class Method
Member function
is Routine
A type for methods that behave the same way as Routine with some exceptions listed in the following. For details of a method's parameter list see Signature.
To create a method outside a class definition, use the declarators my
and method
. If an identifier is provided the methods name will be injected into the scope specified by the declarator.
my = method (: )"greeting".("hello"); # OUTPUT: «greeting: 'hello'»<a b c>.&(my method (List:) ).say;# OUTPUT: «("a", "b", "c")(a b c)»
The invocant of a method defaults to self
. A type constraint including a type-smiley can be used and is honored both for methods defined in a class and for free floating methods. Call the latter with .&
on an object.
my method m(Int: )my = 1;.(<a>);# OUTPUT: «Int»
Methods will ignore extra named arguments where other types of Routine
will throw at runtime. Extra arguments will be forwarded by nextsame and friends.
is AB.m( :1a, :2b );# OUTPUT: «1 named2 named»
sub lastcall
sub lastcall(--> True)
Truncates the current dispatch chain, which means any calls to nextsame
, callsame
, nextwith
, and callwith
will not find any of the next candidates. Note that since samewith
restarts the dispatch from the start, it's not affected by the truncation of current chain with lastcall
.
Consider example below. foo(6)
uses nextsame
when lastcall
hasn't been called, and so it reaches the Any
candidate. foo(2)
calls nextsame
as well, but since lastcall
was called first, the dispatch chain was truncated and the Any
candidate was not reached. The last call, foo(1)
, calls lastcall
too, however, it then uses samewith
, which isn't affected by it, and so the dispatch re-starts from scratch, hits the Int
candidate with the new argument 6
, and then proceeds to the Any
candidate via nextsame
(which isn't affected by the lastcall
that was used before the samewith
was called):
multi foo (Int )multi foo (Any )foo 6; say '----';foo 2; say '----';foo 1;# OUTPUT:# Int: 6# Any 6# ----# Int: 2# ----# Int: 1# Int: 6# Any 6
Type Graph
Routines supplied by class Routine
Method inherits from class Routine, which provides the following routines:
(Routine) method name
method name(Routine: --> Str)
Returns the name of the sub or method.
(Routine) method package
method package(Routine:)
Returns the package in which the routine is defined.
(Routine) method multi
method multi(Routine: --> Bool)
Returns True
if the routine is a multi sub or method. Note that the name of a multi sub refers to its proto
and this method would return false if called on it. It needs to be called on the candidates themselves:
multi foo ($, $) ;say .multi; # OUTPUT: «False»say .candidates».multi; # OUTPUT: «(True)»
(Routine) method candidates
method candidates(Routine: --> Positional)
Returns a list of multi candidates, or a one-element list with itself if it's not a multi
(Routine) method cando
method cando(Capture )
Returns a possibly-empty list of candidates that can be called with the given Capture, ordered by narrowest candidate first. For methods, the first element of the Capture needs to be the invocant:
.signature.say for "foo".^can("comb")[0].cando: \(Cool, "o");# OUTPUT: «(Cool $: Str $matcher, $limit = Inf, *%_)»
(Routine) method wrap
method wrap(Routine: )
Wraps (i.e. in-place modifies) the routine. That means a call to this routine first calls &wrapper
, which then can (but doesn't have to) call the original routine with the callsame
, callwith
, nextsame
and nextwith
dispatchers. The return value from the routine is also the return value from the wrapper.
wrap
returns an instance of a private class called Routine::WrapHandle
, which you can pass to unwrap to restore the original routine.
(Routine) method unwrap
method unwrap()
Restores the original routine after it has been wrapped with wrap. While the signature allows any type to be passed, only the Routine::WrapHandle
type returned from wrap
can usefully be.
(Routine) method yada
method yada(Routine: --> Bool)
Returns True
if the routine is a stub
say (sub f() ).yada; # OUTPUT: «True»say (sub g() ).yada; # OUTPUT: «False»
(Routine) trait is cached
multi sub trait_mod:<is>(Routine , :!)
Causes the return value of a routine to be stored, so that when subsequent calls with the same list of arguments are made, the stored value can be returned immediately instead of re-running the routine.[1]
Useful when storing and returning the computed value is much faster than re-computing it every time, and when the time saved trumps the cost of the use of more memory.
Even if the arguments passed to the routine are "reference types" (such as objects or arrays), then for the purpose of caching they will only be compared based on their contents. Thus the second invocation will hit the cache in this case:
say foo( [1, 2, 3] ); # runs foosay foo( [1, 2, 3] ); # doesn't run foo, uses cached value
Since it's still at the experimental stage, you will have to insert the use experimental :cached;
statement in any module or script that uses it.
use experimental :cached;sub nth-prime(Int where * > 0) is cachedsay nth-prime(43);say nth-prime(43);say nth-prime(43);
produces this output:
Calculating 43th prime191191191
(Routine) trait is pure
multi sub trait_mod:<is>(Routine , :!)
Marks a subroutine as pure, that is, it asserts that for the same input, it will always produce the same output without any additional side effects.
The is pure
trait is a promise by the programmer to the compiler that it can constant-fold calls to such functions when the arguments are known at compile time.
sub syllables() is pure
You can mark function as pure even if they throw exceptions in edge cases or if they modify temporary objects; hence the is pure
trait can cover cases that the compiler cannot deduce on its own. On the other hand, you might not want to constant-fold functions that produce a large return value (such as the string or list repetition operators, infix x
and xx
) even if they are pure, to avoid large precompilation files.
To see it an action with a particular compiler you can try this example:
BEGINsay ‘Start’;say (^100).map: ;# Example output:# Begin# Generating syllables# Start# (matiroi yeterani shoriyuru...
Essentially this allows the compiler to perform some operations at compile time. The benefits of constant-folding may include better performance, especially in cases when the folded code is precompiled.
In addition, using a pure function or operator in sink context (that is, where the result is discarded) may lead to a warning. The code
sub double() is pure ;double(21);say "anything";# WARNING: «Useless use of "double(21)" in expression "double(21)" in sink context (line 2)»
If you want to apply this trait to a multi
, you need to apply it to the proto
; it will not work otherwise, at least in versions 2018.08 and below.
(Routine) trait is rw
multi sub trait_mod:<is>(Routine , :!)
When a routine is modified with this trait, its return value will be writable. This is useful when returning variables or writable elements of hashes or arrays, for example:
sub walk(\thing, *) is rwmy ;walk(, 'some', 'key', 1, 2) = 'autovivified';say .perl;
produces
("some" => ).hash
Note that return
marks return values as read only; if you need an early exit from an is rw
routine, you have to use return-rw
instead.
(Routine) trait is export
multi sub trait_mod:<is>(Routine , :!)
Marks a routine as exported to the rest of the world
module Foo { sub double($x) is export { 2 * $x } } import Foo; # makes sub double available say double 21; # 42
From inside another file you'd say use Foo;
to load a module and import the exported functions.
See Exporting and Selective Importing Modules for more details.
(Routine) trait is DEPRECATED
multi sub trait_mod:<is>(Routine , :!)
Marks a routine as deprecated, optionally with a message what to use instead.
This code
sub f() is DEPRECATED('the literal 42')say f();
produces this output:
42Saw 1 occurrence of deprecated code.================================================================================Sub f (from GLOBAL) seen at:deprecated.p6, line 2Please use the literal 42 instead.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------Please contact the author to have these occurrences of deprecated codeadapted, so that this message will disappear!
(Routine) trait is hidden-from-backtrace
multi sub trait_mod:<is>(Routine, :!)
Hides a routine from showing up in a default backtrace. For example
sub inner ;sub outer ;outer();
produces the error message and backtrace
OH NOEZin sub inner at bt.p6:1in sub outer at bt.p6:2in block <unit> at bt.p6:3
but if inner
is marked with hidden-from-backtrace
sub inner is hidden-from-backtrace ;sub outer ;outer();
the error backtrace does not show it:
OH NOEZin sub outer at bt.p6:2in block <unit> at bt.p6:3
(Routine) trait is default
Defined as
multi sub trait_mod:<is>(Routine , :!)
There is a special trait for Routine
s called is default
. This trait is designed as a way to disambiguate multi
calls that would normally throw an error because the compiler would not know which one to use. This means that given the following two Routine
s, the one with the is default
trait will be called.
multi sub f() is defaultmulti sub f()f(); # OUTPUT: «"Hello there"»
The is default
trait can become very useful for debugging and other uses but keep in mind that it will only resolve an ambiguous dispatch between two Routine
s of the same precedence. If one of the Routine
s is narrower than another, then that one will be called. For example:
multi sub f() is defaultmulti sub f(:)f(); # "Use of uninitialized value $greet..."
In this example, the multi
without is default
was called because it was actually narrower than the Sub
with it.
(Routine) trait is raw
Defined as:
multi sub trait_mod:<is>(Routine , :!)
Gives total access to the data structure returned by the routine.
my = <zape zapatilla>;sub þor() is raw;þor()[1] = 'pantuflo';say ; # OUTPUT: «[zape pantuflo]»
Routines supplied by class Code
Method inherits from class Code, which provides the following routines:
(Code) method ACCEPTS
multi method ACCEPTS(Code: Mu )
Usually calls the code object and passes $topic
as an argument. However, when called on a code object that takes no arguments, the code object is invoked with no arguments and $topic
is dropped. The result of the call is returned.
(Code) method arity
Defined as:
method arity(Code: --> Int)
Returns the minimum number of positional arguments that must be passed in order to call the code object. Any optional or slurpy parameters in the code object's Signature
do not contribute, nor do named parameters.
sub argless()sub args(, ?)sub slurpy(, , *)say .arity; # OUTPUT: «0»say .arity; # OUTPUT: «1»say .arity; # OUTPUT: «2»
(Code) method assuming
method assuming(Callable : |primers)
Returns a Callable
that implements the same behavior as the original, but has the values passed to .assuming already bound to the corresponding parameters.
my sub slow();# takes only one parameter and as such wont forward $nsub bench();say .assuming(10000000).; # OUTPUT: «(10000000 7.5508834)»
For a sub with arity greater than one, you can use Whatever
*
for all of the positional parameters that are not "assumed".
sub first-and-last ( , )my = .assuming( *, 'Smith' );.( 'Joe' ); # OUTPUT: «Name is Joe Smith»
You can handle any combination of assumed and not assumed positional parameters:
sub longer-names ( , , , )my = .assuming( *, *, 'Public', * );.( 'Joe', 'Q.', 'Jr.'); # OUTPUT: «Name is Joe Q. Public Jr.»
Named parameters can be assumed as well:
sub foo.assuming(13, :42foo)(24, :72bar); # OUTPUT: «13 24 42 72»
And you can use .assuming
on all types of Callables, including Methods and Blocks:
# We use a Whatever star for the invocant:my = Str.^lookup('comb').assuming: *, /P \w+/;say comber 'Perl is awesome! Python is great! And PHP is OK too';# OUTPUT: «(Perl Python PHP)»my =.assuming: 'Raku';say learner :6months; # OUTPUT: «It took me 6 months to learn Raku»
(Code) method count
Defined as:
method count(Code: --> Real)
Returns the maximum number of positional arguments that may be passed when calling the code object. For code objects that can accept any number of positional arguments (that is, they have a slurpy parameter), count
will return Inf
. Named parameters do not contribute.
sub argless()sub args(, ?)sub slurpy(, , *)say .count; # OUTPUT: «0»say .count; # OUTPUT: «2»say .count; # OUTPUT: «Inf»
(Code) method of
Defined as:
method of(Code: --> Mu)
Returns the return type constraint of the Code
:
say -> () --> Int .of; # OUTPUT: «(Int)»
(Code) method signature
Defined as:
multi method signature(Code: --> Signature)
Returns the Signature
object for this code object, which describes its parameters.
sub a(Int , Str ) ;say .signature; # OUTPUT: «(Int $one, Str $two)»
(Code) method cando
method cando(Capture )
Returns a list of candidates that can be called with the given Capture. Since Code
objects do not have any multiple dispatch, this either returns a list with the object, or an empty list.
my = \'a'; # a single argument Capturemy = \('a', 42); # a two argument Capturemy = ; # a Block object, that is a subclass of Code, taking one argumentsay .cando(); # OUTPUT: «(-> $a { #`(Block|94212856419136) ... })»say .cando(); # OUTPUT: «()»
(Code) method Str
Defined as:
multi method Str(Code: --> Str)
Will output the method name, but also produce a warning. Use .perl
or .gist
instead.
sub marine()say ~;# OUTPUT: «Sub object coerced to string (please use .gist or .perl to do that)marine»say .Str;# OUTPUT: «Sub object coerced to string (please use .gist or .perl to do that)marine»say .perl; # OUTPUT: «sub marine { #`(Sub|94280758332168) ... }»
(Code) method file
Defined as:
method file(Code: --> Str)
Returns the name of the file in which the code object was declared.
say :<+>.file;
(Code) method line
Defined as
method line(Code: --> Int)
Returns the line number in which the code object was declared.
say :<+>.line;
Routines supplied by role Callable
Method inherits from class Code, which does role Callable, which provides the following routines:
(Callable) method CALL-ME
method CALL-ME(Callable : |arguments)
This method is required for postfix:«( )» and postfix:«.( )». It's what makes an object actually call-able and needs to be overloaded to let a given object act like a routine. If the object needs to be stored in a &
-sigiled container, is has to implement Callable.
does Callablemy = A;say a(); # OUTPUT: «called»
Applying the Callable
role is not a requirement to make an object callable; if a class simply wants to add subroutine-like semantics in a regular scalar container, the submethod CALL-ME
can be used for that.
my = A.new: values => [4,5,6,7]say (2); # OUTPUT: «6»
(Callable) method Capture
Defined as:
method Capture()
Throws X::Cannot::Capture
.