holding the foreign key. If $cond is not given, the relname is used as
the column name.
+If the relationship is optional - ie the column containing the foreign
+key can be NULL - then the belongs_to relationship does the right
+thing - so in the example above C<$obj->author> would return C<undef>.
+However in this case you would probably want to set the C<join_type>
+attribute so that a C<LEFT JOIN> is done, which makes complex
+resultsets involving C<join> or C<prefetch> operations work correctly.
+The modified declaration is shown below:-
+
+ # in a Book class (where Author has many Books)
+ __PACKAGE__->belongs_to(author => 'My::DBIC::Schema::Author',
+ 'author', {join_type => 'left'});
+
+
+Cascading deletes are off per default on a C<belongs_to> relationship, to turn
+them on, pass C<< cascade_delete => 1 >> in the $attr hashref.
+
NOTE: If you are used to L<Class::DBI> relationships, this is the equivalent
of C<has_a>.
L<DBIx::Class::Relationship::Base/"create_related">.
If you delete an object in a class with a C<has_many> relationship, all
-related objects will be deleted as well. However, any database-level
-cascade or restrict will take precedence.
+the related objects will be deleted as well. However, any database-level
+cascade or restrict will take precedence. To turn this behavior off, pass
+C<< cascade_delete => 0 >> in the $attr hashref.
=head2 might_have
If you update or delete an object in a class with a C<might_have>
relationship, the related object will be updated or deleted as well.
Any database-level update or delete constraints will override this behaviour.
+To turn off this behavior, add C<< cascade_delete => 0 >> to the $attr hashref.
=head2 has_one
=head2 many_to_many
+=over 4
+
+=item Arguments: $accessor_name, $link_rel_name, $foreign_rel_name
+
+=back
+
My::DBIC::Schema::Actor->has_many( actor_roles =>
'My::DBIC::Schema::ActorRoles',
'actor' );
My::DBIC::Schema::Actor->many_to_many( roles => 'actor_roles',
'role' );
- ...
-
- my @role_objs = $actor->roles;
+Creates a accessors bridging two relationships; not strictly a relationship in
+its own right, although the accessor will return a resultset or collection of
+objects just as a has_many would.
-Creates an accessor bridging two relationships; not strictly a relationship
-in its own right, although the accessor will return a resultset or collection
-of objects just as a has_many would.
To use many_to_many, existing relationships from the original table to the link
table, and from the link table to the end table must already exist, these
relation names are then used in the many_to_many call.