=head1 COMMON PROBLEMS
-=head2 Constructors
+=head2 Speed
+
+=head3 Why is my code taking so long to load?
+
+Moose does have a compile time performance burden,
+which it inherits from Class::MOP. If load/compile
+time is a concern for your application, Moose may not
+be the right tool for you.
+
+Although, you should note that we are exploring the
+use of L<Module::Compile> to try and reduce this problem,
+but nothing is ready yet.
+
+=head3 Why are my objects taking so long to construct?
+
+Moose uses a lot of introspection when constructing an
+instance, and introspection can be slow. This problem
+can be solved by making your class immutable. This can
+be done with the following code:
+
+ MyClass->meta->make_immutable();
+
+Moose will then memoize a number of meta-level methods
+and inline a constructor for you. For more information
+on this see the L<Constructors> section below and in the
+L<Moose::Cookbook::FAQ>.
+
+=head2 Constructors & Immutability
+
+=head3 I made my class immutable, but C<new> it is still slow!
+
+Do you have a custom C<new> method in your class? Moose
+will not overwrite your custom C<new> method, you would
+probably do better to try and convert this to use the
+C<BUILD> method or possibly set C<default> values in
+the attribute declaration.
+
+=head3 I made my class immutable, and now my (before | after |
+ around) C<new> is not being called?
+
+Making a I<before>, I<after> or I<around> wrap around the
+C<new> method, will actually create a C<new> method within
+your class. This will prevent Moose from creating one itself
+when you make the class immutable.
=head2 Accessors
would overwrite your custom accessor. You wouldn't want that
would you?
-=head2 Method Modfiers
+=head2 Method Modifiers
=head3 How come I can't change C<@_> in a C<before> modifier?
return reverse @rv;
};
+=head2 Moose and Attributes
+
+=head3 Why don't attributes I inherited from a superclass work?
+
+Currently when you subclass a module, this is done at runtime with
+the C<extends> keyword but attributes are checked at compile time
+by Perl. To make attributes work, you must place C<extends> in a
+C<BEGIN> block so that the attribute handlers will be available at
+compile time like this:
+
+ BEGIN { extends qw/Foo/ }
+
+=head2 Moose and Other Modules
+
+=head3 Why can't I get Catalyst and Moose to work together?
+
+See L<Moose and Attributes>.
+
+=head2 Roles
+
+=head3 How come BUILD is not called for my composed roles?
+
+BUILD is never called in composed roles. The primary reason is that
+roles are B<not> order sensitive. Roles are composed in such a way
+that the order of composition does not matter (for information on
+the deeper theory of this read the original traits papers here
+L<http://www.iam.unibe.ch/~scg/Research/Traits/>).
+
+Because roles are essentially un-ordered, it would be impossible to
+determine the order in which to execute the BUILD methods.
+
+As for alternate solutions, there are a couple.
+
+=over 4
+
+=item *
+
+Using a combination of lazy and default in your attributes to
+defer initialization (see the Binary Tree example in the cookbook
+for a good example of lazy/default usage
+L<http://search.cpan.org/~stevan/Moose-0.21/lib/Moose/Cookbook/Recipe3.pod>)
+
+=item *
+
+Use attibutes triggers, which fire after an attribute it set, to faciliate
+initialization. These are described in the L<Moose> docs and examples can be
+found in the test suite.
+
+=back
+
+In general, roles should not I<require> intialization, they should either
+provide sane defaults or should be documented as needing specific
+initialization. One such way to "document" this is to have a seperate
+attribute initializer which is required for the role. Here is an example of
+how to do this:
+
+ package My::Role;
+ use Moose::Role;
+
+ has 'height' => (
+ is => 'rw',
+ isa => 'Int',
+ lazy => 1,
+ default => sub {
+ my $self = shift;
+ $self->init_height;
+ }
+ );
+
+ requires 'init_height';
+
+In this example, the role will not compose successfully unless the class
+provides a C<init_height> method.
+
+If none of those solutions work, then it is possible that a role is not
+the best tool for the job, and you really should be using classes. Or, at
+the very least, you should reduce the amount of functionality in your role
+so that it does not require initialization.
+
=head1 AUTHOR
Stevan Little E<lt>stevan@iinteractive.comE<gt>
+Anders Nor Berle E<lt>debolaz@gmail.comE<gt>
+
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
-Copyright 2006 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
+Copyright 2006-2008 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
L<http://www.iinteractive.com>
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the same terms as Perl itself.
-=cut
\ No newline at end of file
+=cut