use strictures 1;
use Moo::_Utils;
use B 'perlstring';
+use Sub::Defer ();
-our $VERSION = '0.009014'; # 0.9.13
+our $VERSION = '0.091007'; # 0.91.7
$VERSION = eval $VERSION;
-sub Moo::HandleMoose::AuthorityHack::DESTROY {
- require Moo::HandleMoose;
- Moo::HandleMoose->import;
-}
-
-if ($INC{"Moose.pm"}) {
- require Moo::HandleMoose;
- Moo::HandleMoose->import;
-} else {
- $Moose::AUTHORITY = bless({}, 'Moo::HandleMoose::AuthorityHack');
-}
+require Moo::sification;
our %MAKERS;
my $class = shift;
strictures->import;
return if $MAKERS{$target}; # already exported into this package
- *{_getglob("${target}::extends")} = sub {
+ _install_coderef "${target}::extends" => "Moo::extends" => sub {
_load_module($_) for @_;
# Can't do *{...} = \@_ or 5.10.0's mro.pm stops seeing @ISA
@{*{_getglob("${target}::ISA")}{ARRAY}} = @_;
+ if (my $old = delete $Moo::MAKERS{$target}{constructor}) {
+ delete _getstash($target)->{new};
+ Moo->_constructor_maker_for($target)
+ ->register_attribute_specs(%{$old->all_attribute_specs});
+ }
+ $Moo::HandleMoose::MOUSE{$target} = [
+ grep defined, map Mouse::Util::find_meta($_), @_
+ ] if $INC{"Mouse.pm"};
+ $class->_maybe_reset_handlemoose($target);
+ return;
};
- *{_getglob("${target}::with")} = sub {
+ _install_coderef "${target}::with" => "Moo::with" => sub {
require Moo::Role;
- die "Only one role supported at a time by with" if @_ > 1;
- Moo::Role->apply_role_to_package($target, $_[0]);
+ Moo::Role->apply_roles_to_package($target, $_[0]);
+ $class->_maybe_reset_handlemoose($target);
};
$MAKERS{$target} = {};
- *{_getglob("${target}::has")} = sub {
+ _install_coderef "${target}::has" => "Moo::has" => sub {
my ($name, %spec) = @_;
- ($MAKERS{$target}{accessor} ||= do {
- require Method::Generate::Accessor;
- Method::Generate::Accessor->new
- })->generate_method($target, $name, \%spec);
$class->_constructor_maker_for($target)
->register_attribute_specs($name, \%spec);
+ $class->_accessor_maker_for($target)
+ ->generate_method($target, $name, \%spec);
+ $class->_maybe_reset_handlemoose($target);
+ return;
};
foreach my $type (qw(before after around)) {
- *{_getglob "${target}::${type}"} = sub {
+ _install_coderef "${target}::${type}" => "Moo::${type}" => sub {
require Class::Method::Modifiers;
_install_modifier($target, $type, @_);
+ return;
};
}
{
}
}
+sub _maybe_reset_handlemoose {
+ my ($class, $target) = @_;
+ if ($INC{"Moo/HandleMoose.pm"}) {
+ Moo::HandleMoose::maybe_reinject_fake_metaclass_for($target);
+ }
+}
+
+sub _accessor_maker_for {
+ my ($class, $target) = @_;
+ return unless $MAKERS{$target};
+ $MAKERS{$target}{accessor} ||= do {
+ my $maker_class = do {
+ if (my $m = do {
+ if (my $defer_target =
+ (Sub::Defer::defer_info($target->can('new'))||[])->[0]
+ ) {
+ my ($pkg) = ($defer_target =~ /^(.*)::[^:]+$/);
+ $MAKERS{$pkg} && $MAKERS{$pkg}{accessor};
+ } else {
+ undef;
+ }
+ }) {
+ ref($m);
+ } else {
+ require Method::Generate::Accessor;
+ 'Method::Generate::Accessor'
+ }
+ };
+ $maker_class->new;
+ }
+}
+
sub _constructor_maker_for {
my ($class, $target, $select_super) = @_;
return unless $MAKERS{$target};
$moo_constructor = 1; # no other constructor, make a Moo one
}
};
- Method::Generate::Constructor
+ ($con ? ref($con) : 'Method::Generate::Constructor')
->new(
package => $target,
- accessor_generator => do {
- require Method::Generate::Accessor;
- Method::Generate::Accessor->new;
- },
+ accessor_generator => $class->_accessor_maker_for($target),
construction_string => (
$moo_constructor
? ($con ? $con->construction_string : undef)
: ('$class->'.$target.'::SUPER::new(@_)')
),
- subconstructor_generator => (
- $class.'->_constructor_maker_for($class,'.perlstring($target).')'
+ subconstructor_handler => (
+ ' if ($Moo::MAKERS{$class}) {'."\n"
+ .' '.$class.'->_constructor_maker_for($class,'.perlstring($target).');'."\n"
+ .' return $class->new(@_)'.";\n"
+ .' }'."\n"
),
)
->install_delayed
to make it smooth to upgrade to L<Moose> when you need more than minimal
features.
+=head1 Moo and Moose - NEW, EXPERIMENTAL
+
+If L<Moo> detects L<Moose> being loaded, it will automatically register
+metaclasses for your L<Moo> and L<Moo::Role> packages, so you should be able
+to use them in L<Moose> code without it ever realising you aren't using
+L<Moose> everywhere.
+
+Extending a L<Moose> class or consuming a L<Moose::Role> should also work.
+
+So should extending a L<Mouse> class or consuming a L<Mouse::Role>.
+
+This means that there is no need for anything like L<Any::Moose> for Moo
+code - Moo and Moose code should simply interoperate without problem. To
+handle L<Mouse> code, you'll likely need an empty Moo role or class consuming
+or extending the L<Mouse> stuff since it doesn't register true L<Moose>
+metaclasses like we do.
+
+However, these features are new as of 0.91.0 (0.091000) so while serviceable,
+they are absolutely certain to not be 100% yet; please do report bugs.
+
+If you need to disable the metaclass creation, add:
+
+ no Moo::sification;
+
+to your code before Moose is loaded, but bear in mind that this switch is
+currently global and turns the mechanism off entirely, so don't put this
+in library code, only in a top level script as a temporary measure while
+you send a bug report.
+
=head1 IMPORTED METHODS
=head2 new
=head2 BUILDARGS
- around BUILDARGS => sub {
- my $orig = shift;
+ sub BUILDARGS {
my ( $class, @args ) = @_;
unshift @args, "attr1" if @args % 2 == 1;
- return $class->$orig(@args);
+ return { @args };
};
Foo::Bar->new( 3 );
=head2 with
with 'Some::Role1';
- with 'Some::Role2';
-Composes a L<Role::Tiny> into current class. Only one role may be composed in
-at a time to allow the code to remain as simple as possible.
+or
+
+ with 'Some::Role1', 'Some::Role2';
+
+Composes one or more L<Moo::Role> (or L<Role::Tiny>) roles into the current
+class. An error will be raised if these roles have conflicting methods.
=head2 has
=item * is
-B<required>, must be C<ro> or C<rw>. Unsurprisingly, C<ro> generates an
-accessor that will not respond to arguments; to be clear: a getter only. C<rw>
-will create a perlish getter/setter.
+B<required>, may be C<ro>, C<lazy>, C<rwp> or C<rw>.
+
+C<ro> generates an accessor that dies if you attempt to write to it - i.e.
+a getter only - by defaulting C<reader> to the name of the attribute.
+
+C<lazy> generates a reader like C<ro>, but also sets C<lazy> to 1 and
+C<builder> to C<_build_${attribute_name}> to allow on-demand generated
+attributes. This feature was my attempt to fix my incompetence when
+originally designing C<lazy_build>, and is also implemented by
+L<MooseX::AttributeShortcuts>.
+
+C<rwp> generates a reader like C<ro>, but also sets C<writer> to
+C<_set_${attribute_name}> for attributes that are designed to be written
+from inside of the class, but read-only from outside.
+This feature comes from L<MooseX::AttributeShortcuts>.
+
+C<rw> generates a normal getter/setter by defaulting C<accessor> to the
+name of the attribute.
=item * isa
L<Sub::Quote aware|/SUB QUOTE AWARE>
+Since L<Moo> does B<not> run the C<isa> check before C<coerce> if a coercion
+subroutine has been supplied, C<isa> checks are not structural to your code
+and can, if desired, be omitted on non-debug builds (although if this results
+in an uncaught bug causing your program to break, the L<Moo> authors guarantee
+nothing except that you get to keep both halves).
+
+If you want L<MooseX::Types> style named types, look at
+L<MooX::Types::MooseLike>.
+
+To cause your C<isa> entries to be automatically mapped to named
+L<Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint> objects (rather than the default behaviour
+of creating an anonymous type), set:
+
+ $Moo::HandleMoose::TYPE_MAP{$isa_coderef} = sub {
+ require MooseX::Types::Something;
+ return MooseX::Types::Something::TypeName();
+ };
+
+Note that this example is purely illustrative; anything that returns a
+L<Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint> object or something similar enough to it to
+make L<Moose> happy is fine.
+
=item * coerce
Takes a coderef which is meant to coerce the attribute. The basic idea is to
$_[0] + 1 unless $_[0] % 2
},
-Coerce does not require C<isa> to be defined.
+Note that L<Moo> will always fire your coercion - this is to permit
+isa entries to be used purely for bug trapping, whereas coercions are
+always structural to your code. We do, however, apply any supplied C<isa>
+check after the coercion has run to ensure that it returned a valid value.
L<Sub::Quote aware|/SUB QUOTE AWARE>
=item * trigger
-Takes a coderef which will get called any time the attribute is set. Coderef
-will be invoked against the object with the new value as an argument.
+Takes a coderef which will get called any time the attribute is set. This
+includes the constructor. Coderef will be invoked against the object with the
+new value as an argument.
+
+If you set this to just C<1>, it generates a trigger which calls the
+C<_trigger_${attr_name}> method on C<$self>. This feature comes from
+L<MooseX::AttributeShortcuts>.
Note that Moose also passes the old value, if any; this feature is not yet
supported.
Takes a method name which will return true if an attribute has a value.
-A common example of this would be to call it C<has_$foo>, implying that the
-object has a C<$foo> set.
+If you set this to just C<1>, the predicate is automatically named
+C<has_${attr_name}> if your attribute's name does not start with an
+underscore, or <_has_${attr_name_without_the_underscore}> if it does.
+This feature comes from L<MooseX::AttributeShortcuts>.
=item * builder
$self->$builder;
+If you set this to just C<1>, the predicate is automatically named
+C<_build_${attr_name}>. This feature comes from L<MooseX::AttributeShortcuts>.
+
=item * clearer
Takes a method name which will clear the attribute.
+If you set this to just C<1>, the clearer is automatically named
+C<clear_${attr_name}> if your attribute's name does not start with an
+underscore, or <_clear_${attr_name_without_the_underscore}> if it does.
+This feature comes from L<MooseX::AttributeShortcuts>.
+
=item * lazy
B<Boolean>. Set this if you want values for the attribute to be grabbed
Takes the name of the key to look for at instantiation time of the object. A
common use of this is to make an underscored attribute have a non-underscored
initialization name. C<undef> means that passing the value in on instantiation
+is ignored.
=back
=head1 INCOMPATIBILITIES WITH MOOSE
-You can only compose one role at a time. If your application is large or
-complex enough to warrant complex composition, you wanted L<Moose>. Note that
-this does not mean you can only compose one role per class -
-
- with 'FirstRole';
- with 'SecondRole';
-
-is absolutely fine, there's just currently no equivalent of Moose's
-
- with 'FirstRole', 'SecondRole';
-
-which composes the two roles together, and then applies them.
-
There is no built in type system. C<isa> is verified with a coderef, if you
need complex types, just make a library of coderefs, or better yet, functions
that return quoted subs. L<MooX::Types::MooseLike> provides a similar API
probably the weakest part of Moose design-wise.
C<initializer> is not supported in core since the author considers it to be a
-bad idea but may be supported by an extension in future.
+bad idea but may be supported by an extension in future. Meanwhile C<trigger> or
+C<coerce> are more likely to be able to fulfill your needs.
There is no meta object. If you need this level of complexity you wanted
L<Moose> - Moo succeeds at being small because it explicitly does not
-provide a metaprotocol.
+provide a metaprotocol. However, if you load L<Moose>, then
-No support for C<super>, C<override>, C<inner>, or C<augment> - override can
-be handled by around albeit with a little more typing, and the author considers
-augment to be a bad idea.
+ Class::MOP::class_of($moo_class_or_role)
-The C<dump> method is not provided by default. The author suggests loading
+will return an appropriate metaclass pre-populated by L<Moo>.
+
+No support for C<super>, C<override>, C<inner>, or C<augment> - the author
+considers augment to be a bad idea, and override can be translated:
+
+ override foo => sub {
+ ...
+ super();
+ ...
+ };
+
+ around foo => sub {
+ my ($orig, $self) = (shift, shift);
+ ...
+ $self->$orig(@_);
+ ...
+ };
+
+The C<dump> method is not provided by default. The author suggests loading
L<Devel::Dwarn> into C<main::> (via C<perl -MDevel::Dwarn ...> for example) and
using C<$obj-E<gt>$::Dwarn()> instead.
L</default> only supports coderefs, because doing otherwise is usually a
mistake anyway.
-C<lazy_build> is not supported per se, but of course it will work if you
-manually set all the options it implies.
+C<lazy_build> is not supported; you are instead encouraged to use the
+C<is => 'lazy'> option supported by L<Moo> and L<MooseX::AttributeShortcuts>.
C<auto_deref> is not supported since the author considers it a bad idea.
-C<documentation> is not supported since it's a very poor replacement for POD.
+C<documentation> will show up in a L<Moose> metaclass created from your class
+but is otherwise ignored. Then again, L<Moose> ignores it as well, so this
+is arguably not an incompatibility.
+
+Since C<coerce> does not require C<isa> to be defined but L<Moose> does
+require it, the metaclass inflation for coerce-alone is a trifle insane
+and if you attempt to subtype the result will almost certainly break.
Handling of warnings: when you C<use Moo> we enable FATAL warnings. The nearest
similar invocation for L<Moose> would be:
Additionally, L<Moo> supports a set of attribute option shortcuts intended to
reduce common boilerplate. The set of shortcuts is the same as in the L<Moose>
-module L<MooseX::AttributeShortcuts>. So if you:
+module L<MooseX::AttributeShortcuts> as of its version 0.009+. So if you:
package MyClass;
use Moo;
constructor. Moo does it automatically the first time ->new is called
on your class.
+=head1 SUPPORT
+
+IRC: #web-simple on irc.perl.org
+
=head1 AUTHOR
mst - Matt S. Trout (cpan:MSTROUT) <mst@shadowcat.co.uk>