOR
       Robin Houston <robin@cpan.org>

       With contributions from Richard Soberberg, Jesse Luehrs and Yuval
       Kogman, bug-spotting from Peter Scott, Dave Mitchell and Goro Fuji, and
       suggestions from demerphq.

SEE ALSO
       Devel::LexAlias, Devel::Caller, Sub::Parameters

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (c) 2000-2009, Robin Houston. All Rights Reserved.  This
       module is free software. It may be used, redistributed and/or modified
       under the same terms as Perl itself.

perl v5.30.0                      2019-10-06                    PadWalker(3pm)

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