=head1 DESCRIPTION
-This class represents a Catalyst Action. You can access the object for the
+This class represents a Catalyst Action. You can access the object for the
currently dispatched action via $c->action. See the L<Catalyst::Dispatcher>
for more information on how actions are dispatched. Actions are defined in
L<Catalyst::Controller> subclasses.
use Moose;
-has class => (is => 'rw');
-has namespace => (is => 'rw');
-has 'reverse' => (is => 'rw');
-has attributes => (is => 'rw');
-has name => (is => 'rw');
-has code => (is => 'rw');
+with 'MooseX::Emulate::Class::Accessor::Fast';
-no Moose;
-
-no warnings 'recursion';
+has class => (is => 'rw');
+has namespace => (is => 'rw');
+has 'reverse' => (is => 'rw');
+has attributes => (is => 'rw');
+has name => (is => 'rw');
+has code => (is => 'rw');
-#__PACKAGE__->mk_accessors(qw/class namespace reverse attributes name code/);
+no Moose;
use overload (
# Stringify to reverse for debug output etc.
- q{""} => sub { shift->reverse() },
+ q{""} => sub { shift->{reverse} },
# Codulate to execute to invoke the encapsulated action coderef
'&{}' => sub { my $self = shift; sub { $self->execute(@_); }; },
);
+
+
+no warnings 'recursion';
+
+#__PACKAGE__->mk_accessors(qw/class namespace reverse attributes name code/);
+
sub dispatch { # Execute ourselves against a context
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
- #Moose todo: grrrrrr. this is no good. i don't know enough about it to
- # debug it though. why can't we just call the accessor?
- local $c->{namespace} = $self->namespace;
return $c->execute( $self->class, $self );
-
- #believed to be equivalent:
- #my $orig = $c->namespace;
- #$c->namespace($self->namespace);
- #my $ret = $c->execute( $self->class, $self );
- #$c->namespace($orig);
- #return $ret;
}
sub execute {
Provided by Moose
-=head1 AUTHOR
+=head1 AUTHORS
-Matt S. Trout
+Catalyst Contributors, see Catalyst.pm
=head1 COPYRIGHT