NAME
    Scope::Context - Object-oriented interface for inspecting or acting upon
    upper scope frames.

VERSION
    Version 0.03

SYNOPSIS
        use Scope::Context;

        for (1 .. 5) {
         sub {
          eval {
           # Create Scope::Context objects for different upper frames :
           my ($block, $eval, $sub, $loop);
           {
            $block = Scope::Context->new;
            $eval  = $block->eval;   # == $block->up
            $sub   = $block->sub;    # == $block->up(2)
            $loop  = $sub->up;       # == $block->up(3)
           }

           eval {
            # This throws an exception, since $block has expired :
            $block->localize('$x' => 1);
           };

           # This will print "hello" when the current eval block ends :
           $eval->reap(sub { print "hello\n" });

           # Ignore warnings just for the loop body :
           $loop->localize_elem('%SIG', __WARN__ => sub { });

           # Execute the callback as if it ran in place of the sub :
           my @values = $sub->uplevel(sub {
            return @_, 2;
           }, 1);
           # @values now contains (1, 2).

           # Immediately return (1, 2, 3) from the sub, bypassing the eval :
           $sub->unwind(@values, 3);

           # Not reached.
          }

          # Not reached.
         }->();

         # unwind() returns here. "hello\n" was printed, and now warnings are
         # ignored.
        }

        # $SIG{__WARN__} has been restored to its original value, warnings are no
        # longer ignored.

DESCRIPTION
    This class provides an object-oriented interface to Scope::Upper's
    functionalities. A Scope::Context object represents a currently active
    dynamic scope (or context), and encapsulates the corresponding
    Scope::Upper-compatible context identifier. All of Scope::Upper's
    functions are then made available as methods. This gives you a prettier
    and safer interface when you are not reaching for extreme performance,
    but rest assured that the overhead of this module is minimal anyway.

    The Scope::Context methods actually do more than their subroutine
    counterparts from Scope::Upper : before each call, the target context
    will be checked to ensure it is still active (which means that it is
    still present in the current call stack), and an exception will be
    thrown if you attempt to act on a context that has already expired. This
    means that :

        my $cxt;
        {
         $cxt = Scope::Context->new;
        }
        $cxt->reap(sub { print "hello\n });

    will croak when "reap" is called.

METHODS
  "new"
        my $cxt = Scope::Context->new;
        my $cxt = Scope::Context->new($scope_upper_cxt);

    Creates a new immutable Scope::Context object from the
    Scope::Upper-comptabile context identifier $context. If omitted,
    $context defaults to the current context.

  "here"
    A synonym for "new".

  "cxt"
        my $scope_upper_cxt = $cxt->cxt;

    Read-only accessor to the Scope::Upper context identifier associated
    with the invocant.

  "uid"
        my $uid = $cxt->uid;

    Read-only accessor to the Scope::Upper unique identifier representing
    the Scope::Upper context associated with the invocant.

    This class also overloads the "==" operator, which will return true if
    and only if its two operands are Scope::Context objects that have the
    same UID.

  "is_valid"
        my $is_valid = $cxt->is_valid;

    Returns true if and only if the invocant is still valid (that is, it
    designates a scope that is higher on the call stack than the current
    scope).

  "assert_valid"
        $cxt->assert_valid;

    Throws an exception if the invocant has expired and is no longer valid.
    Returns true otherwise.

  "package"
        $cxt->package;

    Returns the namespace in use when the scope denoted by the invocant
    begins.

  "file"
        $cxt->file;

    Returns the name of the file where the scope denoted by the invocant
    belongs to.

  "line"
        $cxt->line;

    Returns the line number where the scope denoted by the invocant begins.

  "sub_name"
        $cxt->sub_name;

    Returns the name of the subroutine called for this context, or "undef"
    if this is not a subroutine context.

  "sub_has_args"
        $cxt->sub_has_args;

    Returns a boolean indicating whether a new instance of @_ was set up for
    this context, or "undef" if this is not a subroutine context.

  "gimme"
        $cxt->gimme;

    Returns the context (in the sense of "perlfunc/wantarray" : "undef" for
    void context, '' for scalar context, and true for list context) in which
    the scope denoted by the invocant is executed.

  "eval_text"
        $cxt->eval_text;

    Returns the contents of the string being compiled for this context, or
    "undef" if this is not an eval context.

  "is_require"
        $cxt->is_require;

    Returns a boolean indicating whether this eval context was created by
    "require", or "undef" if this is not an eval context.

  "hints_bits"
        $cxt->hints_bits;

    Returns the value of the lexical hints bit mask (available as $^H at
    compile time) in use when the scope denoted by the invocant begins.

  "warnings_bits"
        $cxt->warnings_bits;

    Returns the bit string representing the warnings (available as
    "${^WARNING_BITS}" at compile time) in use when the scope denoted by the
    invocant begins.

  "hints_hash"
        $cxt->hints_hash;

    Returns a reference to the lexical hints hash (available as "%^H" at
    compile time) in use when the scope denoted by the invocant begins. This
    method is available only on perl 5.10 and greater.

  "want"
        my $want = $cxt->want;

    Returns the Perl context (in the sense of "perlfunc/wantarray") in which
    is executed the closest subroutine, eval or format enclosing the scope
    pointed by the invocant.

  "up"
        my $up_cxt = $cxt->up;
        my $up_cxt = $cxt->up($frames);
        my $up_cxt = Scope::Context->up;

    Returns a new Scope::Context object pointing to the $frames-th upper
    scope above the scope pointed by the invocant.

    This method can also be invoked as a class method, in which case it is
    equivalent to calling "up" on a Scope::Context object representing the
    current context.

    If omitted, $frames defaults to 1.

        sub {
         {
          {
           my $up = Scope::Context->new->up(2); # == Scope::Context->up(2)
           # $up points two contextes above this one, which is the sub.
          }
         }
        }

  "sub"
        my $sub_cxt = $cxt->sub;
        my $sub_cxt = $cxt->sub($frames);
        my $sub_cxt = Scope::Context->sub;

    Returns a new Scope::Context object pointing to the "$frames + 1"-th
    subroutine scope above the scope pointed by the invocant.

    This method can also be invoked as a class method, in which case it is
    equivalent to calling "sub" on a Scope::Context object for the current
    context.

    If omitted, $frames defaults to 0, which results in the closest sub
    enclosing the scope pointed by the invocant.

        outer();

        sub outer {
         inner();
        }

        sub inner {
         my $sub = Scope::Context->new->sub(1); # == Scope::Context->sub(1)
         # $sub points to the context for the outer() sub.
        }

  "eval"
        my $eval_cxt = $cxt->eval;
        my $eval_cxt = $cxt->eval($frames);
        my $eval_cxt = Scope::Context->eval;

    Returns a new Scope::Context object pointing to the "$frames + 1"-th
    "eval" scope above the scope pointed by the invocant.

    This method can also be invoked as a class method, in which case it is
    equivalent to calling "eval" on a Scope::Context object for the current
    context.

    If omitted, $frames defaults to 0, which results in the closest eval
    enclosing the scope pointed by the invocant.

        eval {
         sub {
          my $eval = Scope::Context->new->eval; # == Scope::Context->eval
          # $eval points to the eval context.
         }->()
        }

  "reap"
        $cxt->reap($code);

    Executes $code when the scope pointed by the invocant ends.

    See "reap" in Scope::Upper for details.

  "localize"
        $cxt->localize($what, $value);

    Localizes the variable described by $what to the value $value when the
    control flow returns to the scope pointed by the invocant, until said
    scope ends.

    See "localize" in Scope::Upper for details.

  "localize_elem"
        $cxt->localize_elem($what, $key, $value);

    Localizes the element $key of the variable $what to the value $value
    when the control flow returns to the scope pointed by the invocant,
    until said scope ends.

    See "localize_elem" in Scope::Upper for details.

  "localize_delete"
        $cxt->localize_delete($what, $key);

    Deletes the element $key from the variable $what when the control flow
    returns to the scope pointed by the invocant, and restores it to its
    original value when said scope ends.

    See "localize_delete" in Scope::Upper for details.

  "unwind"
        $cxt->unwind(@values);

    Immediately returns the scalars listed in @values from the closest
    subroutine enclosing the scope pointed by the invocant.

    See "unwind" in Scope::Upper for details.

  "yield"
        $cxt->yield(@values);

    Immediately returns the scalars listed in @values from the scope pointed
    by the invocant, whatever it may be (except a substitution eval
    context).

    See "yield" in Scope::Upper for details.

  "uplevel"
        my @ret = $cxt->uplevel($code, @args);

    Executes the code reference $code with arguments @args in the same
    setting as the closest subroutine enclosing the scope pointed by the
    invocant, then returns to the current scope the values returned by
    $code.

    See "uplevel" in Scope::Upper for details.

DEPENDENCIES
    Carp (core module since perl 5), overload (since 5.2.0), Scalar::Util
    (since 5.7.3).

    Scope::Upper 0.21.

SEE ALSO
    Scope::Upper.

    Continuation::Escape.

AUTHOR
    Vincent Pit, "<perl at profvince.com>", <http://www.profvince.com>.

    You can contact me by mail or on "irc.perl.org" (vincent).

BUGS
    Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-scope-context at
    rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at
    <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Scope-Context>. I will
    be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on
    your bug as I make changes.

SUPPORT
    You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.

        perldoc Scope::Context

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
    Copyright 2011,2012,2013,2015 Vincent Pit, all rights reserved.

    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
    under the same terms as Perl itself.