File Coverage

blib/lib/PPI/Token/_QuoteEngine.pm
Criterion Covered Total %
statement 65 71 91.5
branch 24 32 75.0
condition n/a
subroutine 6 6 100.0
pod n/a
total 95 109 87.1


line stmt bran cond sub pod time code
1             package PPI::Token::_QuoteEngine;
2              
3             =pod
4              
5             =head1 NAME
6              
7             PPI::Token::_QuoteEngine - The PPI Quote Engine
8              
9             =head1 DESCRIPTION
10              
11             The C package is designed hold functionality
12             for processing quotes and quote like operators, including regexes.
13             These have special requirements in parsing.
14              
15             The C package itself provides various parsing
16             methods, which the L, L and
17             L can inherit from. In this sense, it serves
18             as a base class.
19              
20             =head2 Using this class
21              
22             I<(Refers only to internal uses. This class does not provide a
23             public interface)>
24              
25             To use these, you should initialize them as normal C<'$Class-Enew'>,
26             and then call the 'fill' method, which will cause the specialised
27             parser to scan forwards and parse the quote to its end point.
28              
29             If -Efill returns true, finalise the token.
30              
31             =cut
32              
33 67     67   468 use strict;
  67         148  
  67         2535  
34 67     67   411 use Carp ();
  67         156  
  67         72895  
35              
36             our $VERSION = '1.28401'; # TRIAL
37              
38              
39              
40              
41              
42             # Hook for the __TOKENIZER__on_char token call
43             sub __TOKENIZER__on_char {
44 16794     16794   36098 my $class = shift;
45 16794 50       63300 my $t = $_[0]->{token} ? shift : return undef;
46              
47             # Call the fill method to process the quote
48 16794         61179 my $rv = $t->{token}->_fill( $t );
49 16794 50       44141 return undef unless defined $rv;
50              
51             ## Doesn't support "end of file" indicator
52              
53             # Finalize the token and return 0 to tell the tokenizer
54             # to go to the next character.
55 16794         63656 $t->_finalize_token;
56              
57 16794         59492 0;
58             }
59              
60              
61              
62              
63              
64             #####################################################################
65             # Optimised character processors, used for quotes
66             # and quote like stuff, and accessible to the child classes
67              
68             # An outright scan, raw and fast.
69             # Searches for a particular character, not escaped, loading in new
70             # lines as needed.
71             # When called, we start at the current position.
72             # When leaving, the position should be set to the position
73             # of the character, NOT the one after it.
74             sub _scan_for_unescaped_character {
75 15431     15431   27424 my $class = shift;
76 15431         25817 my $t = shift;
77 15431 50       55105 my $char = (length $_[0] == 1) ? quotemeta shift : return undef;
78              
79             # Create the search regex.
80             # Same as above but with a negative look-behind assertion.
81 15431         266908 my $search = qr/(.*?(?
82              
83 15431         38802 my $string = '';
84 15431         50986 while ( exists $t->{line} ) {
85             # Get the search area for the current line
86 18216         64053 pos $t->{line} = $t->{line_cursor};
87              
88             # Can we find a match on this line
89 18216 100       361742 if ( $t->{line} =~ m/\G$search/gc ) {
90             # Found the character on this line
91 13766         58742 $t->{line_cursor} += length($1) - 1;
92 13766         82445 return $string . $1;
93             }
94              
95             # Load in the next line
96 4450         14474 $string .= substr $t->{line}, $t->{line_cursor};
97 4450         12788 my $rv = $t->_fill_line('inscan');
98 4450 100       13794 if ( $rv ) {
    50          
99             # Push to first character
100 2785         8768 $t->{line_cursor} = 0;
101             } elsif ( defined $rv ) {
102             # We hit the End of File
103 1665         7891 return \$string;
104             } else {
105             # Unexpected error
106 0         0 return undef;
107             }
108             }
109              
110             # We shouldn't be able to get here
111 0         0 return undef;
112             }
113              
114             # Scan for a close braced, and take into account both escaping,
115             # and open close bracket pairs in the string. When complete, the
116             # method leaves the line cursor on the LAST character found.
117             sub _scan_for_brace_character {
118 1699     1699   3190 my $class = shift;
119 1699         3417 my $t = shift;
120 1699 50       13761 my $close_brace = $_[0] =~ /^(?:\>|\)|\}|\])$/ ? shift : Carp::confess(''); # return undef;
121 1699         3394 my $open_brace = $close_brace;
122 1699         4846 $open_brace =~ tr/\>\)\}\]/\<\(\{\[/;
123              
124             # Create the search string
125 1699         4212 $close_brace = quotemeta $close_brace;
126 1699         3404 $open_brace = quotemeta $open_brace;
127 1699         33977 my $search = qr/\G(.*?(?
128              
129             # Loop as long as we can get new lines
130 1699         4311 my $string = '';
131 1699         3106 my $depth = 1;
132 1699         5783 while ( exists $t->{line} ) {
133             # Get the search area
134 2974         8893 pos $t->{line} = $t->{line_cursor};
135              
136             # Look for a match
137 2974 100       38176 unless ( $t->{line} =~ /$search/gc ) {
138             # Load in the next line
139 785         2409 $string .= substr( $t->{line}, $t->{line_cursor} );
140 785         2387 my $rv = $t->_fill_line('inscan');
141 785 100       2042 if ( $rv ) {
142             # Push to first character
143 615         1090 $t->{line_cursor} = 0;
144 615         1592 next;
145             }
146 170 50       568 if ( defined $rv ) {
147             # We hit the End of File
148 170         897 return \$string;
149             }
150              
151             # Unexpected error
152 0         0 return undef;
153             }
154              
155             # Add to the string
156 2189         7373 $string .= $1;
157 2189         4913 $t->{line_cursor} += length $1;
158              
159             # Alter the depth and continue if we aren't at the end
160 2189 100       21021 $depth += ($1 =~ /$open_brace$/) ? 1 : -1 and next;
    100          
161              
162             # Rewind the cursor by one character ( cludgy hack )
163 1529         3783 $t->{line_cursor} -= 1;
164 1529         7667 return $string;
165             }
166              
167             # Returning the string as a reference indicates EOF
168 0         0 \$string;
169             }
170              
171             # Find all spaces and comments, up to, but not including
172             # the first non-whitespace character.
173             #
174             # Although it doesn't return it, it leaves the cursor
175             # on the character following the gap
176             sub _scan_quote_like_operator_gap {
177 658     658   1281 my $t = $_[1];
178              
179 658         1417 my $string = '';
180 658         2017 while ( exists $t->{line} ) {
181             # Get the search area for the current line
182 727         2380 pos $t->{line} = $t->{line_cursor};
183              
184             # Since this regex can match zero characters, it should always match
185 727 50       4399 $t->{line} =~ /\G(\s*(?:\#.*)?)/gc or return undef;
186              
187             # Add the chars found to the string
188 727         2416 $string .= $1;
189              
190             # Did we match the entire line?
191 727 100       2672 unless ( $t->{line_cursor} + length $1 == length $t->{line} ) {
192             # Partial line match, which means we are at
193             # the end of the gap. Fix the cursor and return
194             # the string.
195 463         1003 $t->{line_cursor} += length $1;
196 463         1750 return $string;
197             }
198              
199             # Load in the next line.
200             # If we reach the EOF, $t->{line} gets deleted,
201             # which is caught by the while.
202 264         2341 my $rv = $t->_fill_line('inscan');
203 264 100       905 if ( $rv ) {
    50          
204             # Set the cursor to the first character
205 69         206 $t->{line_cursor} = 0;
206             } elsif ( defined $rv ) {
207             # Returning the string as a reference indicates EOF
208 195         679 return \$string;
209             } else {
210 0           return undef;
211             }
212             }
213              
214             # Shouldn't be able to get here
215 0           return undef;
216             }
217              
218             1;
219              
220             =pod
221              
222             =head1 SUPPORT
223              
224             See the L in the main module.
225              
226             =head1 AUTHOR
227              
228             Adam Kennedy Eadamk@cpan.orgE
229              
230             =head1 COPYRIGHT
231              
232             Copyright 2001 - 2011 Adam Kennedy.
233              
234             This program is free software; you can redistribute
235             it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
236              
237             The full text of the license can be found in the
238             LICENSE file included with this module.
239              
240             =cut