From: Aankhen Date: Fri, 4 May 2007 00:53:10 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Moose::Cookbook::Recipe5: X-Git-Tag: 0_22~9 X-Git-Url: http://git.shadowcat.co.uk/gitweb/gitweb.cgi?a=commitdiff_plain;h=6aa9f38562f133aff6d25854805572f2e7690898;p=gitmo%2FMoose.git Moose::Cookbook::Recipe5: * typos, grammar tweaks. --- diff --git a/lib/Moose/Cookbook/Recipe5.pod b/lib/Moose/Cookbook/Recipe5.pod index f1100e8..7f1c468 100644 --- a/lib/Moose/Cookbook/Recipe5.pod +++ b/lib/Moose/Cookbook/Recipe5.pod @@ -55,24 +55,24 @@ Moose::Cookbook::Recipe5 - More subtypes, coercion in a B class =head1 DESCRIPTION This recipe introduces the idea of type coercions, and the C -keyword. Coercions can be attached to pre-existing type constraints, -and can be used to transform input of one type, into input of another +keyword. Coercions can be attached to existing type constraints, +and can be used to transform input of one type into input of another type. This can be an extremely powerful tool if used correctly, which -is why, by default, it is off. If you want your accessor to attempt +is why it is off by default. If you want your accessor to attempt a coercion, you must specifically ask for it with the B option. Now, onto the coercions. -First we need to create a subtype to attach our coercion too. Here we +First we need to create a subtype to attach our coercion to. Here we create a basic I
subtype, which matches any instance of the -class B. +class B: subtype 'Header' => as 'Object' => where { $_->isa('HTTP::Headers') }; - -The simplest thing from here would be create an accessor declaration -like so: + +The simplest thing from here would be create an accessor declaration +like this: has 'headers' => ( is => 'rw', @@ -85,11 +85,11 @@ an empty instance of B. This is nice, but it is not ideal. The constructor for B accepts a list of key-value pairs -representing the fields in an HTTP header. With Perl such a list could -easily be stored into an ARRAY or HASH reference. We would like our +representing the HTTP header fields. In Perl, such a list could +easily be stored in an ARRAY or HASH reference. We would like our class's interface to be able to accept this list of key-value pairs in place of the B instance, and just DWIM. This is where -coercion can help. First, lets declare our coercion: +coercion can help. First, let's declare our coercion: coerce 'Header' => from 'ArrayRef' @@ -98,9 +98,9 @@ coercion can help. First, lets declare our coercion: => via { HTTP::Headers->new( %{ $_ } ) }; We first tell it that we are attaching the coercion to the 'Header' -subtype. We then give is a set of C clauses which map other +subtype. We then give it a set of C clauses which map other subtypes to coercion routines (through the C keyword). Fairly -simple really, however, this alone does nothing. We have to tell +simple really; however, this alone does nothing. We have to tell our attribute declaration to actually use the coercion, like so: has 'headers' => ( @@ -111,14 +111,14 @@ our attribute declaration to actually use the coercion, like so: ); This will coerce any B or B which is passed into -the C accessor into an instance of B. So that +the C accessor into an instance of B. So the the following lines of code are all equivalent: $foo->headers(HTTP::Headers->new(bar => 1, baz => 2)); $foo->headers([ 'bar', 1, 'baz', 2 ]); $foo->headers({ bar => 1, baz => 2 }); -As you can see, careful use of coercions can produce an very open +As you can see, careful use of coercions can produce a very open interface for your class, while still retaining the "safety" of your type constraint checks. @@ -126,8 +126,8 @@ Our next coercion takes advantage of the power of CPAN to handle the details of our coercion. In this particular case it uses the L module, which fits in rather nicely with L. -Again, we create a simple subtype to represent instance of the -B class. +Again, we create a simple subtype to represent instances of the +B class: subtype 'Uri' => as 'Object' @@ -143,22 +143,21 @@ Then we add the coercion: => from 'Str' => via { URI->new( $_, 'http' ) }; -The first C clause we introduce is for the 'Object' subtype, -an 'Object' is simply, anything which is Ced. This means -that if the coercion encounters another object, it should use this -clause. Now we look at the C block so what it does. First -it checks to see if its a B instance. Since the coercion -process happens prior to any type constraint checking, it is entirely -possible for this to happen. And if it does happen, we simple want -to pass the instance on through. However, if it is not an instance -of B, then we need to coerce it. This is where L -can do it's magic, and we can just use it's return value. Simple -really, and much less work since we use a module from CPAN :) +The first C clause we introduce is for the 'Object' subtype. An 'Object' +is simply any Ced value. This means that if the coercion encounters +another object, it should use this clause. Now we look at the C block. +First it checks to see if the object is a B instance. Since the coercion +process occurs prior to any type constraint checking, it is entirely possible +for this to happen, and if it does happen, we simply want to pass the instance +on through. However, if it is not an instance of B, then we need to coerce +it. This is where L can do its magic, and we can just use its +return value. Simple really, and much less work since we used a module from CPAN +:) The second C clause is attached to the 'Str' subtype, and illustrates how coercions can also be used to handle certain 'default' behaviors. In this coercion, we simple take any string -and pass it into the B constructor along with the default +and pass it to the B constructor along with the default 'http' scheme type. And of course, our coercions do nothing unless they are told to,