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Qore Programming Language Reference Manual
0.9.3.2
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Methods in this pseudo-class are available to be executed on any value type (even NOTHING); this is the root class for all pseudo-classes. More...

Public Member Methods | |
| bool | callp () |
| Returns False; this method is reimplemented in other types and will return True if the given expression is a callable value (ie closures or call references) More... | |
| bool | complexType () |
| returns True if the value has a complex type, False if not More... | |
| bool | empty () |
| Returns True; this method will be reimplemented in container types where it may return False. More... | |
| string | fullType () |
| returns the full type name which differs from the simple type name in case of complex types and objects More... | |
| bool | intp () |
| Returns False; this method is reimplemented in other types and will return True if the given expression can be converted to an integer. More... | |
| AbstractIterator | iterator () |
| Returns an iterator object for the value; the default iterator object returned is SingleValueIterator. More... | |
| int | lsize () |
| Returns 1; the return value of this method should give the list size of the value, which is normally 1 for non-lists (except for NOTHING where the size will be 0) and the number of the elements in the list for lists; this method will be reimplemented in other types where it may return other values. More... | |
| int | size () |
| Returns zero; this method will be reimplemented in container types where it may return a non-zero value. More... | |
| bool | sizep () |
| Returns True if the type can return a non-zero size (True for containers including binary objects and strings, False for everything else) More... | |
| bool | strp () |
| Returns False; this method is reimplemented in other types and will return True if the given expression can be converted to a string. More... | |
| bool | toBool () |
| Returns the boolean representation of the value; the default is False. More... | |
| float | toFloat () |
| Returns the floating-point representation of the value; the default is 0.0. More... | |
| int | toInt () |
| Returns the integer representation of the value; the default is 0. More... | |
| number | toNumber () |
| Returns the arbitrary-precision numeric representation of the value; the default is 0. More... | |
| string | toString () |
| Returns the string representation of the value; the default is an empty string. More... | |
| string | type () |
| Returns the string type for the value. More... | |
| int | typeCode () |
| Returns the type code for the value. More... | |
| bool | val () |
| Returns False; this method is reimplemented in other types and will return True if the given expression has a non-empty value. More... | |
Methods in this pseudo-class are available to be executed on any value type (even NOTHING); this is the root class for all pseudo-classes.
| bool <value>::callp | ( | ) |
Returns False; this method is reimplemented in other types and will return True if the given expression is a callable value (ie closures or call references)
| bool <value>::complexType | ( | ) |
returns True if the value has a complex type, False if not
Complex types are:
| bool <value>::empty | ( | ) |
Returns True; this method will be reimplemented in container types where it may return False.
This pseudo-method will return False in all non-container types; use <value>::val() to check if a generic expression that might not be a container type has a value instead.
| string <value>::fullType | ( | ) |
returns the full type name which differs from the simple type name in case of complex types and objects
Complex types are:
"hash<MyHash>")"hash<string, int>")"list<int>")"object<MyClass>"; see Class-Specific Type Declaration)| bool <value>::intp | ( | ) |
Returns False; this method is reimplemented in other types and will return True if the given expression can be converted to an integer.
| AbstractIterator <value>::iterator | ( | ) |
Returns an iterator object for the value; the default iterator object returned is SingleValueIterator.
| int <value>::lsize | ( | ) |
Returns 1; the return value of this method should give the list size of the value, which is normally 1 for non-lists (except for NOTHING where the size will be 0) and the number of the elements in the list for lists; this method will be reimplemented in other types where it may return other values.
| int <value>::size | ( | ) |
Returns zero; this method will be reimplemented in container types where it may return a non-zero value.
This pseudo-method will return 0 in all non-container types; use <value>::val() to check if a generic expression that might not be a container type has a value instead.
| bool <value>::sizep | ( | ) |
Returns True if the type can return a non-zero size (True for containers including binary objects and strings, False for everything else)
| bool <value>::strp | ( | ) |
| bool <value>::toBool | ( | ) |
Returns the boolean representation of the value; the default is False.
| float <value>::toFloat | ( | ) |
Returns the floating-point representation of the value; the default is 0.0.
| int <value>::toInt | ( | ) |
Returns the integer representation of the value; the default is 0.
Use <value>::intp() to determine if the current value can be converted to an integer
| number <value>::toNumber | ( | ) |
Returns the arbitrary-precision numeric representation of the value; the default is 0.
| string <value>::toString | ( | ) |
Returns the string representation of the value; the default is an empty string.
Use <value>::strp() to determine if the current value can be converted to a string
| string <value>::type | ( | ) |
Returns the string type for the value.
| int <value>::typeCode | ( | ) |
Returns the type code for the value.
This method is recommended over <value>::type() or the type(any) or typename(any) functions for comparing data types as it is much faster and more efficient than the other alternatives (which work with string values instead of integer codes).
| bool <value>::val | ( | ) |
Returns False; this method is reimplemented in other types and will return True if the given expression has a non-empty value.
| Type | Rule |
| int, float, number | False if zero, True if non-zero |
| string | False if empty, True if not empty |
| list | False if empty, True if not empty |
| hash | False if empty, True if not empty |
| object | always True with a valid object |
| code | always True |
| NOTHING | always False |
| NULL | always False |
| Example | Result |
0.val() | False |
1.val() | True |
"".val() | False (empty string) |
"0".val() | True |
"string".val() | True |
().val() | False (empty list) |
(0,).val() | True |
{}.val() | False (empty hash) |
("a":0).val() | True |
NOTHING.val() | False |
NULL.val() | False |
"0" when evaluated in a boolean context when %perl-bool-eval is enabled (the default); note that "0".val() returns True while boolean("0") returns False in all cases.