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Perl module generalising the wantarray function, allowing a function to determine in some detail how its return value is going to be immediately used

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-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Want v0.28    - Robin Houston, 2016-02-25
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

For full documentation, see the POD included with the module.
Below is a brief extract of the documentation, to give you an
idea of what this module does. It requires Perl version 5.6 or
later.


NAME
       Want - Implement the `want' command

SYNOPSIS
         use Want;
         sub foo :lvalue {
             if    (want(qw'LVALUE ASSIGN')) {
               print "We have been assigned ", want('ASSIGN');
               lnoreturn;
             }
             elsif (want('LIST')) {
               rreturn (1, 2, 3);
             }
             elsif (want('BOOL')) {
               rreturn 0;
             }
             elsif (want(qw'SCALAR !REF')) {
               rreturn 23;
             }
             elsif (want('HASH')) {
               rreturn { foo => 17, bar => 23 };
             }
             return
         }

DESCRIPTION
       This module generalises the mechanism of the wantarray
       function, allowing a function to determine in some detail
       how its return value is going to be immediately used.

       ...

EXAMPLES

    use Carp 'croak';
    use Want 'howmany';
    sub numbers {
        my $count = howmany();
        croak("Can't make an infinite list") if !defined($count);
        return (1..$count);
    }
    my ($one, $two, $three) = numbers();


    use Want 'want';
    sub pi () {
        if    (want('ARRAY')) {
            return [3, 1, 4, 1, 5, 9];
        }
        elsif (want('LIST')) {
            return (3, 1, 4, 1, 5, 9);
        }
        else {
            return 3;
        }
    }
    print pi->[2];      # prints 4
    print ((pi)[3]);    # prints 1


    use Want;
    use strict;
    sub backstr :lvalue {
        if (want(qw'LVALUE ASSIGN')) {
            my ($a) = want('ASSIGN');
            $_[0] = reverse $a;
            lnoreturn;
        }
        elsif (want('RVALUE')) {
            rreturn scalar reverse $_[0];
        }
        else {
            carp("Not in ASSIGN context");
        }
        return
    }
 
    print "foo -> ", backstr("foo"), "\n";	# foo -> oof
    backstr(my $robin) = "nibor";
    print "\$robin is now $robin\n";		# $robin is now robin


AUTHOR
       Robin Houston, <robin@cpan.org>
       
       Thanks to Damian Conway for encouragement and good
       suggestions, and to Father Chrysostomos and Matthew
       Horsfall for patches.

SEE ALSO
       o   the wantarray entry in the perlfunc manpage

       o   Perl6 RFC 21, by Damian Conway.
           http://dev.perl.org/rfc/21.html

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (c) 2001-2012, Robin Houston. All Rights Reserved.
       This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed
       and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself.

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Perl module generalising the wantarray function, allowing a function to determine in some detail how its return value is going to be immediately used

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