Skip to Content
Programming Perl, 4th Edition
book

Programming Perl, 4th Edition

by Tom Christiansen, brian d foy, Larry Wall, Jon Orwant
February 2012
Intermediate to advanced
1184 pages
37h 17m
English
O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Content preview from Programming Perl, 4th Edition

Chapter 13. Overloading

Objects are cool, but sometimes they’re just a little too cool. Sometimes you would rather they behaved a little less like objects and a little more like regular data types. But there’s a problem: objects are referents represented by references, and references aren’t terribly useful except as references. You can’t add references, or print them, or (usefully) apply many of Perl’s built-in operators. The only thing you can do is dereference them. So you find yourself writing many explicit method invocations, like this:

print $object–>as_string;
$new_object = $subject–>add($object);

Such explicit dereferencing is in general a good thing; you should never confuse your references with your referents, except when you want to confuse them. Now would be one of those times. If you design your class with overloading, you can pretend the references aren’t there and simply say:

print $object;
$new_object = $subject + $object;

When you overload one of Perl’s built-in operators, you define how it behaves when it’s applied to objects of a particular class. A number of standard Perl modules use overloading, such as Math::BigInt, which lets you create Math::BigInt objects that behave just like regular integers but have no size limits. You can add them with +, divide them with /, compare them with <=>, and print them with print.

Note that overloading is not the same as autoloading, which is loading a missing function or method on demand. Neither is it the same as overriding, which ...

Become an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month,
and much more.

Read now

Unlock full access

More than 5,000 organizations count on O’Reilly

AirBnbBlueOriginElectronic ArtsHomeDepotNasdaqRakutenTata Consultancy Services

QuotationMarkO’Reilly covers everything we've got, with content to help us build a world-class technology community, upgrade the capabilities and competencies of our teams, and improve overall team performance as well as their engagement.
Julian F.
Head of Cybersecurity
QuotationMarkI wanted to learn C and C++, but it didn't click for me until I picked up an O'Reilly book. When I went on the O’Reilly platform, I was astonished to find all the books there, plus live events and sandboxes so you could play around with the technology.
Addison B.
Field Engineer
QuotationMarkI’ve been on the O’Reilly platform for more than eight years. I use a couple of learning platforms, but I'm on O'Reilly more than anybody else. When you're there, you start learning. I'm never disappointed.
Amir M.
Data Platform Tech Lead
QuotationMarkI'm always learning. So when I got on to O'Reilly, I was like a kid in a candy store. There are playlists. There are answers. There's on-demand training. It's worth its weight in gold, in terms of what it allows me to do.
Mark W.
Embedded Software Engineer

You might also like

Programming Perl, 3rd Edition

Programming Perl, 3rd Edition

Larry Wall, Tom Christiansen, Jon Orwant
Perl Cookbook, 2nd Edition

Perl Cookbook, 2nd Edition

Tom Christiansen, Nathan Torkington

Publisher Resources

ISBN: 9781449321451Errata Page