Just hardcode the package name you wish to skip to:
$self->SomeClass::method(...);
Example:
#!/usr/bin/env perl
use strict;
use warnings;
{
package Animal;
sub foo {
my $class = shift;
print __PACKAGE__, "\n";
}
}
{
package Mammal;
use base "Animal";
sub foo {
my $class = shift;
print __PACKAGE__, "\n";
$class->SUPER::foo(@_);
}
}
{
package Primate;
use base "Mammal";
sub foo {
my $class = shift;
print __PACKAGE__, "\n";
$class->SUPER::foo(@_);
}
}
{
package Monkey;
use base "Primate";
sub foo {
my $class = shift;
print __PACKAGE__, "\n";
$class->Mammal::foo(@_); # skip over Primate::foo
}
}
Monkey->foo;
Here's an alternative Monkey::foo sub that avoids hard-coding the Mammal class name:
sub foo {
my $class = shift;
print __PACKAGE__, "\n";
require mro;
my $grandparent = $class->mro::get_linear_isa->[2];
my $gp_method = $grandparent->can('foo');
$class->$gp_method(@_);
}
Or even:
sub foo {
my $class = shift;
print __PACKAGE__, "\n";
require mro;
$class->${\ $class->mro::get_linear_isa->[2]->can("foo") }(@_);
}
Note that mro requires Perl 5.10 or better, but there exists a MRO::Compat that provides an alternative implementation of mro::get_linear_isa for Perl 5.8.
package Cow { use Moo; has name => (is => 'lazy', default => sub { 'Mooington' }) } say Cow->new->name
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