NAME Callback - object interface for function callbacks SYNOPSIS use Callback; my $callback = new Callback (\&myfunc, @myargs); my $callback = new Callback ($myobj, $mymethod, @myargs); my $callback = new Callback ($old_callback, @myargs); $callback->call(@some_more_args); DESCRIPTION Callback provides a standard interface to register callbacks. Those callbacks can be either purely functional (i.e. a function call with arguments) or object-oriented (a method call on an object). When a callback is constructed, a base set of arguments can be provided. These function arguments will preceed any arguments added at the time the call is made. There are two forms for the callback constructor, depending on whether the call is a pure functional call or a method call. The rule is that if the first argument is an object, then the second argument is a method name to be called on that object. Method resolution happens at the time the Callback object is built: an error will be raised if it cannot be found. Callback objects built for object-oriented calls also have the property of being serializable via Storable. Purely functional callabacks cannot be serialized because CODE references are not supported by Storable. Callback objects can be created from existing Callback objects. Any arguments will be appended onto the original list of arguments. TRACING use Callback qw(@callbackTrace); If you're writing a debugging routine that provides a stack-dump (for example, Carp::confess) it is useful to know where a callback was registered. my $ct = 0; while (($package, $file, $line, $subname, $hasargs, $wantarray) = caller($i++)) { ... if ($subname eq 'Callback::call') { print "callback registered $Callback::callbackTrace[$ct]\n"; $ct++; } } Without such code, it becomes very hard to know what's going on. COPYRIGHT Copyright (C) 1994, 2000, 2002 David Muir Sharnoff. All rights reserved. This module may be licensed on the same terms as Perl itself. AUTHORS David Muir Sharnoff and Raphael Manfredi SEE ALSO Storable(3).