upping verison numbers and reviewing the immutable changes
[gitmo/Class-MOP.git] / lib / Class / MOP / Class.pm
CommitLineData
8b978dd5 1
2package Class::MOP::Class;
3
4use strict;
5use warnings;
6
c23184fc 7use Class::MOP::Immutable;
ba38bf08 8use Class::MOP::Instance;
9use Class::MOP::Method::Wrapped;
10
8b978dd5 11use Carp 'confess';
7f63694d 12use Scalar::Util 'blessed', 'reftype', 'weaken';
8b978dd5 13use Sub::Name 'subname';
96ceced8 14use B 'svref_2object';
8b978dd5 15
c0fcd6ab 16our $VERSION = '0.22';
f0480c45 17our $AUTHORITY = 'cpan:STEVAN';
8b978dd5 18
2243a22b 19use base 'Class::MOP::Module';
20
0ac992ee 21# Self-introspection
2eb717d5 22
aa448b16 23sub meta { Class::MOP::Class->initialize(blessed($_[0]) || $_[0]) }
2eb717d5 24
8b978dd5 25# Creation
0ac992ee 26
be7677c7 27sub initialize {
28 my $class = shift;
29 my $package_name = shift;
30 (defined $package_name && $package_name && !blessed($package_name))
0ac992ee 31 || confess "You must pass a package name and it cannot be blessed";
c23184fc 32 $class->construct_class_instance('package' => $package_name, @_);
be7677c7 33}
34
35sub reinitialize {
36 my $class = shift;
37 my $package_name = shift;
38 (defined $package_name && $package_name && !blessed($package_name))
0ac992ee 39 || confess "You must pass a package name and it cannot be blessed";
be7677c7 40 Class::MOP::remove_metaclass_by_name($package_name);
c23184fc 41 $class->construct_class_instance('package' => $package_name, @_);
0ac992ee 42}
43
44# NOTE: (meta-circularity)
45# this is a special form of &construct_instance
be7677c7 46# (see below), which is used to construct class
0ac992ee 47# meta-object instances for any Class::MOP::*
48# class. All other classes will use the more
be7677c7 49# normal &construct_instance.
50sub construct_class_instance {
51 my $class = shift;
52 my %options = @_;
c23184fc 53 my $package_name = $options{'package'};
be7677c7 54 (defined $package_name && $package_name)
0ac992ee 55 || confess "You must pass a package name";
be7677c7 56 # NOTE:
0ac992ee 57 # return the metaclass if we have it cached,
58 # and it is still defined (it has not been
59 # reaped by DESTROY yet, which can happen
be7677c7 60 # annoyingly enough during global destruction)
61 return Class::MOP::get_metaclass_by_name($package_name)
0ac992ee 62 if Class::MOP::does_metaclass_exist($package_name);
be7677c7 63
64 # NOTE:
0ac992ee 65 # we need to deal with the possibility
66 # of class immutability here, and then
be7677c7 67 # get the name of the class appropriately
68 $class = (blessed($class)
69 ? ($class->is_immutable
70 ? $class->get_mutable_metaclass_name()
71 : blessed($class))
72 : $class);
73
be7677c7 74 # now create the metaclass
75 my $meta;
76 if ($class =~ /^Class::MOP::Class$/) {
0ac992ee 77 no strict 'refs';
78 $meta = bless {
be7677c7 79 # inherited from Class::MOP::Package
0ac992ee 80 '$!package' => $package_name,
81
c4260b45 82 # NOTE:
0ac992ee 83 # since the following attributes will
84 # actually be loaded from the symbol
c4260b45 85 # table, and actually bypass the instance
86 # entirely, we can just leave these things
87 # listed here for reference, because they
0ac992ee 88 # should not actually have a value associated
c4260b45 89 # with the slot.
0ac992ee 90 '%!namespace' => \undef,
be7677c7 91 # inherited from Class::MOP::Module
c23184fc 92 '$!version' => \undef,
93 '$!authority' => \undef,
c4260b45 94 # defined in Class::MOP::Class
c23184fc 95 '@!superclasses' => \undef,
0ac992ee 96
c23184fc 97 '%!methods' => {},
0ac992ee 98 '%!attributes' => {},
c23184fc 99 '$!attribute_metaclass' => $options{'attribute_metaclass'} || 'Class::MOP::Attribute',
100 '$!method_metaclass' => $options{'method_metaclass'} || 'Class::MOP::Method',
101 '$!instance_metaclass' => $options{'instance_metaclass'} || 'Class::MOP::Instance',
be7677c7 102 } => $class;
103 }
104 else {
105 # NOTE:
106 # it is safe to use meta here because
0ac992ee 107 # class will always be a subclass of
be7677c7 108 # Class::MOP::Class, which defines meta
109 $meta = $class->meta->construct_instance(%options)
727919c5 110 }
0ac992ee 111
be7677c7 112 # and check the metaclass compatibility
113 $meta->check_metaclass_compatability();
0ac992ee 114
be7677c7 115 Class::MOP::store_metaclass_by_name($package_name, $meta);
0ac992ee 116
be7677c7 117 # NOTE:
118 # we need to weaken any anon classes
119 # so that they can call DESTROY properly
b9d9fc0b 120 Class::MOP::weaken_metaclass($package_name) if $meta->is_anon_class;
0ac992ee 121
122 $meta;
123}
124
be7677c7 125sub check_metaclass_compatability {
126 my $self = shift;
127
128 # this is always okay ...
0ac992ee 129 return if blessed($self) eq 'Class::MOP::Class' &&
be7677c7 130 $self->instance_metaclass eq 'Class::MOP::Instance';
131
132 my @class_list = $self->class_precedence_list;
133 shift @class_list; # shift off $self->name
373a16ae 134
0ac992ee 135 foreach my $class_name (@class_list) {
be7677c7 136 my $meta = Class::MOP::get_metaclass_by_name($class_name) || next;
0ac992ee 137
373a16ae 138 # NOTE:
0ac992ee 139 # we need to deal with the possibility
140 # of class immutability here, and then
141 # get the name of the class appropriately
be7677c7 142 my $meta_type = ($meta->is_immutable
143 ? $meta->get_mutable_metaclass_name()
0ac992ee 144 : blessed($meta));
145
be7677c7 146 ($self->isa($meta_type))
0ac992ee 147 || confess $self->name . "->meta => (" . (blessed($self)) . ")" .
148 " is not compatible with the " .
be7677c7 149 $class_name . "->meta => (" . ($meta_type) . ")";
77e5fce4 150 # NOTE:
be7677c7 151 # we also need to check that instance metaclasses
152 # are compatabile in the same the class.
153 ($self->instance_metaclass->isa($meta->instance_metaclass))
0ac992ee 154 || confess $self->name . "->meta => (" . ($self->instance_metaclass) . ")" .
155 " is not compatible with the " .
156 $class_name . "->meta => (" . ($meta->instance_metaclass) . ")";
157 }
158}
8b978dd5 159
6d5355c3 160## ANON classes
161
162{
163 # NOTE:
0ac992ee 164 # this should be sufficient, if you have a
165 # use case where it is not, write a test and
6d5355c3 166 # I will change it.
167 my $ANON_CLASS_SERIAL = 0;
0ac992ee 168
b9d9fc0b 169 # NOTE:
170 # we need a sufficiently annoying prefix
0ac992ee 171 # this should suffice for now, this is
172 # used in a couple of places below, so
b9d9fc0b 173 # need to put it up here for now.
0ac992ee 174 my $ANON_CLASS_PREFIX = 'Class::MOP::Class::__ANON__::SERIAL::';
b9d9fc0b 175
176 sub is_anon_class {
177 my $self = shift;
a651e249 178 no warnings 'uninitialized';
0ac992ee 179 $self->name =~ /^$ANON_CLASS_PREFIX/ ? 1 : 0;
b9d9fc0b 180 }
6d5355c3 181
182 sub create_anon_class {
0ac992ee 183 my ($class, %options) = @_;
6d5355c3 184 my $package_name = $ANON_CLASS_PREFIX . ++$ANON_CLASS_SERIAL;
88dd563c 185 return $class->create($package_name, %options);
0ac992ee 186 }
6d5355c3 187
b9d9fc0b 188 # NOTE:
0ac992ee 189 # this will only get called for
190 # anon-classes, all other calls
191 # are assumed to occur during
b9d9fc0b 192 # global destruction and so don't
193 # really need to be handled explicitly
194 sub DESTROY {
195 my $self = shift;
0ac992ee 196 no warnings 'uninitialized';
b9d9fc0b 197 return unless $self->name =~ /^$ANON_CLASS_PREFIX/;
198 my ($serial_id) = ($self->name =~ /^$ANON_CLASS_PREFIX(\d+)/);
0ac992ee 199 no strict 'refs';
b9d9fc0b 200 foreach my $key (keys %{$ANON_CLASS_PREFIX . $serial_id}) {
201 delete ${$ANON_CLASS_PREFIX . $serial_id}{$key};
202 }
0ac992ee 203 delete ${'main::' . $ANON_CLASS_PREFIX}{$serial_id . '::'};
6d5355c3 204 }
b9d9fc0b 205
6d5355c3 206}
207
208# creating classes with MOP ...
209
8b978dd5 210sub create {
88dd563c 211 my $class = shift;
212 my $package_name = shift;
0ac992ee 213
bfe4d0fc 214 (defined $package_name && $package_name)
8b978dd5 215 || confess "You must pass a package name";
88dd563c 216
217 (scalar @_ % 2 == 0)
0ac992ee 218 || confess "You much pass all parameters as name => value pairs " .
88dd563c 219 "(I found an uneven number of params in \@_)";
220
221 my (%options) = @_;
0ac992ee 222
8b978dd5 223 my $code = "package $package_name;";
0ac992ee 224 $code .= "\$$package_name\:\:VERSION = '" . $options{version} . "';"
88dd563c 225 if exists $options{version};
0ac992ee 226 $code .= "\$$package_name\:\:AUTHORITY = '" . $options{authority} . "';"
227 if exists $options{authority};
228
8b978dd5 229 eval $code;
0ac992ee 230 confess "creation of $package_name failed : $@" if $@;
231
bfe4d0fc 232 my $meta = $class->initialize($package_name);
0ac992ee 233
234 $meta->add_method('meta' => sub {
df7b4119 235 $class->initialize(blessed($_[0]) || $_[0]);
aa448b16 236 });
0ac992ee 237
8b978dd5 238 $meta->superclasses(@{$options{superclasses}})
239 if exists $options{superclasses};
2eb717d5 240 # NOTE:
0ac992ee 241 # process attributes first, so that they can
2eb717d5 242 # install accessors, but locally defined methods
243 # can then overwrite them. It is maybe a little odd, but
244 # I think this should be the order of things.
245 if (exists $options{attributes}) {
cbd9f942 246 foreach my $attr (@{$options{attributes}}) {
247 $meta->add_attribute($attr);
2eb717d5 248 }
0ac992ee 249 }
bfe4d0fc 250 if (exists $options{methods}) {
251 foreach my $method_name (keys %{$options{methods}}) {
252 $meta->add_method($method_name, $options{methods}->{$method_name});
253 }
0ac992ee 254 }
8b978dd5 255 return $meta;
256}
257
7b31baf4 258## Attribute readers
259
260# NOTE:
0ac992ee 261# all these attribute readers will be bootstrapped
7b31baf4 262# away in the Class::MOP bootstrap section
263
c23184fc 264sub get_attribute_map { $_[0]->{'%!attributes'} }
265sub attribute_metaclass { $_[0]->{'$!attribute_metaclass'} }
266sub method_metaclass { $_[0]->{'$!method_metaclass'} }
267sub instance_metaclass { $_[0]->{'$!instance_metaclass'} }
7b31baf4 268
0f71bc80 269# FIXME:
270# this is a prime canidate for conversion to XS
0ac992ee 271sub get_method_map {
c4260b45 272 my $self = shift;
0ac992ee 273 my $map = $self->{'%!methods'};
274
0f71bc80 275 my $class_name = $self->name;
276 my $method_metaclass = $self->method_metaclass;
0ac992ee 277
92330ee2 278 foreach my $symbol ($self->list_all_package_symbols('CODE')) {
91e0eb4a 279 my $code = $self->get_package_symbol('&' . $symbol);
0ac992ee 280
281 next if exists $map->{$symbol} &&
282 defined $map->{$symbol} &&
283 $map->{$symbol}->body == $code;
284
0f71bc80 285 my $gv = svref_2object($code)->GV;
286 next if ($gv->STASH->NAME || '') ne $class_name &&
0ac992ee 287 ($gv->NAME || '') ne '__ANON__';
288
0f71bc80 289 $map->{$symbol} = $method_metaclass->wrap($code);
7855ddba 290 }
0ac992ee 291
7855ddba 292 return $map;
c4260b45 293}
294
c9e77dbb 295# Instance Construction & Cloning
296
5f3c057a 297sub new_object {
298 my $class = shift;
651955fb 299 # NOTE:
0ac992ee 300 # we need to protect the integrity of the
651955fb 301 # Class::MOP::Class singletons here, so we
302 # delegate this to &construct_class_instance
303 # which will deal with the singletons
304 return $class->construct_class_instance(@_)
305 if $class->name->isa('Class::MOP::Class');
24869f62 306 return $class->construct_instance(@_);
5f3c057a 307}
e16da3e6 308
309sub construct_instance {
cbd9f942 310 my ($class, %params) = @_;
0e76a376 311 my $meta_instance = $class->get_meta_instance();
312 my $instance = $meta_instance->create_instance();
c9e77dbb 313 foreach my $attr ($class->compute_all_applicable_attributes()) {
f892c0f0 314 $attr->initialize_instance_slot($meta_instance, $instance, \%params);
cbd9f942 315 }
0ac992ee 316 # NOTE:
d4ba1677 317 # this will only work for a HASH instance type
318 if ($class->is_anon_class) {
319 (reftype($instance) eq 'HASH')
320 || confess "Currently only HASH based instances are supported with instance of anon-classes";
321 # NOTE:
322 # At some point we should make this official
0ac992ee 323 # as a reserved slot name, but right now I am
d4ba1677 324 # going to keep it here.
325 # my $RESERVED_MOP_SLOT = '__MOP__';
326 $instance->{'__MOP__'} = $class;
327 }
2d711cc8 328 return $instance;
329}
330
331sub get_meta_instance {
332 my $class = shift;
052c2a1a 333 return $class->instance_metaclass->new(
0ac992ee 334 $class,
052c2a1a 335 $class->compute_all_applicable_attributes()
336 );
e16da3e6 337}
338
5f3c057a 339sub clone_object {
340 my $class = shift;
0ac992ee 341 my $instance = shift;
651955fb 342 (blessed($instance) && $instance->isa($class->name))
343 || confess "You must pass an instance ($instance) of the metaclass (" . $class->name . ")";
344 # NOTE:
0ac992ee 345 # we need to protect the integrity of the
346 # Class::MOP::Class singletons here, they
a740253a 347 # should not be cloned.
0ac992ee 348 return $instance if $instance->isa('Class::MOP::Class');
f7259199 349 $class->clone_instance($instance, @_);
5f3c057a 350}
351
c9e77dbb 352sub clone_instance {
651955fb 353 my ($class, $instance, %params) = @_;
354 (blessed($instance))
c9e77dbb 355 || confess "You can only clone instances, \$self is not a blessed instance";
f7259199 356 my $meta_instance = $class->get_meta_instance();
0ac992ee 357 my $clone = $meta_instance->clone_instance($instance);
c23184fc 358 foreach my $attr ($class->compute_all_applicable_attributes()) {
795a0c8b 359 if (exists $params{$attr->init_arg}) {
0ac992ee 360 $meta_instance->set_slot_value($clone, $attr->name, $params{$attr->init_arg});
c23184fc 361 }
0ac992ee 362 }
363 return $clone;
c9e77dbb 364}
365
8b978dd5 366# Inheritance
367
368sub superclasses {
369 my $self = shift;
8b978dd5 370 if (@_) {
371 my @supers = @_;
9d6dce77 372 @{$self->get_package_symbol('@ISA')} = @supers;
d82060fe 373 # NOTE:
0ac992ee 374 # we need to check the metaclass
375 # compatability here so that we can
376 # be sure that the superclass is
377 # not potentially creating an issues
d82060fe 378 # we don't know about
379 $self->check_metaclass_compatability();
8b978dd5 380 }
9d6dce77 381 @{$self->get_package_symbol('@ISA')};
8b978dd5 382}
383
384sub class_precedence_list {
385 my $self = shift;
bfe4d0fc 386 # NOTE:
387 # We need to check for ciruclar inheirtance here.
388 # This will do nothing if all is well, and blow
0ac992ee 389 # up otherwise. Yes, it's an ugly hack, better
bfe4d0fc 390 # suggestions are welcome.
93b4e576 391 { ($self->name || return)->isa('This is a test for circular inheritance') }
0ac992ee 392
8b978dd5 393 (
0ac992ee 394 $self->name,
395 map {
f7259199 396 $self->initialize($_)->class_precedence_list()
8b978dd5 397 } $self->superclasses()
0ac992ee 398 );
8b978dd5 399}
400
0882828e 401## Methods
402
403sub add_method {
404 my ($self, $method_name, $method) = @_;
405 (defined $method_name && $method_name)
406 || confess "You must define a method name";
0ac992ee 407
7855ddba 408 my $body;
7855ddba 409 if (blessed($method)) {
0ac992ee 410 $body = $method->body;
7855ddba 411 }
0ac992ee 412 else {
7855ddba 413 $body = $method;
7855ddba 414 ('CODE' eq (reftype($body) || ''))
0ac992ee 415 || confess "Your code block must be a CODE reference";
416 $method = $self->method_metaclass->wrap($body);
7855ddba 417 }
0f71bc80 418 $self->get_method_map->{$method_name} = $method;
0ac992ee 419
420 my $full_method_name = ($self->name . '::' . $method_name);
7855ddba 421 $self->add_package_symbol("&${method_name}" => subname $full_method_name => $body);
0882828e 422}
423
a4258ffd 424{
2d711cc8 425 my $fetch_and_prepare_method = sub {
426 my ($self, $method_name) = @_;
427 # fetch it locally
428 my $method = $self->get_method($method_name);
429 # if we dont have local ...
430 unless ($method) {
195f5bf8 431 # try to find the next method
432 $method = $self->find_next_method_by_name($method_name);
433 # die if it does not exist
434 (defined $method)
804f7d24 435 || confess "The method '$method_name' is not found in the inheritance hierarchy for class " . $self->name;
0ac992ee 436 # and now make sure to wrap it
195f5bf8 437 # even if it is already wrapped
438 # because we need a new sub ref
2d711cc8 439 $method = Class::MOP::Method::Wrapped->wrap($method);
195f5bf8 440 }
441 else {
0ac992ee 442 # now make sure we wrap it properly
195f5bf8 443 $method = Class::MOP::Method::Wrapped->wrap($method)
0ac992ee 444 unless $method->isa('Class::MOP::Method::Wrapped');
445 }
446 $self->add_method($method_name => $method);
2d711cc8 447 return $method;
448 };
449
450 sub add_before_method_modifier {
451 my ($self, $method_name, $method_modifier) = @_;
452 (defined $method_name && $method_name)
0ac992ee 453 || confess "You must pass in a method name";
2d711cc8 454 my $method = $fetch_and_prepare_method->($self, $method_name);
455 $method->add_before_modifier(subname ':before' => $method_modifier);
456 }
457
458 sub add_after_method_modifier {
459 my ($self, $method_name, $method_modifier) = @_;
460 (defined $method_name && $method_name)
0ac992ee 461 || confess "You must pass in a method name";
2d711cc8 462 my $method = $fetch_and_prepare_method->($self, $method_name);
463 $method->add_after_modifier(subname ':after' => $method_modifier);
464 }
0ac992ee 465
2d711cc8 466 sub add_around_method_modifier {
467 my ($self, $method_name, $method_modifier) = @_;
468 (defined $method_name && $method_name)
469 || confess "You must pass in a method name";
470 my $method = $fetch_and_prepare_method->($self, $method_name);
471 $method->add_around_modifier(subname ':around' => $method_modifier);
0ac992ee 472 }
a4258ffd 473
0ac992ee 474 # NOTE:
8c936afc 475 # the methods above used to be named like this:
476 # ${pkg}::${method}:(before|after|around)
477 # but this proved problematic when using one modifier
478 # to wrap multiple methods (something which is likely
479 # to happen pretty regularly IMO). So instead of naming
0ac992ee 480 # it like this, I have chosen to just name them purely
8c936afc 481 # with their modifier names, like so:
482 # :(before|after|around)
0ac992ee 483 # The fact is that in a stack trace, it will be fairly
8c936afc 484 # evident from the context what method they are attached
485 # to, and so don't need the fully qualified name.
ee5e71d4 486}
487
663f8198 488sub alias_method {
489 my ($self, $method_name, $method) = @_;
490 (defined $method_name && $method_name)
491 || confess "You must define a method name";
de19f115 492
0f71bc80 493 my $body = (blessed($method) ? $method->body : $method);
494 ('CODE' eq (reftype($body) || ''))
0ac992ee 495 || confess "Your code block must be a CODE reference";
496
7855ddba 497 $self->add_package_symbol("&${method_name}" => $body);
16e960bd 498}
499
de19f115 500sub has_method {
501 my ($self, $method_name) = @_;
502 (defined $method_name && $method_name)
0ac992ee 503 || confess "You must define a method name";
504
505 return 0 unless exists $self->get_method_map->{$method_name};
de19f115 506 return 1;
0882828e 507}
508
509sub get_method {
c9b8b7f9 510 my ($self, $method_name) = @_;
0882828e 511 (defined $method_name && $method_name)
512 || confess "You must define a method name";
0ac992ee 513
0f71bc80 514 # NOTE:
515 # I don't really need this here, because
0ac992ee 516 # if the method_map is missing a key it
0f71bc80 517 # will just return undef for me now
518 # return unless $self->has_method($method_name);
0ac992ee 519
7855ddba 520 return $self->get_method_map->{$method_name};
c9b8b7f9 521}
522
523sub remove_method {
524 my ($self, $method_name) = @_;
525 (defined $method_name && $method_name)
526 || confess "You must define a method name";
0ac992ee 527
528 my $removed_method = $self->get_method($method_name);
529
530 do {
0f71bc80 531 $self->remove_package_symbol("&${method_name}");
532 delete $self->get_method_map->{$method_name};
533 } if defined $removed_method;
0ac992ee 534
c9b8b7f9 535 return $removed_method;
536}
537
538sub get_method_list {
539 my $self = shift;
0f71bc80 540 keys %{$self->get_method_map};
7855ddba 541}
542
543sub find_method_by_name {
544 my ($self, $method_name) = @_;
b9575695 545 (defined $method_name && $method_name)
0ac992ee 546 || confess "You must define a method name to find";
b9575695 547 # keep a record of what we have seen
0ac992ee 548 # here, this will handle all the
549 # inheritence issues because we are
b9575695 550 # using the &class_precedence_list
551 my %seen_class;
552 my @cpl = $self->class_precedence_list();
553 foreach my $class (@cpl) {
554 next if $seen_class{$class};
555 $seen_class{$class}++;
556 # fetch the meta-class ...
557 my $meta = $self->initialize($class);
0ac992ee 558 return $meta->get_method($method_name)
b9575695 559 if $meta->has_method($method_name);
560 }
561 return;
a5eca695 562}
563
564sub compute_all_applicable_methods {
565 my $self = shift;
566 my @methods;
567 # keep a record of what we have seen
0ac992ee 568 # here, this will handle all the
569 # inheritence issues because we are
a5eca695 570 # using the &class_precedence_list
571 my (%seen_class, %seen_method);
572 foreach my $class ($self->class_precedence_list()) {
573 next if $seen_class{$class};
574 $seen_class{$class}++;
575 # fetch the meta-class ...
576 my $meta = $self->initialize($class);
0ac992ee 577 foreach my $method_name ($meta->get_method_list()) {
a5eca695 578 next if exists $seen_method{$method_name};
579 $seen_method{$method_name}++;
580 push @methods => {
0ac992ee 581 name => $method_name,
a5eca695 582 class => $class,
583 code => $meta->get_method($method_name)
584 };
585 }
586 }
587 return @methods;
588}
589
a5eca695 590sub find_all_methods_by_name {
591 my ($self, $method_name) = @_;
592 (defined $method_name && $method_name)
0ac992ee 593 || confess "You must define a method name to find";
a5eca695 594 my @methods;
595 # keep a record of what we have seen
0ac992ee 596 # here, this will handle all the
597 # inheritence issues because we are
a5eca695 598 # using the &class_precedence_list
599 my %seen_class;
600 foreach my $class ($self->class_precedence_list()) {
601 next if $seen_class{$class};
602 $seen_class{$class}++;
603 # fetch the meta-class ...
96ceced8 604 my $meta = $self->initialize($class);
a5eca695 605 push @methods => {
0ac992ee 606 name => $method_name,
a5eca695 607 class => $class,
608 code => $meta->get_method($method_name)
609 } if $meta->has_method($method_name);
610 }
611 return @methods;
8b978dd5 612}
613
96ceced8 614sub find_next_method_by_name {
615 my ($self, $method_name) = @_;
616 (defined $method_name && $method_name)
0ac992ee 617 || confess "You must define a method name to find";
96ceced8 618 # keep a record of what we have seen
0ac992ee 619 # here, this will handle all the
620 # inheritence issues because we are
96ceced8 621 # using the &class_precedence_list
622 my %seen_class;
2d711cc8 623 my @cpl = $self->class_precedence_list();
624 shift @cpl; # discard ourselves
96ceced8 625 foreach my $class (@cpl) {
626 next if $seen_class{$class};
627 $seen_class{$class}++;
628 # fetch the meta-class ...
629 my $meta = $self->initialize($class);
0ac992ee 630 return $meta->get_method($method_name)
2d711cc8 631 if $meta->has_method($method_name);
96ceced8 632 }
2d711cc8 633 return;
96ceced8 634}
635
552e3d24 636## Attributes
637
e16da3e6 638sub add_attribute {
2e41896e 639 my $self = shift;
640 # either we have an attribute object already
641 # or we need to create one from the args provided
642 my $attribute = blessed($_[0]) ? $_[0] : $self->attribute_metaclass->new(@_);
643 # make sure it is derived from the correct type though
644 ($attribute->isa('Class::MOP::Attribute'))
0ac992ee 645 || confess "Your attribute must be an instance of Class::MOP::Attribute (or a subclass)";
b1897d4d 646
647 # first we attach our new attribute
0ac992ee 648 # because it might need certain information
b1897d4d 649 # about the class which it is attached to
9ec169fe 650 $attribute->attach_to_class($self);
0ac992ee 651
652 # then we remove attributes of a conflicting
653 # name here so that we can properly detach
654 # the old attr object, and remove any
b1897d4d 655 # accessors it would have generated
656 $self->remove_attribute($attribute->name)
657 if $self->has_attribute($attribute->name);
0ac992ee 658
b1897d4d 659 # then onto installing the new accessors
2d711cc8 660 $attribute->install_accessors();
291073fc 661 $self->get_attribute_map->{$attribute->name} = $attribute;
e16da3e6 662}
663
664sub has_attribute {
665 my ($self, $attribute_name) = @_;
666 (defined $attribute_name && $attribute_name)
667 || confess "You must define an attribute name";
0ac992ee 668 exists $self->get_attribute_map->{$attribute_name} ? 1 : 0;
669}
e16da3e6 670
671sub get_attribute {
672 my ($self, $attribute_name) = @_;
673 (defined $attribute_name && $attribute_name)
674 || confess "You must define an attribute name";
0ac992ee 675 return $self->get_attribute_map->{$attribute_name}
b1897d4d 676 # NOTE:
677 # this will return undef anyway, so no need ...
0ac992ee 678 # if $self->has_attribute($attribute_name);
679 #return;
680}
e16da3e6 681
682sub remove_attribute {
683 my ($self, $attribute_name) = @_;
684 (defined $attribute_name && $attribute_name)
685 || confess "You must define an attribute name";
0ac992ee 686 my $removed_attribute = $self->get_attribute_map->{$attribute_name};
22286063 687 return unless defined $removed_attribute;
0ac992ee 688 delete $self->get_attribute_map->{$attribute_name};
689 $removed_attribute->remove_accessors();
2d711cc8 690 $removed_attribute->detach_from_class();
e16da3e6 691 return $removed_attribute;
0ac992ee 692}
e16da3e6 693
694sub get_attribute_list {
695 my $self = shift;
f7259199 696 keys %{$self->get_attribute_map};
0ac992ee 697}
e16da3e6 698
699sub compute_all_applicable_attributes {
700 my $self = shift;
701 my @attrs;
702 # keep a record of what we have seen
0ac992ee 703 # here, this will handle all the
704 # inheritence issues because we are
e16da3e6 705 # using the &class_precedence_list
706 my (%seen_class, %seen_attr);
707 foreach my $class ($self->class_precedence_list()) {
708 next if $seen_class{$class};
709 $seen_class{$class}++;
710 # fetch the meta-class ...
f7259199 711 my $meta = $self->initialize($class);
0ac992ee 712 foreach my $attr_name ($meta->get_attribute_list()) {
e16da3e6 713 next if exists $seen_attr{$attr_name};
714 $seen_attr{$attr_name}++;
c9e77dbb 715 push @attrs => $meta->get_attribute($attr_name);
e16da3e6 716 }
717 }
0ac992ee 718 return @attrs;
e16da3e6 719}
2eb717d5 720
058c1cf5 721sub find_attribute_by_name {
722 my ($self, $attr_name) = @_;
723 # keep a record of what we have seen
0ac992ee 724 # here, this will handle all the
725 # inheritence issues because we are
058c1cf5 726 # using the &class_precedence_list
727 my %seen_class;
728 foreach my $class ($self->class_precedence_list()) {
729 next if $seen_class{$class};
730 $seen_class{$class}++;
731 # fetch the meta-class ...
732 my $meta = $self->initialize($class);
733 return $meta->get_attribute($attr_name)
734 if $meta->has_attribute($attr_name);
735 }
736 return;
737}
738
857f87a7 739## Class closing
740
741sub is_mutable { 1 }
742sub is_immutable { 0 }
743
b817e248 744# NOTE:
745# Why I changed this (groditi)
746# - One Metaclass may have many Classes through many Metaclass instances
747# - One Metaclass should only have one Immutable Transformer instance
748# - Each Class may have different Immutabilizing options
749# - Therefore each Metaclass instance may have different Immutabilizing options
750# - We need to store one Immutable Transformer instance per Metaclass
751# - We need to store one set of Immutable Transformer options per Class
752# - Upon make_mutable we may delete the Immutabilizing options
753# - We could clean the immutable Transformer instance when there is no more
754# immutable Classes of that type, but we can also keep it in case
755# another class with this same Metaclass becomes immutable. It is a case
756# of trading of storing an instance to avoid unnecessary instantiations of
757# Immutable Transformers. You may view this as a memory leak, however
758# Because we have few Metaclasses, in practice it seems acceptable
759# - To allow Immutable Transformers instances to be cleaned up we could weaken
760# the reference stored in $IMMUTABLE_TRANSFORMERS{$class} and ||= should DWIM
04dd7510 761
c23184fc 762{
d9586da2 763 my %IMMUTABLE_TRANSFORMERS;
0ac992ee 764 my %IMMUTABLE_OPTIONS;
c23184fc 765 sub make_immutable {
0ac992ee 766 my $self = shift;
04dd7510 767 my %options = @_;
d9586da2 768 my $class = blessed $self || $self;
769
770 $IMMUTABLE_TRANSFORMERS{$class} ||= $self->create_immutable_transformer;
771 my $transformer = $IMMUTABLE_TRANSFORMERS{$class};
772
773 $transformer->make_metaclass_immutable($self, %options);
7f63694d 774 $IMMUTABLE_OPTIONS{$self->name} =
d9586da2 775 { %options, IMMUTABLE_TRANSFORMER => $transformer };
04dd7510 776
777 if( exists $options{debug} && $options{debug} ){
d9586da2 778 print STDERR "# of Metaclass options: ", keys %IMMUTABLE_OPTIONS;
779 print STDERR "# of Immutable transformers: ", keys %IMMUTABLE_TRANSFORMERS;
04dd7510 780 }
c23184fc 781 }
0ac992ee 782
783 sub make_mutable{
784 my $self = shift;
785 return if $self->is_mutable;
7f63694d 786 my $options = delete $IMMUTABLE_OPTIONS{$self->name};
d9586da2 787 confess "unable to find immutabilizing options" unless $options;
788 my $transformer = delete $options->{IMMUTABLE_TRANSFORMER};
789 $transformer->make_metaclass_mutable($self, %$options);
0ac992ee 790 }
d9586da2 791}
0ac992ee 792
d9586da2 793sub create_immutable_transformer {
794 my $self = shift;
795 my $class = Class::MOP::Immutable->new($self, {
796 read_only => [qw/superclasses/],
797 cannot_call => [qw/
798 add_method
799 alias_method
800 remove_method
801 add_attribute
802 remove_attribute
803 add_package_symbol
804 remove_package_symbol
805 /],
806 memoize => {
807 class_precedence_list => 'ARRAY',
808 compute_all_applicable_attributes => 'ARRAY',
809 get_meta_instance => 'SCALAR',
810 get_method_map => 'SCALAR',
811 }
812 });
813 return $class;
857f87a7 814}
815
8b978dd5 8161;
817
818__END__
819
820=pod
821
0ac992ee 822=head1 NAME
8b978dd5 823
824Class::MOP::Class - Class Meta Object
825
826=head1 SYNOPSIS
827
0ac992ee 828 # assuming that class Foo
8c936afc 829 # has been defined, you can
0ac992ee 830
fe122940 831 # use this for introspection ...
0ac992ee 832
fe122940 833 # add a method to Foo ...
834 Foo->meta->add_method('bar' => sub { ... })
0ac992ee 835
836 # get a list of all the classes searched
837 # the method dispatcher in the correct order
fe122940 838 Foo->meta->class_precedence_list()
0ac992ee 839
fe122940 840 # remove a method from Foo
841 Foo->meta->remove_method('bar');
0ac992ee 842
fe122940 843 # or use this to actually create classes ...
0ac992ee 844
88dd563c 845 Class::MOP::Class->create('Bar' => (
846 version => '0.01',
fe122940 847 superclasses => [ 'Foo' ],
848 attributes => [
849 Class::MOP:::Attribute->new('$bar'),
0ac992ee 850 Class::MOP:::Attribute->new('$baz'),
fe122940 851 ],
852 methods => {
853 calculate_bar => sub { ... },
0ac992ee 854 construct_baz => sub { ... }
fe122940 855 }
856 ));
857
8b978dd5 858=head1 DESCRIPTION
859
0ac992ee 860This is the largest and currently most complex part of the Perl 5
861meta-object protocol. It controls the introspection and
862manipulation of Perl 5 classes (and it can create them too). The
863best way to understand what this module can do, is to read the
fe122940 864documentation for each of it's methods.
865
552e3d24 866=head1 METHODS
867
2eb717d5 868=head2 Self Introspection
869
870=over 4
871
872=item B<meta>
873
0ac992ee 874This will return a B<Class::MOP::Class> instance which is related
875to this class. Thereby allowing B<Class::MOP::Class> to actually
fe122940 876introspect itself.
877
0ac992ee 878As with B<Class::MOP::Attribute>, B<Class::MOP> will actually
879bootstrap this module by installing a number of attribute meta-objects
880into it's metaclass. This will allow this class to reap all the benifits
881of the MOP when subclassing it.
2eb717d5 882
883=back
884
552e3d24 885=head2 Class construction
886
0ac992ee 887These methods will handle creating B<Class::MOP::Class> objects,
888which can be used to both create new classes, and analyze
889pre-existing classes.
552e3d24 890
0ac992ee 891This module will internally store references to all the instances
892you create with these methods, so that they do not need to be
552e3d24 893created any more than nessecary. Basically, they are singletons.
894
895=over 4
896
0ac992ee 897=item B<create ($package_name,
898 version =E<gt> ?$version,
899 authority =E<gt> ?$authority,
900 superclasses =E<gt> ?@superclasses,
901 methods =E<gt> ?%methods,
a2e85e6c 902 attributes =E<gt> ?%attributes)>
552e3d24 903
0ac992ee 904This returns a B<Class::MOP::Class> object, bringing the specified
905C<$package_name> into existence and adding any of the C<$version>,
906C<$authority>, C<@superclasses>, C<%methods> and C<%attributes> to
88dd563c 907it.
552e3d24 908
0ac992ee 909=item B<create_anon_class (superclasses =E<gt> ?@superclasses,
910 methods =E<gt> ?%methods,
587aca23 911 attributes =E<gt> ?%attributes)>
912
0ac992ee 913This will create an anonymous class, it works much like C<create> but
914it does not need a C<$package_name>. Instead it will create a suitably
587aca23 915unique package name for you to stash things into.
916
0ac992ee 917On very important distinction is that anon classes are destroyed once
918the metaclass they are attached to goes out of scope. In the DESTROY
919method, the created package will be removed from the symbol table.
823a5d31 920
d4ba1677 921It is also worth noting that any instances created with an anon-class
0ac992ee 922will keep a special reference to the anon-meta which will prevent the
923anon-class from going out of scope until all instances of it have also
924been destroyed. This however only works for HASH based instance types,
925as we use a special reserved slot (C<__MOP__>) to store this.
d4ba1677 926
66b3dded 927=item B<initialize ($package_name, %options)>
552e3d24 928
0ac992ee 929This initializes and returns returns a B<Class::MOP::Class> object
a2e85e6c 930for a given a C<$package_name>.
931
66b3dded 932=item B<reinitialize ($package_name, %options)>
933
934This removes the old metaclass, and creates a new one in it's place.
0ac992ee 935Do B<not> use this unless you really know what you are doing, it could
936very easily make a very large mess of your program.
66b3dded 937
651955fb 938=item B<construct_class_instance (%options)>
a2e85e6c 939
0ac992ee 940This will construct an instance of B<Class::MOP::Class>, it is
941here so that we can actually "tie the knot" for B<Class::MOP::Class>
942to use C<construct_instance> once all the bootstrapping is done. This
a2e85e6c 943method is used internally by C<initialize> and should never be called
944from outside of that method really.
552e3d24 945
550d56db 946=item B<check_metaclass_compatability>
947
0ac992ee 948This method is called as the very last thing in the
949C<construct_class_instance> method. This will check that the
950metaclass you are creating is compatible with the metaclasses of all
951your ancestors. For more inforamtion about metaclass compatibility
550d56db 952see the C<About Metaclass compatibility> section in L<Class::MOP>.
953
552e3d24 954=back
955
c9e77dbb 956=head2 Object instance construction and cloning
a2e85e6c 957
0ac992ee 958These methods are B<entirely optional>, it is up to you whether you want
c9e77dbb 959to use them or not.
552e3d24 960
961=over 4
962
2bab2be6 963=item B<instance_metaclass>
964
2d711cc8 965=item B<get_meta_instance>
966
5f3c057a 967=item B<new_object (%params)>
968
0ac992ee 969This is a convience method for creating a new object of the class, and
970blessing it into the appropriate package as well. Ideally your class
5f3c057a 971would call a C<new> this method like so:
972
0ac992ee 973 sub MyClass::new {
5f3c057a 974 my ($class, %param) = @_;
975 $class->meta->new_object(%params);
976 }
977
0ac992ee 978Of course the ideal place for this would actually be in C<UNIVERSAL::>
5f3c057a 979but that is considered bad style, so we do not do that.
980
cbd9f942 981=item B<construct_instance (%params)>
552e3d24 982
0ac992ee 983This method is used to construct an instace structure suitable for
984C<bless>-ing into your package of choice. It works in conjunction
c9e77dbb 985with the Attribute protocol to collect all applicable attributes.
986
0ac992ee 987This will construct and instance using a HASH ref as storage
988(currently only HASH references are supported). This will collect all
989the applicable attributes and layout out the fields in the HASH ref,
990it will then initialize them using either use the corresponding key
991in C<%params> or any default value or initializer found in the
a2e85e6c 992attribute meta-object.
727919c5 993
5f3c057a 994=item B<clone_object ($instance, %params)>
995
0ac992ee 996This is a convience method for cloning an object instance, then
997blessing it into the appropriate package. This method will call
998C<clone_instance>, which performs a shallow copy of the object,
999see that methods documentation for more details. Ideally your
19d4b5b8 1000class would call a C<clone> this method like so:
5f3c057a 1001
1002 sub MyClass::clone {
1003 my ($self, %param) = @_;
1004 $self->meta->clone_object($self, %params);
1005 }
1006
0ac992ee 1007Of course the ideal place for this would actually be in C<UNIVERSAL::>
5f3c057a 1008but that is considered bad style, so we do not do that.
1009
c9e77dbb 1010=item B<clone_instance($instance, %params)>
1011
0ac992ee 1012This method is a compliment of C<construct_instance> (which means if
1013you override C<construct_instance>, you need to override this one too),
19d4b5b8 1014and clones the instance shallowly.
a27ae83f 1015
0ac992ee 1016The cloned structure returned is (like with C<construct_instance>) an
1017unC<bless>ed HASH reference, it is your responsibility to then bless
a27ae83f 1018this cloned structure into the right class (which C<clone_object> will
1019do for you).
c9e77dbb 1020
0ac992ee 1021As of 0.11, this method will clone the C<$instance> structure shallowly,
1022as opposed to the deep cloning implemented in prior versions. After much
1023thought, research and discussion, I have decided that anything but basic
1024shallow cloning is outside the scope of the meta-object protocol. I
1025think Yuval "nothingmuch" Kogman put it best when he said that cloning
19d4b5b8 1026is too I<context-specific> to be part of the MOP.
1027
552e3d24 1028=back
1029
0ac992ee 1030=head2 Informational
552e3d24 1031
b9d9fc0b 1032These are a few predicate methods for asking information about the class.
552e3d24 1033
b9d9fc0b 1034=over 4
552e3d24 1035
b9d9fc0b 1036=item B<is_anon_class>
552e3d24 1037
96e38ba6 1038This returns true if the class is a C<Class::MOP::Class> created anon class.
1039
b9d9fc0b 1040=item B<is_mutable>
552e3d24 1041
96e38ba6 1042This returns true if the class is still mutable.
1043
b9d9fc0b 1044=item B<is_immutable>
552e3d24 1045
96e38ba6 1046This returns true if the class has been made immutable.
1047
552e3d24 1048=back
1049
1050=head2 Inheritance Relationships
1051
1052=over 4
1053
1054=item B<superclasses (?@superclasses)>
1055
0ac992ee 1056This is a read-write attribute which represents the superclass
a2e85e6c 1057relationships of the class the B<Class::MOP::Class> instance is
1058associated with. Basically, it can get and set the C<@ISA> for you.
552e3d24 1059
343203ee 1060B<NOTE:>
0ac992ee 1061Perl will occasionally perform some C<@ISA> and method caching, if
1062you decide to change your superclass relationship at runtime (which
1063is quite insane and very much not recommened), then you should be
1064aware of this and the fact that this module does not make any
343203ee 1065attempt to address this issue.
1066
552e3d24 1067=item B<class_precedence_list>
1068
0ac992ee 1069This computes the a list of all the class's ancestors in the same order
1070in which method dispatch will be done. This is similair to
a2e85e6c 1071what B<Class::ISA::super_path> does, but we don't remove duplicate names.
552e3d24 1072
1073=back
1074
1075=head2 Methods
1076
1077=over 4
1078
c4260b45 1079=item B<get_method_map>
1080
2e41896e 1081=item B<method_metaclass>
1082
552e3d24 1083=item B<add_method ($method_name, $method)>
1084
0ac992ee 1085This will take a C<$method_name> and CODE reference to that
1086C<$method> and install it into the class's package.
552e3d24 1087
0ac992ee 1088B<NOTE>:
1089This does absolutely nothing special to C<$method>
1090other than use B<Sub::Name> to make sure it is tagged with the
1091correct name, and therefore show up correctly in stack traces and
552e3d24 1092such.
1093
663f8198 1094=item B<alias_method ($method_name, $method)>
1095
0ac992ee 1096This will take a C<$method_name> and CODE reference to that
1097C<$method> and alias the method into the class's package.
663f8198 1098
0ac992ee 1099B<NOTE>:
1100Unlike C<add_method>, this will B<not> try to name the
1101C<$method> using B<Sub::Name>, it only aliases the method in
1102the class's package.
663f8198 1103
552e3d24 1104=item B<has_method ($method_name)>
1105
0ac992ee 1106This just provides a simple way to check if the class implements
1107a specific C<$method_name>. It will I<not> however, attempt to check
a2e85e6c 1108if the class inherits the method (use C<UNIVERSAL::can> for that).
552e3d24 1109
0ac992ee 1110This will correctly handle functions defined outside of the package
552e3d24 1111that use a fully qualified name (C<sub Package::name { ... }>).
1112
0ac992ee 1113This will correctly handle functions renamed with B<Sub::Name> and
1114installed using the symbol tables. However, if you are naming the
1115subroutine outside of the package scope, you must use the fully
1116qualified name, including the package name, for C<has_method> to
1117correctly identify it.
552e3d24 1118
0ac992ee 1119This will attempt to correctly ignore functions imported from other
1120packages using B<Exporter>. It breaks down if the function imported
1121is an C<__ANON__> sub (such as with C<use constant>), which very well
1122may be a valid method being applied to the class.
552e3d24 1123
0ac992ee 1124In short, this method cannot always be trusted to determine if the
1125C<$method_name> is actually a method. However, it will DWIM about
a2e85e6c 112690% of the time, so it's a small trade off I think.
552e3d24 1127
1128=item B<get_method ($method_name)>
1129
0ac992ee 1130This will return a Class::MOP::Method instance related to the specified
86482605 1131C<$method_name>, or return undef if that method does not exist.
1132
0ac992ee 1133The Class::MOP::Method is codifiable, so you can use it like a normal
86482605 1134CODE reference, see L<Class::MOP::Method> for more information.
552e3d24 1135
16e960bd 1136=item B<find_method_by_name ($method_name>
1137
1138This will return a CODE reference of the specified C<$method_name>,
1139or return undef if that method does not exist.
1140
1141Unlike C<get_method> this will also look in the superclasses.
1142
552e3d24 1143=item B<remove_method ($method_name)>
1144
0ac992ee 1145This will attempt to remove a given C<$method_name> from the class.
1146It will return the CODE reference that it has removed, and will
552e3d24 1147attempt to use B<Sub::Name> to clear the methods associated name.
1148
1149=item B<get_method_list>
1150
0ac992ee 1151This will return a list of method names for all I<locally> defined
1152methods. It does B<not> provide a list of all applicable methods,
1153including any inherited ones. If you want a list of all applicable
552e3d24 1154methods, use the C<compute_all_applicable_methods> method.
1155
1156=item B<compute_all_applicable_methods>
1157
0ac992ee 1158This will return a list of all the methods names this class will
1159respond to, taking into account inheritance. The list will be a list of
1160HASH references, each one containing the following information; method
1161name, the name of the class in which the method lives and a CODE
552e3d24 1162reference for the actual method.
1163
1164=item B<find_all_methods_by_name ($method_name)>
1165
0ac992ee 1166This will traverse the inheritence hierarchy and locate all methods
1167with a given C<$method_name>. Similar to
1168C<compute_all_applicable_methods> it returns a list of HASH references
1169with the following information; method name (which will always be the
1170same as C<$method_name>), the name of the class in which the method
552e3d24 1171lives and a CODE reference for the actual method.
1172
0ac992ee 1173The list of methods produced is a distinct list, meaning there are no
1174duplicates in it. This is especially useful for things like object
1175initialization and destruction where you only want the method called
552e3d24 1176once, and in the correct order.
1177
96ceced8 1178=item B<find_next_method_by_name ($method_name)>
1179
0ac992ee 1180This will return the first method to match a given C<$method_name> in
1181the superclasses, this is basically equivalent to calling
96ceced8 1182C<SUPER::$method_name>, but it can be dispatched at runtime.
1183
552e3d24 1184=back
1185
a4258ffd 1186=head2 Method Modifiers
1187
0ac992ee 1188Method modifiers are a concept borrowed from CLOS, in which a method
1189can be wrapped with I<before>, I<after> and I<around> method modifiers
1190that will be called everytime the method is called.
96ceced8 1191
1192=head3 How method modifiers work?
1193
0ac992ee 1194Method modifiers work by wrapping the original method and then replacing
1195it in the classes symbol table. The wrappers will handle calling all the
1196modifiers in the appropariate orders and preserving the calling context
1197for the original method.
1198
1199Each method modifier serves a particular purpose, which may not be
1200obvious to users of other method wrapping modules. To start with, the
1201return values of I<before> and I<after> modifiers are ignored. This is
1202because thier purpose is B<not> to filter the input and output of the
1203primary method (this is done with an I<around> modifier). This may seem
1204like an odd restriction to some, but doing this allows for simple code
1205to be added at the begining or end of a method call without jeapordizing
1206the normal functioning of the primary method or placing any extra
1207responsibility on the code of the modifier. Of course if you have more
1208complex needs, then use the I<around> modifier, which uses a variation
1209of continutation passing style to allow for a high degree of flexibility.
1210
1211Before and around modifiers are called in last-defined-first-called order,
1212while after modifiers are called in first-defined-first-called order. So
96ceced8 1213the call tree might looks something like this:
0ac992ee 1214
96ceced8 1215 before 2
1216 before 1
1217 around 2
1218 around 1
1219 primary
1220 after 1
1221 after 2
1222
0ac992ee 1223To see examples of using method modifiers, see the following examples
1224included in the distribution; F<InstanceCountingClass>, F<Perl6Attribute>,
1225F<AttributesWithHistory> and F<C3MethodDispatchOrder>. There is also a
96ceced8 1226classic CLOS usage example in the test F<017_add_method_modifier.t>.
1227
1228=head3 What is the performance impact?
1229
0ac992ee 1230Of course there is a performance cost associated with method modifiers,
1231but we have made every effort to make that cost be directly proportional
96ceced8 1232to the amount of modifier features you utilize.
1233
0ac992ee 1234The wrapping method does it's best to B<only> do as much work as it
1235absolutely needs to. In order to do this we have moved some of the
96ceced8 1236performance costs to set-up time, where they are easier to amortize.
1237
1238All this said, my benchmarks have indicated the following:
1239
1240 simple wrapper with no modifiers 100% slower
1241 simple wrapper with simple before modifier 400% slower
1242 simple wrapper with simple after modifier 450% slower
1243 simple wrapper with simple around modifier 500-550% slower
1244 simple wrapper with all 3 modifiers 1100% slower
1245
0ac992ee 1246These numbers may seem daunting, but you must remember, every feature
1247comes with some cost. To put things in perspective, just doing a simple
96ceced8 1248C<AUTOLOAD> which does nothing but extract the name of the method called
0ac992ee 1249and return it costs about 400% over a normal method call.
96ceced8 1250
a4258ffd 1251=over 4
1252
1253=item B<add_before_method_modifier ($method_name, $code)>
1254
0ac992ee 1255This will wrap the method at C<$method_name> and the supplied C<$code>
1256will be passed the C<@_> arguments, and called before the original
1257method is called. As specified above, the return value of the I<before>
1258method modifiers is ignored, and it's ability to modify C<@_> is
1259fairly limited. If you need to do either of these things, use an
96ceced8 1260C<around> method modifier.
1261
a4258ffd 1262=item B<add_after_method_modifier ($method_name, $code)>
1263
0ac992ee 1264This will wrap the method at C<$method_name> so that the original
1265method will be called, it's return values stashed, and then the
96ceced8 1266supplied C<$code> will be passed the C<@_> arguments, and called.
0ac992ee 1267As specified above, the return value of the I<after> method
1268modifiers is ignored, and it cannot modify the return values of
1269the original method. If you need to do either of these things, use an
96ceced8 1270C<around> method modifier.
1271
a4258ffd 1272=item B<add_around_method_modifier ($method_name, $code)>
1273
0ac992ee 1274This will wrap the method at C<$method_name> so that C<$code>
1275will be called and passed the original method as an extra argument
1276at the begining of the C<@_> argument list. This is a variation of
1277continuation passing style, where the function prepended to C<@_>
1278can be considered a continuation. It is up to C<$code> if it calls
1279the original method or not, there is no restriction on what the
96ceced8 1280C<$code> can or cannot do.
1281
a4258ffd 1282=back
1283
552e3d24 1284=head2 Attributes
1285
0ac992ee 1286It should be noted that since there is no one consistent way to define
1287the attributes of a class in Perl 5. These methods can only work with
1288the information given, and can not easily discover information on
a2e85e6c 1289their own. See L<Class::MOP::Attribute> for more details.
552e3d24 1290
1291=over 4
1292
2e41896e 1293=item B<attribute_metaclass>
1294
7b31baf4 1295=item B<get_attribute_map>
1296
8203616d 1297=item B<add_attribute ($attribute_meta_object | $attribute_name, %attribute_spec)>
552e3d24 1298
8203616d 1299This stores the C<$attribute_meta_object> (or creates one from the
0ac992ee 1300C<$attribute_name> and C<%attribute_spec>) in the B<Class::MOP::Class>
1301instance associated with the given class. Unlike methods, attributes
1302within the MOP are stored as meta-information only. They will be used
8203616d 1303later to construct instances from (see C<construct_instance> above).
0ac992ee 1304More details about the attribute meta-objects can be found in the
a2e85e6c 1305L<Class::MOP::Attribute> or the L<Class::MOP/The Attribute protocol>
1306section.
1307
0ac992ee 1308It should be noted that any accessor, reader/writer or predicate
1309methods which the C<$attribute_meta_object> has will be installed
a2e85e6c 1310into the class at this time.
552e3d24 1311
86482605 1312B<NOTE>
0ac992ee 1313If an attribute already exists for C<$attribute_name>, the old one
1314will be removed (as well as removing all it's accessors), and then
86482605 1315the new one added.
1316
552e3d24 1317=item B<has_attribute ($attribute_name)>
1318
0ac992ee 1319Checks to see if this class has an attribute by the name of
552e3d24 1320C<$attribute_name> and returns a boolean.
1321
1322=item B<get_attribute ($attribute_name)>
1323
0ac992ee 1324Returns the attribute meta-object associated with C<$attribute_name>,
1325if none is found, it will return undef.
552e3d24 1326
1327=item B<remove_attribute ($attribute_name)>
1328
0ac992ee 1329This will remove the attribute meta-object stored at
1330C<$attribute_name>, then return the removed attribute meta-object.
552e3d24 1331
0ac992ee 1332B<NOTE:>
1333Removing an attribute will only affect future instances of
1334the class, it will not make any attempt to remove the attribute from
552e3d24 1335any existing instances of the class.
1336
0ac992ee 1337It should be noted that any accessor, reader/writer or predicate
1338methods which the attribute meta-object stored at C<$attribute_name>
1339has will be removed from the class at this time. This B<will> make
1340these attributes somewhat inaccessable in previously created
1341instances. But if you are crazy enough to do this at runtime, then
a2e85e6c 1342you are crazy enough to deal with something like this :).
1343
552e3d24 1344=item B<get_attribute_list>
1345
0ac992ee 1346This returns a list of attribute names which are defined in the local
1347class. If you want a list of all applicable attributes for a class,
552e3d24 1348use the C<compute_all_applicable_attributes> method.
1349
1350=item B<compute_all_applicable_attributes>
1351
0ac992ee 1352This will traverse the inheritance heirachy and return a list of all
1353the applicable attributes for this class. It does not construct a
1354HASH reference like C<compute_all_applicable_methods> because all
1355that same information is discoverable through the attribute
c9e77dbb 1356meta-object itself.
552e3d24 1357
058c1cf5 1358=item B<find_attribute_by_name ($attr_name)>
1359
0ac992ee 1360This method will traverse the inheritance heirachy and find the
1361first attribute whose name matches C<$attr_name>, then return it.
058c1cf5 1362It will return undef if nothing is found.
1363
552e3d24 1364=back
1365
96e38ba6 1366=head2 Class Immutability
857f87a7 1367
1368=over 4
1369
96e38ba6 1370=item B<make_immutable (%options)>
1371
0ac992ee 1372This method will invoke a tranforamtion upon the class which will
1373make it immutable. Details of this transformation can be found in
96e38ba6 1374the L<Class::MOP::Immutable> documentation.
857f87a7 1375
0ac992ee 1376=item B<make_mutable>
1377
1378This method will reverse tranforamtion upon the class which
1379made it immutable.
1380
b817e248 1381=item B<create_immutable_transformer>
1382
1383Create a transformer suitable for making this class immutable
1384
857f87a7 1385=back
1386
1a09d9cc 1387=head1 AUTHORS
8b978dd5 1388
a2e85e6c 1389Stevan Little E<lt>stevan@iinteractive.comE<gt>
8b978dd5 1390
1391=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
1392
2367814a 1393Copyright 2006, 2007 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
8b978dd5 1394
1395L<http://www.iinteractive.com>
1396
1397This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
0ac992ee 1398it under the same terms as Perl itself.
8b978dd5 1399
798baea5 1400=cut