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Math::SimpleVariable - simple representation of mathematical variables (Displayed) README
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Math::SimpleVariable - simple representation of mathematical variables
Math::SimpleVariable - simple representation of mathematical variables
use Math::SimpleVariable;
# Make a variable
my $foo = new Math::SimpleVariable(name => 'foo', value => 0.3);
# Some of the available accessors
# Note that many are identical, but you might want to change
# their behaviour in derived variable classes...
my $name = $foo->name(); # yields 'foo'
print $foo->stringify(), "\n"; # prints 'foo'
my $id = $foo->id(); # yields 'foo'
my $value = $foo->value(); # yields 0.3
print $foo->evaluate(), "\n"; # prints 0.3
# Make a second variable
my $bar = $foo->clone();
$bar->{name} = 'bar'; # changes the name (and as a consequence the id())
print $bar->value(), "\n"; # prints the same value, 0.3
Math::SimpleVariable is a simple representation of mathematical variables,
with an obligatory name and an optional value. This class on itself might
not seem very useful at first sight, but you might want to derive different
types of variables for some application. That way, objects of the derived
variable class can be accessed interchangeably with the here provided
protocols.
Math::SimpleVariable has two data fields - name and value - that
can be accessed and modified as if the variable object is a hash. E.g.
$var->{name} = 'foo';
sets the name of the object $var to 'foo', and
my $val = $var->{value};
reads the value of the $var object into $val.
In addition, the following accessor methods are available for
Math::SimpleVariable objects:
- $var->
name()
-
Returns $var->{name}
- $var->
id()
-
Returns $var->
name() for Math::SimpleVariable objects. The purpose
of id() is to provide some unique identifier when using variables
in some higher level concept, e.g. a matrix representation of a set
of equations. Depending on your needs, you might want to change
the implementation of id() in derived classes.
stringify()
-
Returns a printable representation of the variable. For Math::SimpleVariable
objects, returns $var->name(). Again, you might want to override this
for derived classes.
value()
-
Returns $var->{value}
evaluate()
-
Returns a numerical evaluation of the variable. For Math::SimpleVariable
objects, returns $var->value(). You might want to override this behaviour
in derived classes, athough I cannot think of any place where this might
come in useful :-).
evaluate() is still there for reasons of orthogonality.
perl(1).
This is CVS $Revision: 1.6 $ of Math::Simplevariable,
last edited at $Date: 2001/10/31 12:38:39 $.
Wim Verhaegen <wimv@cpan.org>
Copyright (C) 2001 Wim Verhaegen. All rights reserved.
This program is free software; you may redistribute
and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
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