NAME
    Ref::Util - Utility functions for checking references

VERSION
    0.008

DESCRIPTION
    Ref::Util introduces several functions to help identify references in a
    faster and smarter way. In short:

        ref $foo eq 'ARRAY'

        # is now:

        is_arrayref($foo)

    The difference:

    *   Fast

        The benchmark:

            my $bench = Dumbbench->new(
                target_rel_precision => 0.005,
                initial_runs         => 20,
            );

            my $ref = [];
            $bench->add_instances(
                Dumbbench::Instance::PerlSub->new(
                    name => 'XS',
                    code => sub { Ref::Util::is_arrayref($ref) for(1..1e7) },
                ),

                Dumbbench::Instance::PerlSub->new(
                    name => 'reftype',
                    code => sub { reftype($ref) eq 'ARRAY' for(1..1e7) },
                ),

                Dumbbench::Instance::PerlSub->new(
                    name => 'PP',
                    code => sub { ref($ref) eq 'ARRAY' for(1..1e7) },
                ),
            );

        The results:

            XS:      Ran 27 iterations (6 outliers).
            XS:      Rounded run time per iteration: 3.0093e-01 +/- 4.4e-04 (0.1%)

            reftype: Ran 25 iterations (5 outliers).
            reftype: Rounded run time per iteration: 9.173e-01 +/- 1.2e-03 (0.1%)

            PP:      Ran 26 iterations (6 outliers).
            PP:      Rounded run time per iteration: 6.1437e-01 +/- 3.4e-04 (0.1%)

    *   No comparison against a string constant

        When you call "ref", you stringify the reference and then compare it
        to some string constant (like "ARRAY" or "HASH"). Not just awkward,
        it's brittle since you can mispell the string.

        If you use Scalar::Util's "reftype", you still compare it as a
        string:

            if ( reftype($foo) eq 'ARRAY' ) { ... }

    *   Supports blessed variables

        When calling "ref", you receive either the reference type (SCALAR,
        ARRAY, HASH, etc.) or the package it's blessed into.

        When calling "is_arrayref" (et. al.), you check the variable flags,
        so even if it's blessed, you know what type of variable is blessed.

            my $foo = bless {}, 'PKG';
            ref($foo) eq 'HASH'; # fails

            use Ref::Util 'is_hashref';
            my $foo = bless {}, 'PKG';
            is_hashref($foo); # works

    *   Ignores overloading

        These functions ignore overloaded operators and simply check the
        variable type. Overloading will likely not ever be supported, since
        I deem it problematic and confusing.

        Overloading makes your variables opaque containers and hides away
        what they are and instead require you to figure out how to use them.
        This leads to code that has to test different abilities (in "eval",
        so it doesn't crash) and to interfaces that get around what a person
        thought you would do with a variable. Ugh. Double Ugh. For this
        reason they are not supported.

        This is also not duck-typing, as at least one person suggested. Duck
        typing provides a method that *works* and has different
        implementations. The difference is that here we have different
        methods (stringification, array dereferencing, hash dereferencing,
        callbacks, greater-than comparsion, etc.) which have to be tested
        each individually. This is the opposite of duck-typing. Also, in
        duck-typing you can introspect to know what is available, and
        overloading does not lend to that.

        Overloading is *cool, but terribly horrible*. 'Nuff said.

    *   Readonly, tied variables, and magic

        Tied variables (used in Readonly, for example) are not supported, as
        they are not references, but regular variables with added magic.

        Consider the following:

            use Data::Printer;
            use Readonly;
            Readonly::Scalar my $rh2 => { a => { b => 2 } };
            p $rh2->{a};

            # result:
            # "HASH(0x187dcc8)"

        This should print a hashref structure with key b and value 2, but it
        doesn't. It prints a string. It should have retrieved the values but
        caused stringification instead.

        The problem here is that "$rh2->{a}" is not a hashref, but a "PVLV"
        with magic, so "is_hashref" will correctly not detect it.

    *   Ignores subtle types:

        The following types, provided by Scalar::Util's "reftype", are not
        supported:

        *   "VSTRING"

            This is a "PVMG" ("normal" variable) with a flag set for
            VSTRINGs. Since this is not a reference, it is not supported.

        *   "LVALUE"

            A variable that delegates to another scalar. Since this is not a
            reference, it is not supported.

        *   "INVLIST"

            I couldn't find documentation for this type.

        Support might be added, if a good reason arises.

    Additionally, two implementations are available, depending on the perl
    version you have. For perl that supports Custom OPs, we actually add an
    OP (which is faster), and for perls that do not, we include an
    implementation that just calls an XS function - which is still faster
    than the Pure-Perl equivalent.

    We might also introduce a Pure-Perl version of everything, allowing to
    install this module where a compiler is not available, making the XS
    parts optional.

EXPORT
    Nothing is exported by default. You can ask for specific subroutines
    (described below) or ask for all subroutines at once:

        use Ref::Util qw<is_scalarref is_arrayref is_hashref ...>;

        # or

        use Ref::Util ':all';

SUBROUTINES
  is_ref($ref)
    Check for a reference to anything.

        is_ref([]);

  is_scalarref($ref)
    Check for a scalar reference.

        is_scalarref(\"hello");
        is_scalarref(\30);
        is_scalarref(\$value);

  is_arrayref($ref)
    Check for an array reference.

        is_arrayref([]);

  is_hashref($ref)
    Check for a hash reference.

        is_hashref({});

  is_coderef($ref)
    Check for a code reference.

        is_coderef( sub {} );

  is_regexpref($ref)
    Check for a regular expression (regex, regexp) reference.

        is_regexpref( qr// );

  is_globref($ref)
    Check for a glob reference.

        is_globref( \*STDIN );

  is_formatref($ref)
    Check for a format reference.

        # set up format in STDOUT
        format STDOUT =
        .

        # now we can test it
        is_formatref( *main::STDOUT{'FORMAT'} );

    This function is not available in Perl 5.6 and will trigger a "croak()".

  is_ioref($ref)
    Check for an IO reference.

        is_ioref( *STDOUT{IO} );

  is_refref($ref)
    Check for a reference to a reference.

        is_refref( \[] ); # reference to array reference

SEE ALSO
    *   Params::Classify

    *   Scalar::Util

THANKS
    The following people have been invaluable in their feedback and support.

    *   Yves Orton

    *   Steffen Müller

    *   Jarkko Hietaniemi

    *   Mattia Barbon

AUTHORS
    *   Vikentiy Fesunov

    *   Sawyer X

    *   Gonzalo Diethelm

    *   p5pclub

