README for Class::Classless Time-stamp: "2000-05-13 19:40:59 MDT" [Excerpted from the POD...] NAME Class::Classless -- framework for classless OOP SYNOPSIS use strict; use Class::Classless; my $ob1 = $Class::Classless::ROOT->clone; $ob1->{'NAME'} = 'Ob1'; $ob1->{'stuff'} = 123; $ob1->{'Thing'} = 789; my $ob2 = $ob1->clone; $ob2->{'NAME'} = 'Ob2'; printf "ob1 stuff: <%s>\n", $ob1->{'stuff'}; printf "ob2 stuff: <%s>\n", $ob2->{'stuff'}; printf "ob1 Thing: <%s>\n", $ob1->{'Thing'}; printf "ob2 Thing: <%s>\n", $ob2->{'Thing'}; $ob1->{'METHODS'}{'zaz'} = sub { print "Zaz! on ", $_[0]{'NAME'}, "\n"; }; $ob1->zaz; $ob2->zaz; $ob1->EXAMINE; $ob2->EXAMINE; This prints the following: ob1 stuff: <123> ob2 stuff: <123> ob1 Thing: <789> ob2 Thing: <> Zaz! on Ob1 Zaz! on Ob2 'stuff', 123, 'NAME', 'Ob1', 'Thing', 789, 'METHODS', { 'zaz', 'CODE(0x20068360)' }, 'PARENTS', [ 'ROOT' ], 'stuff', 123, 'NAME', 'Ob2', 'METHODS', { }, 'PARENTS', [ 'Ob1' ], OVERVIEW In class-based OOP frameworks, methods are applicable to objects by virtue of objects belonging to classes that either provide those methods, or inherit them from classes that do. In classless OOP frameworks (AKA delegation-and-prototypes frameworks), what methods an object is capable of is basically an attribute of that object. That is, in Perl terms: instead of methods being entries in the symbol table of the package/class the object belongs to, they are entries in a hash table inside the object. Inheritance is implemented not by having classes inheriting from other classes (via ISA lists), but by having objects inherit from other objects (via PARENTS lists). In class-based OOP frameworks, you get new objects by calling constructors. In a classless framework, you get new objects by copying ("cloning") an existing object -- and the new clone becomes a child (inheritor) of the original object. (Where do you get the one original object? The language provides one, which has no parents, and which contains some general purpose methods like "clone".) PREREQUISITES This suite requires Perl 5; I've only used it under Perl 5.004, so for anything lower, you're on your own. Class::Classless doesn't use any nonstandard modules. INSTALLATION You install Class::Classless, 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::Classless in your home directory, then you should try to produce the initial Makefile with something like this command: perl Makefile.PL LIB=~/perl DOCUMENTATION POD-format documentation is included in Classless.pm. POD is readable with the 'perldoc' utility. See ChangeLog for recent changes. MACPERL INSTALLATION NOTES Don't bother with the makefiles. Just make a Class directory in your MacPerl site_lib or lib directory, and move Classless.pm into there. SUPPORT Questions, bug reports, useful code bits, and suggestions for Class::Classless should just be sent to me at sburke@cpan.org AVAILABILITY The latest version of Class::Classless is available from the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network (CPAN). Visit to find a CPAN site near you. Copyright (c) 1999, 2000 Sean M. Burke. All rights reserved. This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. AUTHOR Sean M. Burke, sburke@cpan.org