summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/dist/Math-BigInt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorPeter John Acklam <pjacklam@online.no>2011-03-07 11:45:38 +0100
committerFather Chrysostomos <sprout@cpan.org>2011-06-11 12:16:25 -0700
commit66a0495875e8130c45cac4fabd5f8d05f2f4c372 (patch)
tree03d076c2a5ecbfab2d11b1378f74f50d92ec4e91 /dist/Math-BigInt
parent7833bfdd94cb7b5afbbc1b18e75e664482f529d5 (diff)
downloadperl-66a0495875e8130c45cac4fabd5f8d05f2f4c372.tar.gz
Fix objectify()'s handling of "foreign objects".
- Fix handling of "foreign objects" so they are converted to the appropriate class (Math::BigInt or Math::BigFloat). - Avoid code duplication by using only one loop. - Loop over indexes rather than array elements to make code cleaner. - Fix incorrect code comments, add more code comments and clearify existing ones. - Correct handling of undefs to make the code consistent. objectify() gave different output when the initial "shortcut" was removed. - Add test file verifying that RT#16221 is fixed. This fix closes RT #16221 and RT #52124. This patch supersedes Perl #86146.
Diffstat (limited to 'dist/Math-BigInt')
-rw-r--r--dist/Math-BigInt/lib/Math/BigInt.pm209
-rwxr-xr-xdist/Math-BigInt/t/rt-16221.t77
2 files changed, 199 insertions, 87 deletions
diff --git a/dist/Math-BigInt/lib/Math/BigInt.pm b/dist/Math-BigInt/lib/Math/BigInt.pm
index 796b75aba1..4757db1026 100644
--- a/dist/Math-BigInt/lib/Math/BigInt.pm
+++ b/dist/Math-BigInt/lib/Math/BigInt.pm
@@ -2589,102 +2589,137 @@ sub as_oct
##############################################################################
# private stuff (internal use only)
-sub objectify
- {
- # check for strings, if yes, return objects instead
-
- # the first argument is number of args objectify() should look at it will
- # return $count+1 elements, the first will be a classname. This is because
- # overloaded '""' calls bstr($object,undef,undef) and this would result in
- # useless objects being created and thrown away. So we cannot simple loop
- # over @_. If the given count is 0, all arguments will be used.
-
- # If the second arg is a ref, use it as class.
- # If not, try to use it as classname, unless undef, then use $class
- # (aka Math::BigInt). The latter shouldn't happen,though.
-
- # caller: gives us:
- # $x->badd(1); => ref x, scalar y
- # Class->badd(1,2); => classname x (scalar), scalar x, scalar y
- # Class->badd( Class->(1),2); => classname x (scalar), ref x, scalar y
- # Math::BigInt::badd(1,2); => scalar x, scalar y
- # In the last case we check number of arguments to turn it silently into
- # $class,1,2. (We can not take '1' as class ;o)
- # badd($class,1) is not supported (it should, eventually, try to add undef)
- # currently it tries 'Math::BigInt' + 1, which will not work.
-
- # some shortcut for the common cases
- # $x->unary_op();
- return (ref($_[1]),$_[1]) if (@_ == 2) && ($_[0]||0 == 1) && ref($_[1]);
-
- my $count = abs(shift || 0);
-
- my (@a,$k,$d); # resulting array, temp, and downgrade
- if (ref $_[0])
- {
- # okay, got object as first
- $a[0] = ref $_[0];
+sub objectify {
+ # Convert strings and "foreign objects" to the objects we want.
+
+ # The first argument, $count, is the number of following arguments that
+ # objectify() looks at and converts to objects. The first is a classname.
+ # If the given count is 0, all arguments will be used.
+
+ # After the count is read, objectify obtains the name of the class to which
+ # the following arguments are converted. If the second argument is a
+ # reference, use the reference type as the class name. Otherwise, if it is
+ # a string that looks like a class name, use that. Otherwise, use $class.
+
+ # Caller: Gives us:
+ #
+ # $x->badd(1); => ref x, scalar y
+ # Class->badd(1,2); => classname x (scalar), scalar x, scalar y
+ # Class->badd(Class->(1),2); => classname x (scalar), ref x, scalar y
+ # Math::BigInt::badd(1,2); => scalar x, scalar y
+
+ # A shortcut for the common case $x->unary_op():
+
+ return (ref($_[1]), $_[1]) if (@_ == 2) && ($_[0]||0 == 1) && ref($_[1]);
+
+ # Check the context.
+
+ unless (wantarray) {
+ require Carp;
+ Carp::croak ("${class}::objectify() needs list context");
}
- else
+
+ # Get the number of arguments to objectify.
+
+ my $count = shift;
+ $count ||= @_;
+
+ # Initialize the output array.
+
+ my @a = @_;
+
+ # If the first argument is a reference, use that reference type as our
+ # class name. Otherwise, if the first argument looks like a class name,
+ # then use that as our class name. Otherwise, use the default class name.
+
{
- # nope, got 1,2 (Class->xxx(1) => Class,1 and not supported)
- $a[0] = $class;
- $a[0] = shift if $_[0] =~ /^[A-Z].*::/; # classname as first?
+ if (ref($a[0])) { # reference?
+ unshift @a, ref($a[0]);
+ last;
+ }
+ if ($a[0] =~ /^[A-Z].*::/) { # string with class name?
+ last;
+ }
+ unshift @a, $class; # default class name
}
- no strict 'refs';
- # disable downgrading, because Math::BigFLoat->foo('1.0','2.0') needs floats
- if (defined ${"$a[0]::downgrade"})
- {
- $d = ${"$a[0]::downgrade"};
- ${"$a[0]::downgrade"} = undef;
+ no strict 'refs';
+
+ # What we upgrade to, if anything.
+
+ my $up = ${"$a[0]::upgrade"};
+
+ # Disable downgrading, because Math::BigFloat -> foo('1.0','2.0') needs
+ # floats.
+
+ my $down;
+ if (defined ${"$a[0]::downgrade"}) {
+ $down = ${"$a[0]::downgrade"};
+ ${"$a[0]::downgrade"} = undef;
}
- my $up = ${"$a[0]::upgrade"};
- # print STDERR "# Now in objectify, my class is today $a[0], count = $count\n";
- if ($count == 0)
- {
- while (@_)
- {
- $k = shift;
- if (!ref($k))
- {
- $k = $a[0]->new($k);
+ for my $i (1 .. $count) {
+ my $ref = ref $a[$i];
+
+ # If it is an object of the right class, all is fine.
+
+ if ($ref eq $a[0]) {
+ next;
}
- elsif (!defined $up && ref($k) ne $a[0])
- {
- # foreign object, try to convert to integer
- $k->can('as_number') ? $k = $k->as_number() : $k = $a[0]->new($k);
- }
- push @a,$k;
- }
- }
- else
- {
- while ($count > 0)
- {
- $count--;
- $k = shift;
- if (!ref($k))
- {
- $k = $a[0]->new($k);
+
+ # Don't do anything with undefs.
+
+ unless (defined($a[$i])) {
+ next;
}
- elsif (ref($k) ne $a[0] and !defined $up || ref $k ne $up)
- {
- # foreign object, try to convert to integer
- $k->can('as_number') ? $k = $k->as_number() : $k = $a[0]->new($k);
- }
- push @a,$k;
- }
- push @a,@_; # return other params, too
- }
- if (! wantarray)
- {
- require Carp; Carp::croak ("$class objectify needs list context");
+
+ # Perl scalars are fed to the appropriate constructor.
+
+ unless ($ref) {
+ $a[$i] = $a[0] -> new($a[$i]);
+ next;
+ }
+
+ # Upgrading is OK, so skip further tests if the argument is upgraded.
+
+ if (defined $up && $ref eq $up) {
+ next;
+ }
+
+ # If we want a Math::BigInt, see if the object can become one.
+ # Support the old misnomer as_number().
+
+ if ($a[0] eq 'Math::BigInt') {
+ if ($a[$i] -> can('as_int')) {
+ $a[$i] = $a[$i] -> as_int();
+ next;
+ }
+ if ($a[$i] -> can('as_number')) {
+ $a[$i] = $a[$i] -> as_number();
+ next;
+ }
+ }
+
+ # If we want a Math::BigFloat, see if the object can become one.
+
+ if ($a[0] eq 'Math::BigFloat') {
+ if ($a[$i] -> can('as_float')) {
+ $a[$i] = $a[$i] -> as_float();
+ next;
+ }
+ }
+
+ # Last resort.
+
+ $a[$i] = $a[0] -> new($a[$i]);
}
- ${"$a[0]::downgrade"} = $d;
- @a;
- }
+
+ # Reset the downgrading.
+
+ ${"$a[0]::downgrade"} = $down;
+
+ return @a;
+}
sub _register_callback
{
diff --git a/dist/Math-BigInt/t/rt-16221.t b/dist/Math-BigInt/t/rt-16221.t
new file mode 100755
index 0000000000..a1dc2c6a3a
--- /dev/null
+++ b/dist/Math-BigInt/t/rt-16221.t
@@ -0,0 +1,77 @@
+#!/usr/bin/perl
+#
+# Verify that
+# - Math::BigInt::objectify() calls as_int() (or as_number(), as a fallback)
+# if the target object class is Math::BigInt.
+# - Math::BigInt::objectify() calls as_float() if the target object class is
+# Math::BigFloat.
+#
+# See RT #16221 and RT #52124.
+
+use strict;
+use warnings;
+
+package main;
+
+use Test::More tests => 2;
+use Math::BigInt;
+use Math::BigFloat;
+
+############################################################################
+
+my $int = Math::BigInt->new(10);
+my $int_percent = My::Percent::Float->new(100);
+
+is($int * $int_percent, 10);
+
+############################################################################
+
+my $float = Math::BigFloat->new(10);
+my $float_percent = My::Percent::Float->new(100);
+
+is($float * $float_percent, 10);
+
+############################################################################
+
+package My::Percent::Int;
+
+sub new {
+ my $class = shift;
+ my $num = shift;
+ return bless \$num, $class;
+}
+
+sub as_number {
+ my $self = shift;
+ return Math::BigInt->new($$self / 100);
+}
+
+sub as_string {
+ my $self = shift;
+ return $$self;
+}
+
+############################################################################
+
+package My::Percent::Float;
+
+sub new {
+ my $class = shift;
+ my $num = shift;
+ return bless \$num, $class;
+}
+
+sub as_int {
+ my $self = shift;
+ return Math::BigInt->new($$self / 100);
+}
+
+sub as_float {
+ my $self = shift;
+ return Math::BigFloat->new($$self / 100);
+}
+
+sub as_string {
+ my $self = shift;
+ return $$self;
+}