Returns a L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet> for the relationship named
$relationship_name.
+=head2 $relationship_accessor
+
+=over 4
+
+=item Arguments: None
+
+=item Return Value: $row_object | $related_resultset | undef
+
+=back
+
+ # These pairs do the same thing
+ $row = $cd->related_resultset('artist')->single; # has_one relationship
+ $row = $cd->artist;
+ $rs = $cd->related_resultset('tracks'); # has_many relationship
+ $rs = $cd->tracks;
+
+This is the recommended way to transverse through relationships, based
+on the L</accessor> name given in the relationship definition.
+
+This will return either a L<Row|DBIx::Class::Row> or a
+L<ResultSet|DBIx::Class::ResultSet>, depending on if the relationship is
+C<single> (returns only one row) or C<multi> (returns many rows). The
+method may also return C<undef> if the relationship doesn't exist for
+this instance (like in the case of C<might_have> relationships).
+
=cut
sub related_resultset {
L<might_have|DBIx::Class::Relationship/might_have>)
relationship accessors of L<DBIx::Class::Row> objects.
+=head1 NOTE
+
+All "Row objects" derived from a Schema-attached L<DBIx::Class::ResultSet>
+object (such as a typical C<< L<search|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/search
+>->L<next|DBIx::Class::ResultSet/next> >> call) are actually Result
+instances, based on your application's
+L<Result class|DBIx::Class::Manual::Glossary/Result_class>.
+
+L<DBIx::Class::Row> implements most of the row-based communication with the
+underlying storage, but a Result class B<should not inherit from it directly>.
+Usually, Result classes inherit from L<DBIx::Class::Core>, which in turn
+combines the methods from several classes, one of them being
+L<DBIx::Class::Row>. Therefore, while many of the methods available to a
+L<DBIx::Class::Core>-derived Result class are described in the following
+documentation, it does not detail all of the methods available to Result
+objects. Refer to L<DBIx::Class::Core> for more info.
+
=head1 METHODS
=head2 new
=item Arguments: \%attrs or \%colsandvalues
-=item Returns: A Row object
+=item Returns: A DBIx::Class::Row object
=back
return $new;
}
+=head2 $column_accessor
+
+ # Each pair does the same thing
+
+ # (un-inflated, regular column)
+ my $val = $row->get_column('first_name');
+ my $val = $row->first_name;
+
+ $row->set_column('first_name' => $val);
+ $row->first_name($val);
+
+ # (inflated column via DBIx::Class::InflateColumn::DateTime)
+ my $val = $row->get_inflated_column('last_modified');
+ my $val = $row->last_modified;
+
+ $row->set_inflated_column('last_modified' => $val);
+ $row->last_modified($val);
+
+=over
+
+=item Arguments: $value?
+
+=item Returns: $value
+
+=back
+
+A column accessor method is created for each column, which is used for
+getting/setting the value for that column.
+
+The actual method name is based on the L<accessor|DBIx::Class::ResultSource/accessor>
+name given in the table definition. Like L</set_column>, this will
+not store the data until L</insert> or L</update> is called on the row.
+
=head2 insert
$row->insert;
If passed an object or reference as a value, this method will happily
attempt to store it, and a later L</insert> or L</update> will try and
stringify/numify as appropriate. To set an object to be deflated
-instead, see L</set_inflated_columns>.
+instead, see L</set_inflated_columns>, or better yet, use L</$column_accessor>.
=cut
return $resultset->find($self->_storage_ident_condition);
}
-=head2 discard_changes ($attrs?)
+=head2 discard_changes
$row->discard_changes