# NAME

autobox::Transform - Autobox methods to transform Arrays and Hashes

# NOTE

This module supercedes autobox::Array::Transform which was
unfortunately named. The old module is deprecated and will soon
disappear.

# SYNOPSIS

    # Comparison of vanilla Perl and autobox version

    ### map_by - method call: $books are Book objects
    my @genres = map { $_->genre() } @$books;
    my @genres = $books->map_by("genre");

    my $genres = [ map { $_->genre() } @$books ];
    my $genres = $books->map_by("genre");

    # With sum from autobox::Core / List::AllUtils
    my $book_order_total = sum(
        map { $_->price_with_tax($tax_pct) } @{$order->books}
    );
    my $book_order_total = $order->books
        ->map_by(price_with_tax => [$tax_pct])->sum;

    ### map_by - hash key: $books are book hashrefs
    my @genres = map { $_->{genre} } @$books;
    my @genres = $books->map_by("genre");


    ### grep_by - method call: $books are Book objects
    my $sold_out_books = [ grep { $_->is_sold_out } @$books ];
    my $sold_out_books = $books->grep_by("is_sold_out");

    my $books_in_library = [ grep { $_->is_in_library($library) } @$books ];
    my $books_in_library = $books->grep_by(is_in_library => [$library]);

    ### grep_by - hash key: $books are book hashrefs
    my $sold_out_books = [ grep { $_->{is_sold_out} } @$books ];
    my $sold_out_books = $books->grep_by("is_sold_out");


    ### group_by - method call: $books are Book objects

    $books->group_by("title"),
    # {
    #     "Leviathan Wakes"       => $books->[0],
    #     "Caliban's War"         => $books->[1],
    #     "The Tree-Body Problem" => $books->[2],
    #     "The Name of the Wind"  => $books->[3],
    # },

    $authors->group_by(publisher_affiliation => ["with"]),
    # {
    #     'James A. Corey with Orbit'     => $authors->[0],
    #     'Cixin Liu with Head of Zeus'   => $authors->[1],
    #     'Patrick Rothfuss with Gollanz' => $authors->[2],
    # },

    $books->group_by_count("genre"),
    # {
    #     "Sci-fi"  => 3,
    #     "Fantasy" => 1,
    # },

    my $genre_books = $books->group_by_array("genre");
    # {
    #     "Sci-fi"  => [ $sf_book_1, $sf_book_2, $sf_book_3 ],
    #     "Fantasy" => [ $fantasy_book_1 ],
    # },


    ### group_by - hash key: $books are book hashrefs
    $books->group_by("title"), # $books are hashrefs


    #### flat - $author->books returns an arrayref of Books
    my $author_books = [ map { @{$_->books} } @$authors ]
    my $author_books = $authors->map_by("books")->flat

# DESCRIPTION

High level autobox methods you can call on arrays, arrayrefs, hashes
and hashrefs e.g.

- $array->map\_by()
- $array->grep\_by()
- $array->group\_by()
- $array->flat()

## Raison d'etre

[autobox::Core](https://metacpan.org/pod/autobox::Core) is awesome, for a variety of reasons.

- It cuts down on dereferencing punctuation clutter.
- It makes map and grep transforms read in the same direction it's executed.
- It makes it easier to write those things in a natural order. No need
to move the cursor around a lot just to fix dereferencing, order of
operations etc.

autobox::Transform provides a few higher level methods for mapping,
greping and sorting common cases which are easier to read and write.

Since they are at a slightly higher semantic level, once you know them
they also provide a more specific meaning than just "map" or "grep".

(Compare the difference between seeing a "map" and seeing a "foreach"
loop. Just seeing the word "map" hints at what type of thing is going
on here: transforming a list into another list).

The methods of autobox::Transform are not suitable for all
cases, but when used appropriately they will lead to much more clear,
succinct and direct code, especially in conjunction with
autobox::Core.

## Examples

    my $total_order_amount = $order->books
        ->map_by(price_with_tax => [ $tax_pct ])
        ->sum;

    my $order_authors = $order->books
        ->map_by("author")
        ->map_by("name")->uniq->sort->join(", ");

## Transforming lists of objects vs list of hashrefs

map\_by, grep\_by etc are called the same way regardless of whether the
list contains objects or hashrefs. The items in the list must all be
either objects or hashrefs.

If the array contains objects, a method is called on each object
(possibly with the arguments provided).

If the array contains hashrefs, the hash key is looked up on each
item.

## List and Scalar Context

All of the methods below are context sensitive, i.e. they return a
list in list context and an arrayref in scalar context, just like
autobox::Core.

Beware: you might be in list context when you need an arrayref.

When in doubt, assume they work like `map` and `grep`, and convert
the return value to references where you might have an unobvious list
context. E.g.

    $self->my_method(
        # Wrong, this is list context and wouldn't return an arrayref
        books => $books->grep_by("is_published"),
    ),

    $self->my_method(
        # Correct, convert the list to an arrayref
        books => [ $books->grep_by("is_published") ],
    ),
    $self->my_method(
        # Correct, ensure scalar context i.e. an array ref
        books => scalar $books->grep_by("is_published"),
    ),

# AUTOBOX ARRAY METHODS

## @array->map\_by($accessor, @$args?) : @array | @$array

Call the $accessor on each object in @array, or get the hash key
value on each hashref in the list. Like:

    map { $_->$accessor() }
    # or
    map { $_->{$accessor} }

Examples:

    my @ahthor_names = $authors->map_by("name");
    my $author_names = @publishers->map_by("authors")->map_by("name");

Optionally pass in @$args in the method call. Like:

    map { $_->$accessor(@$args) }

Examples:

    my @prices_including_tax = $books->map_by("price_with_tax", [ $tax_pct ]);
    my $prices_including_tax = $books->map_by(price_with_tax => [ $tax_pct ]);

Or get the hash key value. Examples:

    my @review_scores = $reviews->map_by("score");

## @array->grep\_by($accessor, @$args?) : @array | @$array

Call the $accessor on each object in the list, or get the hash key
value on each hashref in the list. Like:

    grep { $_->$accessor() }
    grep { $_->{$accessor} }

Examples:

    my @prolific_authors = $authors->grep_by("is_prolific");

Optionally pass in @$args in the method call. Like:

    grep { $_->$accessor(@$args) }

Examples:

    my @books_to_charge_for = $books->grep_by("price_with_tax", [ $tax_pct ]);

## @array->group\_by($accessor, @$args = \[\], $value\_sub = object) : %key\_value | %$key\_value

Call ->$accessor(@$args) on each object in the array, or get the hash
key for each hashref in the array (just like ->map\_by) and group the
return values as keys in a hashref.

The default $value\_sub puts the objects in the list as the hash
values.

Example:

    my $title_book = $books->group_by("title");
    # {
    #     "Leviathan Wakes"       => $books->[0],
    #     "Caliban's War"         => $books->[1],
    #     "The Tree-Body Problem" => $books->[2],
    #     "The Name of the Wind"  => $books->[3],
    # },

### The $value\_sub

This is a bit tricky to use, so the most common thing would probably
be to use one of the more specific group\_by-methods which do common
things (see below). It should be capable enough to achieve what you
need though, so here's how it works:

The hash key is whatever is returned from $object->$accessor(@$args).

The hash value is whatever is returned from

    my $new_value = $value_sub->($current_value, $object, $key);

where:

- $current value is the current hash value for this key (or undef if the first one).
- $object is the current item in the list. The current $\_ is also set to this.
- $key is the key returned by $object->$accessor(@$args)

## @array->group\_by\_count($accessor, @$args = \[\]) : %key\_count | %$key\_count

Just like group\_by, but the hash values are the the number of
instances each $accessor value occurs in the list.

Example:

    $books->group_by_count("genre"),
    # {
    #     "Sci-fi"  => 3,
    #     "Fantasy" => 1,
    # },

$book->genre() returns the genre string. There are three books counted
for the "Sci-fi" key.

## @array->group\_by\_array($accessor, @$args = \[\]) : %key\_objects | %$key\_objects

Just like group\_by, but the hash values are arrayrefs containing the
objects which has each $accessor value.

Example:

    my $genre_books = $books->group_by_array("genre");
    # {
    #     "Sci-fi"  => [ $sf_book_1, $sf_book_2, $sf_book_3 ],
    #     "Fantasy" => [ $fantasy_book_1 ],
    # },

$book->genre() returns the genre string. The three Sci-fi book objects
are collected under the Sci-fi key.

## @array->flat() : @array | @$array

Return a flattened array, assuming the array items themselves are
array refs. I.e.

    [
        [ 1, 2, 3 ],
        [ "a", "b" ],
    ]->flat

returns

    [ 1, 2, 3, "a", "b "]

This is useful if e.g. a map\_by("some\_method") returns arrayrefs of
objects which you want to do further method calls on. Example:

    # ->books returns an arrayref of Book objects with a ->title
    $authors->map_by("books")->flat->map_by("title")

Note: This is different from autobox::Core's ->flatten, which reurns a
list rather than an array and therefore can't be used in this
way.

# DEVELOPMENT

## Author

Johan Lindstrom, `<johanl [AT] cpan.org>`

## Source code

[https://github.com/jplindstrom/p5-autobox-Transform](https://github.com/jplindstrom/p5-autobox-Transform)

## Bug reports

Please report any bugs or feature requests on GitHub:

[https://github.com/jplindstrom/p5-autobox-Transform/issues](https://github.com/jplindstrom/p5-autobox-Transform/issues).

# COPYRIGHT & LICENSE

Copyright 2016- Johan Lindstrom, All Rights Reserved.

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