-=pod
+package Moose::Manual::MooseX;
+
+# ABSTRACT: Recommended Moose extensions
-=head1 NAME
+__END__
-Moose::Manual::MooseX - Recommended Moose Extensions
+=pod
=head1 MooseX?
-One of the great things about Moose is that it is easy to extend and
-override. You can use the meta-model API to do things your own way,
+It's easy to extend and change Moose, and this is part of what makes
+Moose so powerful. You can use the MOP API to do things your own way,
add new features, and generally customize your Moose.
Writing your own extensions does require a good understanding of the
-meta-model. You can start learning about thiswith the
-L<Moose::Manual::Introspection> docs. There are also several extensions
-recipes in the L<Moose::Cookbook>.
+meta-model. You can start learning about this with the
+L<Moose::Manual::MOP> docs. There are also several extension recipes
+in the L<Moose::Cookbook>.
Explaining how to write extensions is beyond the scope of this
manual. Fortunately, lots of people have already written extensions
This document covers a few of the ones we like best.
-=head1 MooseX::AttributeHelpers
+=head1 L<MooseX::AttributeHelpers>
-If you only look at one extension, it should be this one. The name
-isn't the best, but what it does it provide the equivalent of
-delegation for all of Perl's native data types, such as array
-reference, hash references, numbers, strings, etc.
+The functionality of this MooseX module has been moved into Moose core.
+See L<Moose::Meta::Attribute::Native>.
-This lets you create I<much> cleaner and fluent APIs.
+=head1 L<Moose::Autobox>
- package User;
+MooseX::AttributeHelpers, but turned inside out, Moose::Autobox provides
+methods on both arrays/hashes/etc. but also references to them, using
+Moose roles, allowing you do to things like:
- use Moose;
- use MooseX::AttributeHelpers;
-
- has '_orders' => (
- metaclass => 'Collection::Array',
- is => 'ro',
- isa => 'ArrayRef',
- default => sub { [] },
- provides => {
- push => 'add_order',
- shift => 'next_order',
- elements => 'orders',
- },
- );
+ use Moose::Autobox;
+
+ $somebody_elses_object->orders->push($order);
-Instead of directly exposing an array reference, we have three
-well-named, easy to use methods.
+Lexically scoped and not to everybody's taste, but very handy for sugaring
+up other people's APIs and your own code.
-=head1 MooseX::StrictConstructor
+=head1 L<MooseX::StrictConstructor>
By default, Moose lets you pass any old junk into a class's
-constructor. If you load C<MooseX::StrictConstructor>, your class will
+constructor. If you load L<MooseX::StrictConstructor>, your class will
throw an error if it sees something it doesn't recognize;
package User;
User->new( name => 'Bob', emali => 'bob@example.com' );
-With C<MooseX::StrictConstructor>, that typo ("emali") will cause a
-runtime error. Otherwise, the "emali" attribute would just be silently
-ignored.
+With L<MooseX::StrictConstructor>, that typo ("emali") will cause a
+runtime error. With plain old Moose, the "emali" attribute would be
+silently ignored.
-=head1 MooseX::Params::Validate
+=head1 L<MooseX::Params::Validate>
-We have high hopes for the future of C<MooseX::Method::Signatures> and
-C<MooseX::Declare>. However, for now we recommend the decidely more
-clunky (but also faster and simpler) C<MooseX::Params::Validate>. This
+We have high hopes for the future of L<MooseX::Method::Signatures> and
+L<MooseX::Declare>. However, these modules, while used regularly in
+production by some of the more insane members of the community, are
+still marked alpha just in case backwards incompatible changes need to
+be made.
+
+If you don't want to risk that, for now we recommend the decidedly more
+clunky (but also faster and simpler) L<MooseX::Params::Validate>. This
module lets you apply Moose types and coercions to any method
arguments.
package User;
use Moose;
- use MooseX::Params::Validate qw( validatep );
+ use MooseX::Params::Validate;
sub login {
my $self = shift;
my ($password)
- = validatep( \@_, password => { isa => 'Str', required => 1 } );
+ = validated_list( \@_, password => { isa => 'Str', required => 1 } );
...
}
-=head1 MooseX::Getopt
+=head1 L<MooseX::Getopt>
This is a role which adds a C<new_with_options> method to your
class. This is a constructor that takes the command line options and
uses them to populate attributes.
-Thia makes writing a command-line application as a module trivially
+This makes writing a command-line application as a module trivially
simple:
package App::Foo;
App::Foo->new_with_options->run;
-=head1 MooseX::Singleton
+From the command line, someone can execute the script:
+
+ foo@example> foo --input /path/to/input --output /path/to/output
-To be honest, using a singleton is often a hack, but it sure is a
-handy hack. C<MooseX::Singleton> lets you have a Moose class that's a
-singleton:
+=head1 L<MooseX::Singleton>
+
+To be honest, using a singleton is just a way to have a magic global
+variable in languages that don't actually have global variables.
+
+In perl, you can just as easily use a global. However, if your
+colleagues are Java-infected, they might prefer a singleton. Also, if
+you have an existing class that I<isn't> a singleton but should be,
+using L<MooseX::Singleton> is the easiest way to convert it.
package Config;
=head1 EXTENSIONS TO CONSIDER
-There are literally dozens of other extensions on CPAN. These are a
-few to consider. We're not quite ready to recommend them outright,
-though. There's a couple reasons for this. One, they may be very
-specialized. Two, they may be immature. Three, they may not be quite
-right yet. Four, we may not all agree they're such a great idea.
+There are literally dozens of other extensions on CPAN. This is a list
+of extensions that you might find useful, but we're not quite ready to
+endorse just yet.
-=head2 MooseX::Declare
+=head2 L<MooseX::Declare>
Extends Perl with Moose-based keywords using C<Devel::Declare>. Very
cool, but still new and experimental.
method login (Str $password) { ... }
}
-=head2 MooseX::Types
+=head2 L<MooseX::Types>
This extension helps you build a type library for your application. It
-also lets you pre-declare type names and use them as barewords.
+also lets you predeclare type names and use them as barewords.
- use MooseX::Types -declare => ['PosInt'];
+ use MooseX::Types -declare => ['PositiveInt'];
use MooseX::Types::Moose 'Int';
- subtype PositiveInt
- => as Int,
- => where { $_ > 0 }
- => message {"Int is not larger than 0"};
+ subtype PositiveInt,
+ as Int,
+ where { $_ > 0 },
+ message { "Int is not larger than 0" };
-One nice feature is the those bareword names are actually namespaces
+One nice feature is that those bareword names are actually namespaced
in Moose's type registry, so multiple applications can use the same
bareword names, even if the type definitions differ.
-=head2 MooseX::Types::Structured
+=head2 L<MooseX::Types::Structured>
-This extension builds on top of C<MooseX::Types> to let you declare
+This extension builds on top of L<MooseX::Types> to let you declare
complex data structure types.
use MooseX::Types -declare => [ qw( Name Color ) ];
Of course, you could always use objects to represent these sorts of
things too.
-=head2 MooseX::ClassAttribute
+=head2 L<MooseX::ClassAttribute>
This extension provides class attributes for Moose classes. The
declared class attributes are introspectable just like regular Moose
class_has 'Cache' => ( ... );
-=head2 MooseX::Daemonize
+Note however that this class attribute does I<not> inherit like a
+L<Class::Data::Inheritable> or similar attribute - calling
+
+ $subclass->Cache($cache);
+
+will set it for the superclass as well. Additionally, class data is usually
+The Wrong Thing To Do in a strongly OO program since it makes testing a
+lot harder - consider carefully whether you'd be better off with an object
+that's passed around instead.
+
+=head2 L<MooseX::Daemonize>
This is a role that provides a number of methods useful for creating a
daemon, including methods for starting and stopping, managing a PID
file, and signal handling.
-=head2 MooseX::Role::Parameterized
+=head2 L<MooseX::Role::Parameterized>
If you find yourself wanting a role that customizes itself for each
consumer, this is the tool for you. With this module, you can create a
-role that accepts parameters and generates attributes, methods, etc on
+role that accepts parameters and generates attributes, methods, etc. on
a customized basis for each consumer.
-=head2 MooseX::POE
+=head2 L<MooseX::POE>
This is a small wrapper that ties together a Moose class with
C<POE::Session>, and gives you an C<event> sugar function to declare
event handlers.
-=head2 MooseX::FollowPBP
+=head2 L<MooseX::FollowPBP>
Automatically names all accessors I<Perl Best Practices>-style,
-"get_name" and "set_name".
-
-=head2 MooseX::SemiAffordanceAccessor
-
-Autoamtically names all accessors with an explicit set and implicit
-get, "name" and "set_name".
-
-=head1 AUTHOR
-
-Dave Rolsky E<lt>autarch@urth.orgE<gt>
+"get_size" and "set_size".
-=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
+=head2 L<MooseX::SemiAffordanceAccessor>
-Copyright 2008 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
+Automatically names all accessors with an explicit set and implicit
+get, "size" and "set_size".
-L<http://www.iinteractive.com>
+=head2 L<MooseX::NonMoose>
-This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
-it under the same terms as Perl itself.
+MooseX::NonMoose allows for easily subclassing non-Moose classes with Moose,
+taking care of the annoying details connected with doing this, such as
+setting up proper inheritance from Moose::Object and installing
+(and inlining, at make_immutable time) a constructor that makes sure things
+like BUILD methods are called.
=cut