6 Moose::Cookbook - How to cook a Moose
10 The Moose cookbook is a series of recipes taken from the Moose
11 test suite. Each recipe presents some code, which demonstrates
12 some of the features of Moose, and then proceeds to explain the
15 We also provide a L<Moose::Cookbook::FAQ> and a L<Moose::Cookbook::WTF>
16 for common questions and problems people have with Moose.
24 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe1> - The (always classic) B<Point> example
26 A simple Moose-based class. Demonstrated Moose attributes and subclassing.
28 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe2> - A simple B<BankAccount> example
30 A slightly more complex Moose class. Demonstrates using a method
31 modifier in a subclass.
33 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe3> - A lazy B<BinaryTree> example
35 Demonstrates several attribute features, including types, weak
36 references, predicates ("does this object have a foo?"), defaults, and
37 lazy attribute construction.
39 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe4> - Subtypes, and modeling a simple B<Company> class hierarchy
41 Introduces the creation and use of custom types, a C<BUILD> method,
42 and the use of C<override> in a subclass.
44 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe5> - More subtypes, coercion in a B<Request> class
46 More type examples, including the use of type coercions.
48 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe6> - The augment/inner example
50 Demonstrates the use of C<augment> method modifiers, a way of turning
51 the usual method overriding style "inside-out".
53 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe7> - Making Moose fast with immutable
55 Making a class immutable greatly increases the speed of accessors and
58 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe8> - Managing complex relations with trigger (TODO)
62 Work off of this http://code2.0beta.co.uk/moose/svn/Moose/trunk/t/200_examples/007_Child_Parent_attr_inherit.t
64 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe9> - Builder methods and lazy_build
66 The builder feature provides an inheritable and role-composable way to
67 provide a default attribute value.
75 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe10> - The Moose::Role example
77 Demonstrates roles, which are also sometimes known as traits or
78 mix-ins. Roles provide a method of code re-use which is orthogonal to
81 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe11> - Advanced Role Composition - method exclusion and aliasing
83 Sometimes you just want to include part of a role in your
84 class. Sometimes you want the whole role but one if its methods
85 conflicts with one in your class. With method exclusion and aliasing,
86 you can work around these problems.
88 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe12> - Runtime Role Composition (TODO)
98 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe20> - Welcome to the meta-world (TODO)
100 I<abstract goes here>
102 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe21> - The meta-attribute example
104 One way to extend Moose is to provide your own attribute
105 metaclasses. Attribute metaclasses let you extend attribute
106 declarations (with C<has>) and behavior to provide additional
107 attribute functionality.
109 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe22> - The meta-attribute trait example (TODO)
111 I<abstract goes here>
113 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe23> - The meta-instance example (TODO)
115 I<abstract goes here>
117 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Recipe24> - The meta-class example (TODO)
119 I<abstract goes here>
127 =item L<Moose::Cookbook::Snack::Types>
135 =item L<http://www.gsph.com/index.php?Lang=En&ID=291>
141 Stevan Little E<lt>stevan@iinteractive.comE<gt>
143 =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
145 Copyright 2006-2008 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
147 L<http://www.iinteractive.com>
149 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
150 it under the same terms as Perl itself.