Does Perl have an enumeration type?
Does Perl have an enumeration type that adheres to best practices, or maybe more importantly, does it need one?
The project I am working one uses strings all over the place to denote things that would typically use an Enum in a language like C#. For example, we have a set of phone numbers in an array of hashes, each associated with a phone type ("Home", "Work", "Mobile", etc.):
$phone_number->{type} = 'Home';
Would it be sufficient to use a read-only set of variables here or should an Enum be used? I've found an enum
module on CPAN but it appears to use bare words which violates one of the Perl Best Practices. My thinking on using read-only variables goes something like this:
use Readonly;
Readonly my $HOME => 'Home';
Readonly my $WORK => 'Work';
Readonly my $MOBILE => 'Mobile';
$phone_number->{type} = $HOME;
Is this a good approach or is there a better way?
Solution 1:
No, there isn't a built-in enum construct. Perl doesn't do a lot of strict typing, so I think there's actually little need for one.
In my opinion, the Readonly
approach you used is solid.
There's also the more traditional constant
pragma.
use constant {
HOME => 'Home',
WORK => 'Work',
MOBILE => 'Mobile',
};
$phone_number->{type} = HOME;
Behind the scenes, it sets up a function for each constant that returns the value, like so.
sub HOME () { 'Home' }
I'd stick with Readonly
unless you want to take advantage of that property, for example:
package Phone::Type;
use constant {
HOME => 'Home',
#...
};
package main;
print Phone::Type->HOME, "\n";
Solution 2:
Perl does in fact have an enum type like in C. Try this for details.
perldoc enum
For instance:
use enum qw(HOME WORK MOBILE);
Now we have:
HOME == 0
WORK == 1
MOBILE == 2
You can also set the indices yourself:
use enum qw(HOME=0 WORK MOBILE=10 FAX);
Now we have:
HOME == 0
WORK == 1
MOBILE == 10
FAX == 11
Look here for more details.
Note that this isn't supported in every version of Perl. I know that v5.8.3 doesn't support it, while v5.8.7 does.