Raw content of Bio::EnsEMBL::Utils::Argument =head1 LICENSE Copyright (c) 1999-2009 The European Bioinformatics Institute and Genome Research Limited. All rights reserved. This software is distributed under a modified Apache license. For license details, please see /info/about/code_licence.html =head1 CONTACT Please email comments or questions to the public Ensembl developers list at <ensembl-dev@ebi.ac.uk>. Questions may also be sent to the Ensembl help desk at <helpdesk@ensembl.org>. =cut =head1 NAME Bio::EnsEMBL::Utils::Argument - Utility functions for argument handling =head1 SYNOPSIS use Bio::EnsEMBL::Utils::Argument qw(rearrange) package Feature; sub new { my $class = shift; my ( $start, $end, $strand ) = rearrange( [ 'START', 'END', 'STRAND' ], @_ ); return bless( { 'start' => $start, 'end' => $end, 'strand' => $strand }, $class ); } =head1 DESCRIPTION This is derived from the Bio::Root module in BioPerl. The _rearrange object method taken from BioPerl has been renamed rearrange and is now a static class method. This method was originally written by Lincoln Stein, and has since been refactored several times by various people (as described below). It is recommended that this package be used instead of inheriting unnecessarily from the Bio::EnsEMBL::Root or Bio::Root object. =head1 METHODS =cut package Bio::EnsEMBL::Utils::Argument; use strict; use warnings; use Exporter; use vars qw(@ISA @EXPORT); @ISA = qw(Exporter); @EXPORT = qw(rearrange); =head2 rearrange Usage : rearrange( array_ref, list_of_arguments) Purpose : Rearranges named parameters to requested order. Example : use Bio::EnsEMBL::Utils::Argument qw(rearrange); : rearrange([qw(SEQUENCE ID DESC)],@param); : Where @param = (-sequence => $s, : -id => $i, : -desc => $d); Returns : @params - an array of parameters in the requested order. : The above example would return ($s, $i, $d) Argument : $order : a reference to an array which describes the desired : order of the named parameters. : @param : an array of parameters, either as a list (in : which case the function simply returns the list), : or as an associative array with hyphenated tags : (in which case the function sorts the values : according to @{$order} and returns that new array.) : The tags can be upper, lower, or mixed case : but they must start with a hyphen (at least the : first one should be hyphenated.) Source : This function was taken from CGI.pm, written by Dr. Lincoln : Stein, and adapted for use in Bio::Seq by Richard Resnick and : then adapted for use in Bio::Root::Object.pm by Steve A. Chervitz. : This has since been adapted as an exported static method in this class Bio::EnsEMBL::Utils::Argument Comments : (SAC) : This method may not be appropriate for method calls that are : within in an inner loop if efficiency is a concern. : : Parameters can be specified using any of these formats: : @param = (-name=>'me', -color=>'blue'); : @param = (-NAME=>'me', -COLOR=>'blue'); : @param = (-Name=>'me', -Color=>'blue'); : A leading hyphenated argument is used by this function to : indicate that named parameters are being used. : Therefore, a ('me', 'blue') list will be returned as-is. : : Note that Perl will confuse unquoted, hyphenated tags as : function calls if there is a function of the same name : in the current namespace: : -name => 'foo' is interpreted as -&name => 'foo' : : For ultimate safety, put single quotes around the tag: : ('-name'=>'me', '-color' =>'blue'); : This can be a bit cumbersome and I find not as readable : as using all uppercase, which is also fairly safe: : (-NAME=>'me', -COLOR =>'blue'); : : Personal note (SAC): I have found all uppercase tags to : be more managable: it involves less single-quoting, : the code is more readable, and there are no method naming : conlicts. : Regardless of the style, it greatly helps to line : the parameters up vertically for long/complex lists. =cut sub rearrange { my $order = shift; if ( $order eq "Bio::EnsEMBL::Utils::Argument" ) { # skip object if one provided $order = shift; } # If we've got parameters, we need to check to see whether # they are named or simply listed. If they are listed, we # can just return them. unless ( @_ && $_[0] && substr( $_[0], 0, 1 ) eq '-' ) { return @_; } # Convert all of the parameter names to uppercase, and create a # hash with parameter names as keys, and parameter values as values my $i = 0; my (%param) = map { if ($i) { $i--; $_; } else { $i++; uc($_); } } @_; # What we intend to do is loop through the @{$order} variable, # and for each value, we use that as a key into our associative # array, pushing the value at that key onto our return array. return map { $param{ uc("-$_") } } @$order; } 1;