package MooseX::Types;
use Moose;
-=head1 NAME
-
-MooseX::Types - Organise your Moose types in libraries
-
-=cut
+# ABSTRACT: Organise your Moose types in libraries
use Moose::Util::TypeConstraints;
use MooseX::Types::TypeDecorator;
use namespace::clean -except => [qw( meta )];
use 5.008;
-our $VERSION = '0.21';
my $UndefMsg = q{Action for type '%s' not yet defined in library '%s'};
=head1 SYNOPSIS
B<Important Note>: This handler will only be exported for types that can
do type coercion. This has the advantage that a coercion to a type that
-cannot hasn't defined any coercions will lead to a compile-time error.
+has not defined any coercions will lead to a compile-time error.
=head1 LIBRARY DEFINITION
subtype StrOrArrayRef => as Str|ArrayRef;
-The 'StrOrArrayRef' will have it's stringification activated this causes the
+The 'StrOrArrayRef' will have its stringification activated this causes the
subtype to not be created. Since the bareword type constraints are not strings
you really should not try to treat them that way. You will have to use the ','
operator instead. The author's of this package realize that all the L<Moose>
together. I realize this workaround will lead a lot of duplication in your
export declarations and will be onerous for large type libraries. Patches and
detailed test cases welcome. See the tests directory for a start on this.
-
+
+=head1 COMBINING TYPE LIBRARIES
+
+You may want to combine a set of types for your application with other type
+libraries, like L<MooseX::Types::Moose> or L<MooseX::Types::Common::String>.
+
+The L<MooseX::Types::Combine> module provides a simple API for combining a set
+of type libraries together.
+
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<Moose>,
Many thanks to the C<#moose> cabal on C<irc.perl.org>.
-=head1 AUTHOR
-
-Robert "phaylon" Sedlacek <rs@474.at>
-
=head1 CONTRIBUTORS
jnapiorkowski: John Napiorkowski <jjnapiork@cpan.org>
autarch: Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>
-=head1 COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
-
-Copyright (c) 2007-2009 Robert Sedlacek <rs@474.at>
-
-This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
-it under the same terms as perl itself.
-
=cut
1;