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Perl::Critic::Violation(3)



NAME

       Perl::Critic::Violation - A violation of a Policy found in some source
       code.


SYNOPSIS

         use PPI;
         use Perl::Critic::Violation;

         my $elem = $doc->child(0);      # $doc is a PPI::Document object
         my $desc = 'Offending code';    # Describe the violation
         my $expl = [1,45,67];           # Page numbers from PBP
         my $sev  = 5;                   # Severity level of this violation

         my $vio  = Perl::Critic::Violation->new($desc, $expl, $node, $sev);


DESCRIPTION

       Perl::Critic::Violation is the generic representation of an individual
       Policy violation.  Its primary purpose is to provide an abstraction
       layer so that clients of Perl::Critic don't have to know anything about
       PPI.  The "violations" method of all Perl::Critic::Policy subclasses
       must return a list of these Perl::Critic::Violation objects.


INTERFACE SUPPORT

       This is considered to be a public class.  Any changes to its interface
       will go through a deprecation cycle.


CONSTRUCTOR

       "new( $description, $explanation, $element, $severity )"
           Returns a reference to a new "Perl::Critic::Violation" object. The
           arguments are a description of the violation (as string), an
           explanation for the policy (as string) or a series of page numbers
           in PBP (as an ARRAY ref), a reference to the PPI element that
           caused the violation, and the severity of the violation (as an
           integer).


METHODS

       "description()"
           Returns a brief description of the specific violation.  In other
           words, this value may change on a per violation basis.

       "explanation()"
           Returns an explanation of the policy as a string or as reference to
           an array of page numbers in PBP.  This value will generally not
           change based upon the specific code violating the policy.

       "location()"
           Don't use this method.  Use the "line_number()",
           "logical_line_number()", "column_number()",
           "visual_column_number()", and "logical_filename()" methods instead.

           Returns a five-element array reference containing the line and real
           & virtual column and logical numbers and logical file name where
           this Violation occurred, as in PPI::Element.

       "line_number()"
           Returns the physical line number that the violation was found on.

       "logical_line_number()"
           Returns the logical line number that the violation was found on.
           This can differ from the physical line number when there were
           "#line" directives in the code.

       "column_number()"
           Returns the physical column that the violation was found at.  This
           means that hard tab characters count as a single character.

       "visual_column_number()"
           Returns the column that the violation was found at, as it would
           appear if hard tab characters were expanded, based upon the value
           of "tab_width [ $width ]" in PPI::Document.

       "filename()"
           Returns the path to the file where this Violation occurred.  In
           some cases, the path may be undefined because the source code was
           not read directly from a file.

       "logical_filename()"
           Returns the logical path to the file where the Violation occurred.
           This can differ from "filename()" when there was a "#line"
           directive in the code.

       "severity()"
           Returns the severity of this Violation as an integer ranging from 1
           to 5, where 5 is the "most" severe.

       "sort_by_severity( @violation_objects )"
           If you need to sort Violations by severity, use this handy routine:

               @sorted = Perl::Critic::Violation::sort_by_severity(@violations);

       "sort_by_location( @violation_objects )"
           If you need to sort Violations by location, use this handy routine:

               @sorted = Perl::Critic::Violation::sort_by_location(@violations);

       "diagnostics()"
           Returns a formatted string containing a full discussion of the
           motivation for and details of the Policy module that created this
           Violation.  This information is automatically extracted from the
           "DESCRIPTION" section of the Policy module's POD.

       "policy()"
           Returns the name of the Perl::Critic::Policy that created this
           Violation.

       "source()"
           Returns the string of source code that caused this exception.  If
           the code spans multiple lines (e.g. multi-line statements,
           subroutines or other blocks), then only the line containing the
           violation will be returned.

       "element_class()"
           Returns the PPI::Element subclass of the code that caused this
           exception.

       "set_format( $format )"
           Class method.  Sets the format for all Violation objects when they
           are evaluated in string context.  The default is '%d at line %l,
           column %c. %e'.  See "OVERLOADS" for formatting options.

       "get_format()"
           Class method. Returns the current format for all Violation objects
           when they are evaluated in string context.

       "to_string()"
           Returns a string representation of this violation.  The content of
           the string depends on the current value of the $format package
           variable.  See "OVERLOADS" for the details.


OVERLOADS

       Perl::Critic::Violation overloads the "" operator to produce neat
       little messages when evaluated in string context.

       Formats are a combination of literal and escape characters similar to
       the way "sprintf" works.  If you want to know the specific formatting
       capabilities, look at String::Format. Valid escape characters are:

           Escape    Meaning
           -------   ----------------------------------------------------------------
           %c        Column number where the violation occurred
           %d        Full diagnostic discussion of the violation (DESCRIPTION in POD)
           %e        Explanation of violation or page numbers in PBP
           %F        Just the name of the logical file where the violation occurred.
           %f        Path to the logical file where the violation occurred.
           %G        Just the name of the physical file where the violation occurred.
           %g        Path to the physical file where the violation occurred.
           %l        Logical line number where the violation occurred
           %L        Physical line number where the violation occurred
           %m        Brief description of the violation
           %P        Full name of the Policy module that created the violation
           %p        Name of the Policy without the Perl::Critic::Policy:: prefix
           %r        The string of source code that caused the violation
           %C        The class of the PPI::Element that caused the violation
           %s        The severity level of the violation

       Explanation of the %F, %f, %G, %G, %l, and %L formats: Using "#line"
       directives, you can affect what perl thinks the current line number and
       file name are; see "Plain Old Comments (Not!)" in perlsyn for the
       details.  Under normal circumstances, the values of %F, %f, and %l will
       match the values of %G, %g, and %L, respectively.  In the presence of a
       "#line" directive, the values of %F, %f, and %l will change to take
       that directive into account.  The values of %G, %g, and %L are
       unaffected by those directives.

       Here are some examples:

           Perl::Critic::Violation::set_format("%m at line %l, column %c.\n");
           # looks like "Mixed case variable name at line 6, column 23."

           Perl::Critic::Violation::set_format("%m near '%r'\n");
           # looks like "Mixed case variable name near 'my $theGreatAnswer = 42;'"

           Perl::Critic::Violation::set_format("%l:%c:%p\n");
           # looks like "6:23:NamingConventions::Capitalization"

           Perl::Critic::Violation::set_format("%m at line %l. %e. \n%d\n");
           # looks like "Mixed case variable name at line 6.  See page 44 of PBP.
             Conway's recommended naming convention is to use lower-case words
             separated by underscores.  Well-recognized acronyms can be in ALL
             CAPS, but must be separated by underscores from other parts of the
             name."


AUTHOR

       Jeffrey Ryan Thalhammer <jeff@imaginative-software.com>


COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2005-2011 Imaginative Software Systems.  All rights
       reserved.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the same terms as Perl itself.  The full text of this license can
       be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.



perl v5.28.2                      2019-05-24        Perl::Critic::Violation(3)

perl-critic 1.134.0 - Generated Fri Jun 7 11:25:56 CDT 2019
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