use strict;
use warnings;
-our $VERSION = '0.56';
+use 5.008;
+
+our $VERSION = '0.58';
+$VERSION = eval $VERSION;
our $AUTHORITY = 'cpan:STEVAN';
use Scalar::Util 'blessed';
use Moose::Exporter;
-use Class::MOP 0.64;
+use Class::MOP 0.67;
use Moose::Meta::Class;
use Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint;
use Moose::Meta::Attribute;
use Moose::Meta::Instance;
+use Moose::Object;
+
use Moose::Meta::Role;
+use Moose::Meta::Role::Composite;
+use Moose::Meta::Role::Application;
+use Moose::Meta::Role::Application::RoleSummation;
+use Moose::Meta::Role::Application::ToClass;
+use Moose::Meta::Role::Application::ToRole;
+use Moose::Meta::Role::Application::ToInstance;
-use Moose::Object;
use Moose::Util::TypeConstraints;
use Moose::Util ();
+sub throw_error {
+ # FIXME This
+ shift;
+ goto \&confess
+}
+
sub extends {
my $class = shift;
# this checks the metaclass to make sure
# it is correct, sometimes it can get out
# of sync when the classes are being built
- my $meta = $class->meta->_fix_metaclass_incompatability(@supers);
+ my $meta = Moose::Meta::Class->initialize($class);
$meta->superclasses(@supers);
}
sub with {
my $class = shift;
- Moose::Util::apply_all_roles($class->meta, @_);
+ Moose::Util::apply_all_roles(Class::MOP::Class->initialize($class), @_);
}
sub has {
croak 'Usage: has \'name\' => ( key => value, ... )' if @_ == 1;
my %options = @_;
my $attrs = ( ref($name) eq 'ARRAY' ) ? $name : [ ($name) ];
- $class->meta->add_attribute( $_, %options ) for @$attrs;
+ Class::MOP::Class->initialize($class)->add_attribute( $_, %options ) for @$attrs;
}
sub before {
sub override {
my $class = shift;
my ( $name, $method ) = @_;
- $class->meta->add_override_method_modifier( $name => $method );
+ Class::MOP::Class->initialize($class)->add_override_method_modifier( $name => $method );
}
sub inner {
sub augment {
my $class = shift;
my ( $name, $method ) = @_;
- $class->meta->add_augment_method_modifier( $name => $method );
+ Class::MOP::Class->initialize($class)->add_augment_method_modifier( $name => $method );
}
sub make_immutable {
my $class = shift;
cluck "The make_immutable keyword has been deprecated, " .
"please go back to __PACKAGE__->meta->make_immutable\n";
- $class->meta->make_immutable(@_);
+ Class::MOP::Class->initialize($class)->make_immutable(@_);
}
-my $exporter = Moose::Exporter->build_import_methods(
+Moose::Exporter->setup_import_methods(
with_caller => [
qw( extends with has before after around override augment make_immutable )
],
],
);
-# This exists for backwards compat
sub init_meta {
- my ( $class, $base_class, $metaclass ) = @_;
-
- __PACKAGE__->_init_meta( for_class => $class,
- object_base_class => $base_class,
- metaclass_class => $metaclass,
- );
-}
+ # This used to be called as a function. This hack preserves
+ # backwards compatibility.
+ if ( $_[0] ne __PACKAGE__ ) {
+ return __PACKAGE__->init_meta(
+ for_class => $_[0],
+ base_class => $_[1],
+ metaclass => $_[2],
+ );
+ }
-sub _init_meta {
shift;
my %args = @_;
my $class = $args{for_class}
- or confess "Cannot call _init_meta without specifying a for_class";
- my $base_class = $args{object_base_class} || 'Moose::Object';
- my $metaclass = $args{metaclass_class} || 'Moose::Meta::Class';
+ or Moose->throw_error("Cannot call init_meta without specifying a for_class");
+ my $base_class = $args{base_class} || 'Moose::Object';
+ my $metaclass = $args{metaclass} || 'Moose::Meta::Class';
- confess
- "The Metaclass $metaclass must be a subclass of Moose::Meta::Class."
+ Moose->throw_error("The Metaclass $metaclass must be a subclass of Moose::Meta::Class.")
unless $metaclass->isa('Moose::Meta::Class');
# make a subtype for each Moose class
unless find_type_constraint($class);
my $meta;
+
+ if ( $meta = Class::MOP::get_metaclass_by_name($class) ) {
+ unless ( $meta->isa("Moose::Meta::Class") ) {
+ Moose->throw_error("$class already has a metaclass, but it does not inherit $metaclass ($meta)");
+ }
+ } else {
+ # no metaclass, no 'meta' method
+
+ # now we check whether our ancestors have metaclass, and if so borrow that
+ my ( undef, @isa ) = @{ $class->mro::get_linear_isa };
+
+ foreach my $ancestor ( @isa ) {
+ my $ancestor_meta = Class::MOP::get_metaclass_by_name($ancestor) || next;
+
+ my $ancestor_meta_class = ($ancestor_meta->is_immutable
+ ? $ancestor_meta->get_mutable_metaclass_name
+ : ref($ancestor_meta));
+
+ # if we have an ancestor metaclass that inherits $metaclass, we use
+ # that. This is like _fix_metaclass_incompatibility, but we can do it now.
+
+ # the case of having an ancestry is not very common, but arises in
+ # e.g. Reaction
+ unless ( $metaclass->isa( $ancestor_meta_class ) ) {
+ if ( $ancestor_meta_class->isa($metaclass) ) {
+ $metaclass = $ancestor_meta_class;
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
+ $meta = $metaclass->initialize($class);
+ }
+
if ( $class->can('meta') ) {
+ # check 'meta' method
+
+ # it may be inherited
+
# NOTE:
# this is the case where the metaclass pragma
# was used before the 'use Moose' statement to
# override a specific class
- $meta = $class->meta();
- ( blessed($meta) && $meta->isa('Moose::Meta::Class') )
- || confess "You already have a &meta function, but it does not return a Moose::Meta::Class";
+ my $method_meta = $class->meta;
+
+ ( blessed($method_meta) && $method_meta->isa('Moose::Meta::Class') )
+ || Moose->throw_error("$class already has a &meta function, but it does not return a Moose::Meta::Class ($meta)");
+
+ $meta = $method_meta;
}
- else {
- # NOTE:
- # this is broken currently, we actually need
- # to allow the possiblity of an inherited
- # meta, which will not be visible until the
- # user 'extends' first. This needs to have
- # more intelligence to it
- $meta = $metaclass->initialize($class);
+
+ unless ( $meta->has_method("meta") ) { # don't overwrite
+ # also check for inherited non moose 'meta' method?
+ # FIXME also skip this if the user requested by passing an option
$meta->add_method(
'meta' => sub {
# re-initialize so it inherits properly
- $metaclass->initialize( blessed( $_[0] ) || $_[0] );
+ $metaclass->initialize( ref($_[0]) || $_[0] );
}
);
}
return $meta;
}
+# This may be used in some older MooseX extensions.
+sub _get_caller {
+ goto &Moose::Exporter::_get_caller;
+}
+
## make 'em all immutable
$_->meta->make_immutable(
- inline_constructor => 0,
+ inline_constructor => 1,
+ constructor_name => "_new",
inline_accessors => 1, # these are Class::MOP accessors, so they need inlining
)
- for (
- 'Moose::Meta::Attribute',
- 'Moose::Meta::Class',
- 'Moose::Meta::Instance',
-
- 'Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint',
- 'Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Union',
- 'Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Parameterized',
- 'Moose::Meta::TypeCoercion',
-
- 'Moose::Meta::Method',
- 'Moose::Meta::Method::Accessor',
- 'Moose::Meta::Method::Constructor',
- 'Moose::Meta::Method::Destructor',
- 'Moose::Meta::Method::Overriden',
-
- 'Moose::Meta::Role',
- 'Moose::Meta::Role::Method',
- 'Moose::Meta::Role::Method::Required',
- );
+ for (qw(
+ Moose::Meta::Attribute
+ Moose::Meta::Class
+ Moose::Meta::Instance
+
+ Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint
+ Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Union
+ Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Parameterized
+ Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Parameterizable
+ Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Enum
+ Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Class
+ Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Role
+ Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Registry
+ Moose::Meta::TypeCoercion
+ Moose::Meta::TypeCoercion::Union
+
+ Moose::Meta::Method
+ Moose::Meta::Method::Accessor
+ Moose::Meta::Method::Constructor
+ Moose::Meta::Method::Destructor
+ Moose::Meta::Method::Overriden
+ Moose::Meta::Method::Augmented
+
+ Moose::Meta::Role
+ Moose::Meta::Role::Method
+ Moose::Meta::Role::Method::Required
+
+ Moose::Meta::Role::Composite
+
+ Moose::Meta::Role::Application
+ Moose::Meta::Role::Application::RoleSummation
+ Moose::Meta::Role::Application::ToClass
+ Moose::Meta::Role::Application::ToRole
+ Moose::Meta::Role::Application::ToInstance
+));
1;
The main goal of Moose is to make Perl 5 Object Oriented programming
easier, more consistent and less tedious. With Moose you can to think
-more about what you want to do and less about the mechanics of OOP.
+more about what you want to do and less about the mechanics of OOP.
+
+Additionally, Moose is built on top of L<Class::MOP>, which is a
+metaclass system for Perl 5. This means that Moose not only makes
+building normal Perl 5 objects better, but it provides the power of
+metaclass programming as well.
+
+=head2 New to Moose?
-Additionally, Moose is built on top of L<Class::MOP>, which is a
-metaclass system for Perl 5. This means that Moose not only makes
-building normal Perl 5 objects better, but it provides the power of
-metaclass programming as well.
+If you're new to Moose, the best place to start is the L<Moose::Intro>
+docs, followed by the L<Moose::Cookbook>. The intro will show you what
+Moose is, and how it makes Perl 5 OO better.
+
+The cookbook recipes on Moose basics will get you up to speed with
+many of Moose's features quickly. Once you have an idea of what Moose
+can do, you can use the API documentation to get more detail on
+features which interest you.
=head2 Moose Extensions
only). These will create either a read/write accessor or a read-only
accessor respectively, using the same name as the C<$name> of the attribute.
-If you need more control over how your accessors are named, you can use the
-I<reader>, I<writer> and I<accessor> options inherited from
-L<Class::MOP::Attribute>, however if you use those, you won't need the I<is>
-option.
+If you need more control over how your accessors are named, you can
+use the L<reader|Class::MOP::Attribute/reader>,
+L<writer|Class::MOP::Attribute/writer> and
+L<accessor|Class::MOP::Attribute/accessor> options inherited from
+L<Class::MOP::Attribute>, however if you use those, you won't need the
+I<is> option.
=item I<isa =E<gt> $type_name>
the attribute is set. The CODE ref will be passed the instance itself, the
updated value and the attribute meta-object (this is for more advanced fiddling
and can typically be ignored). You B<cannot> have a trigger on a read-only
-attribute.
+attribute.
+
+B<NOTE:> Triggers will only fire when you B<assign> to the attribute,
+either in the constructor, or using the writer. Default and built values will
+B<not> cause the trigger to be fired.
=item I<handles =E<gt> ARRAY | HASH | REGEXP | ROLE | CODE>
This tells Moose to take the list of C<@role_names> and apply them to the
attribute meta-object. This is very similar to the I<metaclass> option, but
-allows you to use more than one extension at a time. This too is an advanced
-topic, we don't yet have a cookbook for it though.
+allows you to use more than one extension at a time.
-As with I<metaclass>, the default behavior is to just load C<$role_name>; however,
-we also have a way to alias to a shorter name. This will first look to see if
-B<Moose::Meta::Attribute::Custom::Trait::$role_name> exists. If it does, Moose
-will then check to see if that has the method C<register_implementation>, which
-should return the actual name of the custom attribute trait. If there is no
-C<register_implementation> method, it will fall back to using
-B<Moose::Meta::Attribute::Custom::Trait::$metaclass_name> as the trait name.
+See L<TRAIT NAME RESOLUTION> for details on how a trait name is
+resolved to a class name.
+
+Also see L<Moose::Cookbook::Meta::Recipe3> for a metaclass trait
+example.
+
+=item I<builder>
+
+The value of this key is the name of the method that will be called to
+obtain the value used to initialize the attribute. See the L<builder
+option docs in Class::MOP::Attribute|Class::MOP::Attribute/builder>
+for more information.
+
+=item I<default>
+
+The value of this key is the default value which will initialize the attribute.
+
+NOTE: If the value is a simple scalar (string or number), then it can
+be just passed as is. However, if you wish to initialize it with a
+HASH or ARRAY ref, then you need to wrap that inside a CODE reference.
+See the L<default option docs in
+Class::MOP::Attribute|Class::MOP::Attribute/default> for more
+information.
+
+=item I<initializer>
+
+This may be a method name (referring to a method on the class with
+this attribute) or a CODE ref. The initializer is used to set the
+attribute value on an instance when the attribute is set during
+instance initialization (but not when the value is being assigned
+to). See the L<initializer option docs in
+Class::MOP::Attribute|Class::MOP::Attribute/initializer> for more
+information.
+
+=item I<clearer>
+
+Allows you to clear the value, see the L<clearer option docs in
+Class::MOP::Attribute|Class::MOP::Attribute/clearer> for more
+information.
+
+=item I<predicate>
+
+Basic test to see if a value has been set in the attribute, see the
+L<predicate option docs in
+Class::MOP::Attribute|Class::MOP::Attribute/predicate> for more
+information.
=back
=back
+=head1 METACLASS TRAITS
+
+When you use Moose, you can also specify traits which will be applied
+to your metaclass:
+
+ use Moose -traits => 'My::Trait';
+
+This is very similar to the attribute traits feature. When you do
+this, your class's C<meta> object will have the specified traits
+applied to it. See L<TRAIT NAME RESOLUTION> for more details.
+
+=head1 TRAIT NAME RESOLUTION
+
+By default, when given a trait name, Moose simply tries to load a
+class of the same name. If such a class does not exist, it then looks
+for for a class matching
+B<Moose::Meta::$type::Custom::Trait::$trait_name>. The C<$type>
+variable here will be one of B<Attribute> or B<Class>, depending on
+what the trait is being applied to.
+
+If a class with this long name exists, Moose checks to see if it has
+the method C<register_implementation>. This method is expected to
+return the I<real> class name of the trait. If there is no
+C<register_implementation> method, it will fall back to using
+B<Moose::Meta::$type::Custom::Trait::$trait> as the trait name.
+
+If all this is confusing, take a look at
+L<Moose::Cookbook::Meta::Recipe3>, which demonstrates how to create an
+attribute trait.
+
=head1 UNIMPORTING FUNCTIONS
=head2 B<unimport>
=head1 EXTENDING AND EMBEDDING MOOSE
-Moose also offers some options for extending or embedding it into your own
-framework. The basic premise is to have something that sets up your class'
-metaclass and export the moose declarators (C<has>, C<with>, C<extends>,...).
-Here is an example:
+To learn more about extending Moose, we recommend checking out the
+"Extending" recipes in the L<Moose::Cookbook>, starting with
+L<Moose::Cookbook::Extending::Recipe1>, which provides an overview of
+all the different ways you might extend Moose.
- package MyFramework;
- use Moose;
+=head2 B<< Moose->init_meta(for_class => $class, base_class => $baseclass, metaclass => $metaclass) >>
- sub import {
- my $CALLER = caller();
+The C<init_meta> method sets up the metaclass object for the class
+specified by C<for_class>. This method injects a a C<meta> accessor
+into the class so you can get at this object. It also sets the class's
+superclass to C<base_class>, with L<Moose::Object> as the default.
- strict->import;
- warnings->import;
+You can specify an alternate metaclass with the C<metaclass> parameter.
- # we should never export to main
- return if $CALLER eq 'main';
- Moose::init_meta( $CALLER, 'MyFramework::Base' );
- Moose->import({into => $CALLER});
-
- # Do my custom framework stuff
+For more detail on this topic, see L<Moose::Cookbook::Extending::Recipe2>.
- return 1;
- }
+This method used to be documented as a function which accepted
+positional parameters. This calling style will still work for
+backwards compatibility, but is deprecated.
=head2 B<import>
Moose's C<import> method supports the L<Sub::Exporter> form of C<{into =E<gt> $pkg}>
-and C<{into_level =E<gt> 1}>
+and C<{into_level =E<gt> 1}>.
-=head2 B<init_meta ($class, $baseclass, $metaclass)>
+B<NOTE>: Doing this is more or less deprecated. Use L<Moose::Exporter>
+instead, which lets you stack multiple C<Moose.pm>-alike modules
+sanely. It handles getting the exported functions into the right place
+for you.
-Moose does some boot strapping: it creates a metaclass object for your class,
-and then injects a C<meta> accessor into your class to retrieve it. Then it
-sets your baseclass to Moose::Object or the value you pass in unless you already
-have one. This is all done via C<init_meta> which takes the name of your class
-and optionally a baseclass and a metaclass as arguments.
+=head2 B<throw_error>
-For more detail on this topic, see L<Moose::Cookbook::Extending::Recipe2>.
+An alias for C<confess>, used by internally by Moose.
+
+=head1 METACLASS COMPATIBILITY AND MOOSE
+
+Metaclass compatibility is a thorny subject. You should start by
+reading the "About Metaclass compatibility" section in the
+C<Class::MOP> docs.
+
+Moose will attempt to resolve a few cases of metaclass incompatibility
+when you set the superclasses for a class, unlike C<Class::MOP>, which
+simply dies if the metaclasses are incompatible.
+
+In actuality, Moose fixes incompatibility for I<all> of a class's
+metaclasses, not just the class metaclass. That includes the instance
+metaclass, attribute metaclass, as well as its constructor class and
+destructor class. However, for simplicity this discussion will just
+refer to "metaclass", meaning the class metaclass, most of the time.
+
+Moose has two algorithms for fixing metaclass incompatibility.
+
+The first algorithm is very simple. If all the metaclass for the
+parent is a I<subclass> of the child's metaclass, then we simply
+replace the child's metaclass with the parent's.
+
+The second algorithm is more complicated. It tries to determine if the
+metaclasses only "differ by roles". This means that the parent and
+child's metaclass share a common ancestor in their respective
+hierarchies, and that the subclasses under the common ancestor are
+only different because of role applications. This case is actually
+fairly common when you mix and match various C<MooseX::*> modules,
+many of which apply roles to the metaclass.
+
+If the parent and child do differ by roles, Moose replaces the
+metaclass in the child with a newly created metaclass. This metaclass
+is a subclass of the parent's metaclass, does all of the roles that
+the child's metaclass did before being replaced. Effectively, this
+means the new metaclass does all of the roles done by both the
+parent's and child's original metaclasses.
+
+Ultimately, this is all transparent to you except in the case of an
+unresolvable conflict.
=head1 CAVEATS
their behavior is then easier to predict. Time will tell whether I am right or
not (UPDATE: so far so good).
-=item *
-
-It is important to note that we currently have no simple way of combining
-multiple extended versions of Moose (see L<EXTENDING AND EMBEDDING MOOSE> above),
-and that in many cases they will conflict with one another. We are working on
-developing a way around this issue, but in the meantime, you have been warned.
-
-=back
-
-=head1 JUSTIFICATION
-
-In case you are still asking yourself "Why do I need this?", then this
-section is for you. This used to be part of the main DESCRIPTION, but
-I think Moose no longer actually needs justification, so it is included
-(read: buried) here for those who are still not convinced.
-
-=over 4
-
-=item Another object system!?!?
-
-Yes, I know there has been an explosion recently of new ways to
-build objects in Perl 5, most of them based on inside-out objects
-and other such things. Moose is different because it is not a new
-object system for Perl 5, but instead an extension of the existing
-object system.
-
-Moose is built on top of L<Class::MOP>, which is a metaclass system
-for Perl 5. This means that Moose not only makes building normal
-Perl 5 objects better, but it also provides the power of metaclass
-programming.
-
-=item Is this for real? Or is this just an experiment?
-
-Moose is I<based> on the prototypes and experiments I did for the Perl 6
-meta-model. However, Moose is B<NOT> an experiment/prototype; it is for B<real>.
-
-=item Is this ready for use in production?
-
-Yes, I believe that it is.
-
-Moose has been used successfully in production environemnts by several people
-and companies (including the one I work for). There are Moose applications
-which have been in production with little or no issue now for well over two years.
-I consider it highly stable and we are commited to keeping it stable.
-
-Of course, in the end, you need to make this call yourself. If you have
-any questions or concerns, please feel free to email me, or even the list
-or just stop by #moose and ask away.
-
-=item Is Moose just Perl 6 in Perl 5?
-
-No. While Moose is very much inspired by Perl 6, it is not itself Perl 6.
-Instead, it is an OO system for Perl 5. I built Moose because I was tired of
-writing the same old boring Perl 5 OO code, and drooling over Perl 6 OO. So
-instead of switching to Ruby, I wrote Moose :)
-
-=item Wait, I<post> modern, I thought it was just I<modern>?
-
-So I was reading Larry Wall's talk from the 1999 Linux World entitled
-"Perl, the first postmodern computer language" in which he talks about how
-he picked the features for Perl because he thought they were cool and he
-threw out the ones that he thought sucked. This got me thinking about how
-we have done the same thing in Moose. For Moose, we have "borrowed" features
-from Perl 6, CLOS (LISP), Smalltalk, Java, BETA, OCaml, Ruby and more, and
-the bits we didn't like (cause they sucked) we tossed aside. So for this
-reason (and a few others) I have re-dubbed Moose a I<postmodern> object system.
-
-Nuff Said.
-
=back
=head1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Jonathan (jrockway) Rockway
+Dave (autarch) Rolsky
+
Piotr (dexter) Roszatycki
Sam (mugwump) Vilain