writeClassList()writeTree()
Class::Tree - Build and print hierarchical information such as directory trees
and C++ classes.
use Class::Tree;
# Or ...
# use Class::Tree qw($root);
# 1. A directory tree.
my($dir1) = 'someDir/someSubdir';
my($tree1) = new Class::Tree;
$tree1 -> buildDirTree($dir1, ['CVS']);
$tree1 -> writeTree();
# 2. A C++ class tree.
use Cwd;
my($currentDir) = cwd();
my($dir2) = 'someDir/someSubdir'; # Contains *.h. See t/family.h.
my($origin) = 'Root';
my($tree2) = new Class::Tree;
$tree2 -> buildClassTree($dir2, $origin, $currentDir);
print "Class tree\n----------\n";
$tree2 -> writeTree();
print "\n";
print "Class list\n----------\n";
$tree2 -> writeClassList();
The Class::Tree module provides a simple way of building:
I assume $ENV{'PERCEPS'} is the directory containing the C++ parser perceps, or perceps.pl. So, you must define this variable before calling buildClassTree().
This is an alias for $root. See below.
This points to the root of the tree.
Call this to initiate processing by the C++ parser 'perceps'.
The directories $dir and $baseDir are passed to 'perceps'.
$fontName is a string used to label the root of the tree.
Then call writeTree() and/or writeClassList().
Call this to build a memory image of a directory tree. Use the 2nd parameter to specify a list of directories to ignore.
Then call writeTree().
writeClassList()Call this after calling buildClassTree(), to print the C++ class structure.
writeTree()Call this after calling buildClassTree() or buildDirTree(),
to print the directory structure.
You install Class::Tree, as you would install any perl module library,
by running these commands:
perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install
If you want to install a private copy of Class::Tree in your home
directory, then you should try to produce the initial Makefile with
something like this command:
perl Makefile.PL LIB=~/perl
or
perl Makefile.PL LIB=C:/Perl/Site/Lib
If, like me, you don't have permission to write man pages into unix system directories, use:
make pure_install
instead of make install. This option is secreted in the middle of p 414 of the second edition of the dromedary book.
As always, be aware that these 2 lines mean the same thing, sometimes:
The problem is the spaces around the ->. Inside double quotes, ``...'', the first space stops the dereference taking place. Outside double quotes the scanner correctly associates the $self token with the {'thing'} token.
I regard this as a bug.
Class::Tree was written by Ron Savage <ron@savage.net.au> in 1997.
Australian copyright (c) 1999-2002 Ron Savage.
All Programs of mine are 'OSI Certified Open Source Software';
you can redistribute them and/or modify them under the terms of
The Artistic License, a copy of which is available at:
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/index.html