correct pod document name
[gitmo/Moose.git] / lib / Moose / Manual / Construction.pod
CommitLineData
9c397ba1 1=pod
2
3=head1 NAME
4
f7435595 5Moose::Manual::Construction - Object construction (and destruction) with Moose
9c397ba1 6
7=head1 WHERE'S THE CONSTRUCTOR?
8
f293b363 9B<Do not define a C<new()> method for your classes!>
9c397ba1 10
11When you C<use Moose> in your class, you will become a subclass of
0c39debe 12L<Moose::Object>, which provides a C<new> method for you. If you
76f75f80 13follow our recommendations in L<Moose::Manual::BestPractices> and make
5384dda8 14your class immutable, then you actually get a class-specific C<new>
088f068f 15method "inlined" in your class.
9c397ba1 16
62225ecf 17=head1 OBJECT CONSTRUCTION AND ATTRIBUTES
18
9c397ba1 19The Moose-provided constructor accepts a hash or hash reference of
20named parameters matching your attributes (actually, matching their
21C<init_arg>s). This is just another way in which Moose keeps you from
22worrying I<how> classes are implemented. Simply define a class and
23you're ready to start creating objects!
24
5384dda8 25=head1 OBJECT CONSTRUCTION HOOKS
9c397ba1 26
088f068f 27Moose lets you hook into object construction. You can validate an
28object's state, do logging, or maybe allow non-hash(ref) constructor
29arguments. You can do this by creating C<BUILD> and/or C<BUILDARGS>
30methods.
9c397ba1 31
088f068f 32If these methods exist in your class, Moose will arrange for them to
33be called as part of the object construction process.
9c397ba1 34
35=head2 BUILDARGS
36
088f068f 37The C<BUILDARGS> method is called as a class method I<before> an
38object is created. It will receive all of the arguments that were
39passed to C<new> I<as-is>, and is expected to return a hash
40reference. This hash reference will be used to construct the object,
41so it should contain keys matching your attributes' names (well,
42C<init_arg>s).
9c397ba1 43
636f25f3 44One common use for C<BUILDARGS> is to accommodate a non-hash(ref)
9c397ba1 45calling style. For example, we might want to allow our Person class to
46be called with a single argument of a social security number, C<<
47Person->new($ssn) >>.
48
5384dda8 49Without a C<BUILDARGS> method, Moose will complain, because it expects
50a hash or hash reference. We can use the C<BUILDARGS> method to
636f25f3 51accommodate this calling style:
9c397ba1 52
53 sub BUILDARGS {
54 my $class = shift;
55
56 if ( @_ == 1 && ! ref $_[0] ) {
57 return { ssn => $_[0] };
58 }
59 else {
60 return $class->SUPER::BUILDARGS(@_);
61 }
62 }
63
64Note the call to C<SUPER::BUILDARGS>. This will call the default
0c39debe 65C<BUILDARGS> in L<Moose::Object>. This method handles distinguishing
088f068f 66between a hash reference and a plain hash for you.
9c397ba1 67
68=head2 BUILD
69
70The C<BUILD> method is called I<after> an object is created. There are
dab94063 71several ways to use a C<BUILD> method. One of the most common is to
72check that the object state is valid. While we can validate individual
73attributes through the use of types, we can't validate the state of a
74whole object that way.
9c397ba1 75
76 sub BUILD {
77 my $self = shift;
78
79 if ( $self->country_of_residence eq 'USA' ) {
80 die 'All US residents must have an SSN'
81 unless $self->has_ssn;
82 }
83 }
84
85Another use of a C<BUILD> method could be for logging or tracking
86object creation.
87
88 sub BUILD {
89 my $self = shift;
90
5384dda8 91 debug( 'Made a new person - SSN = ', $self->ssn, );
9c397ba1 92 }
93
d67ce58f 94=head3 BUILD and parent classes
9c397ba1 95
96The interaction between multiple C<BUILD> methods in an inheritance
97hierarchy is different from normal Perl methods. B<You should never
98call C<< $self->SUPER::BUILD >>.>
99
100Moose arranges to have all of the C<BUILD> methods in a hierarchy
101called when an object is constructed, I<from parents to
102children>. This might be surprising at first, because it reverses the
103normal order of method inheritance.
104
105The theory behind this is that C<BUILD> methods can only be used for
106increasing specialization of a class's constraints, so it makes sense
f293b363 107to call the least specific C<BUILD> method first. Also, this is how
108Perl 6 does it.
9c397ba1 109
5384dda8 110=head1 OBJECT DESTRUCTION
9c397ba1 111
112Moose provides a hook for object destruction with the C<DEMOLISH>
113method. As with C<BUILD>, you should never explicitly call C<<
114$self->SUPER::DEMOLISH >>. Moose will arrange for all of the
115C<DEMOLISH> methods in your hierarchy to be called, from most to least
116specific.
117
5384dda8 118In most cases, Perl's built-in garbage collection is sufficient, and
088f068f 119you won't need to provide a C<DEMOLISH> method.
5384dda8 120
9c397ba1 121=head1 AUTHOR
122
123Dave Rolsky E<lt>autarch@urth.orgE<gt>
124
125=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
126
2840a3b2 127Copyright 2009 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
9c397ba1 128
129L<http://www.iinteractive.com>
130
131This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
132it under the same terms as Perl itself.
133
134=cut