Add note about non-standard database config and SimpleDB
[catagits/Catalyst-Manual.git] / lib / Catalyst / Manual / Tutorial / BasicCRUD.pod
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fbbb9084 1=head1 NAME
d442cc9f 2
4b4d3884 3Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::BasicCRUD - Catalyst Tutorial - Chapter 4: Basic CRUD
d442cc9f 4
5
6=head1 OVERVIEW
7
4b4d3884 8This is B<Chapter 4 of 10> for the Catalyst tutorial.
d442cc9f 9
10L<Tutorial Overview|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial>
11
12=over 4
13
14=item 1
15
16L<Introduction|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Intro>
17
18=item 2
19
20L<Catalyst Basics|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::CatalystBasics>
21
22=item 3
23
3533daff 24L<More Catalyst Basics|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::MoreCatalystBasics>
d442cc9f 25
26=item 4
27
3533daff 28B<Basic CRUD>
d442cc9f 29
30=item 5
31
3533daff 32L<Authentication|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Authentication>
d442cc9f 33
34=item 6
35
3533daff 36L<Authorization|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Authorization>
d442cc9f 37
38=item 7
39
3533daff 40L<Debugging|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Debugging>
d442cc9f 41
42=item 8
43
3533daff 44L<Testing|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Testing>
d442cc9f 45
46=item 9
47
3533daff 48L<Advanced CRUD|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::AdvancedCRUD>
49
50=item 10
51
d442cc9f 52L<Appendices|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Appendices>
53
54=back
55
56
d442cc9f 57=head1 DESCRIPTION
58
4b4d3884 59This chapter of the tutorial builds on the fairly primitive
60application created in Chapter 3 to add basic support for Create,
61Read, Update, and Delete (CRUD) of C<Book> objects. Note that the
62'list' function in Chapter 2 already implements the Read portion of
63CRUD (although Read normally refers to reading a single object; you
72609296 64could implement full Read functionality using the techniques
4b4d3884 65introduced below). This section will focus on the Create and Delete
66aspects of CRUD. More advanced capabilities, including full Update
67functionality, will be addressed in Chapter 9.
68
69Although this chapter of the tutorial will show you how to build CRUD
70functionality yourself, another option is to use a "CRUD builder" type
71of tool to automate the process. You get less control, but it's quick
72and easy. For example, see
73L<CatalystX::ListFramework::Builder|CatalystX::ListFramework::Builder>,
74L<CatalystX::CRUD|CatalystX::CRUD>, and
7edc5484 75L<CatalystX::CRUD::YUI|CatalystX::CRUD::YUI>.
1390ef0e 76
72609296 77You can check out the source code for this example from the Catalyst
78Subversion repository as per the instructions in
1390ef0e 79L<Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Intro|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Intro>.
d442cc9f 80
3533daff 81
d442cc9f 82=head1 FORMLESS SUBMISSION
83
55490817 84Our initial attempt at object creation will utilize the "URL
3533daff 85arguments" feature of Catalyst (we will employ the more common form-
86based submission in the sections that follow).
d442cc9f 87
88
89=head2 Include a Create Action in the Books Controller
90
91Edit C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> and enter the following method:
92
93 =head2 url_create
55490817 94
d442cc9f 95 Create a book with the supplied title, rating, and author
55490817 96
d442cc9f 97 =cut
55490817 98
d442cc9f 99 sub url_create : Local {
55490817 100 # In addition to self & context, get the title, rating, &
101 # author_id args from the URL. Note that Catalyst automatically
102 # puts extra information after the "/<controller_name>/<action_name/"
d442cc9f 103 # into @_
104 my ($self, $c, $title, $rating, $author_id) = @_;
55490817 105
106 # Call create() on the book model object. Pass the table
d442cc9f 107 # columns/field values we want to set as hash values
d0496197 108 my $book = $c->model('DB::Books')->create({
d442cc9f 109 title => $title,
110 rating => $rating
111 });
55490817 112
113 # Add a record to the join table for this book, mapping to
d442cc9f 114 # appropriate author
115 $book->add_to_book_authors({author_id => $author_id});
116 # Note: Above is a shortcut for this:
117 # $book->create_related('book_authors', {author_id => $author_id});
55490817 118
d442cc9f 119 # Assign the Book object to the stash for display in the view
120 $c->stash->{book} = $book;
55490817 121
d442cc9f 122 # Set the TT template to use
123 $c->stash->{template} = 'books/create_done.tt2';
124 }
125
126Notice that Catalyst takes "extra slash-separated information" from the
127URL and passes it as arguments in C<@_>. The C<url_create> action then
128uses a simple call to the DBIC C<create> method to add the requested
129information to the database (with a separate call to
130C<add_to_book_authors> to update the join table). As do virtually all
131controller methods (at least the ones that directly handle user input),
132it then sets the template that should handle this request.
133
134
8a472b34 135=head2 Include a Template for the 'url_create' Action:
d442cc9f 136
137Edit C<root/src/books/create_done.tt2> and then enter:
138
139 [% # Use the TT Dumper plugin to Data::Dumper variables to the browser -%]
140 [% # Not a good idea for production use, though. :-) 'Indent=1' is -%]
141 [% # optional, but prevents "massive indenting" of deeply nested objects -%]
142 [% USE Dumper(Indent=1) -%]
55490817 143
d442cc9f 144 [% # Set the page title. META can 'go back' and set values in templates -%]
145 [% # that have been processed 'before' this template (here it's for -%]
72609296 146 [% # root/lib/site/html and root/lib/site/header). Note that META only -%]
147 [% # works on simple/static strings (i.e. there is no variable -%]
148 [% # interpolation). -%]
d442cc9f 149 [% META title = 'Book Created' %]
55490817 150
d442cc9f 151 [% # Output information about the record that was added. First title. -%]
152 <p>Added book '[% book.title %]'
55490817 153
d442cc9f 154 [% # Output the last name of the first author. This is complicated by an -%]
155 [% # issue in TT 2.15 where blessed hash objects are not handled right. -%]
156 [% # First, fetch 'book.authors' from the DB once. -%]
157 [% authors = book.authors %]
158 [% # Now use IF statements to test if 'authors.first' is "working". If so, -%]
159 [% # we use it. Otherwise we use a hack that seems to keep TT 2.15 happy. -%]
55490817 160 by '[% authors.first.last_name IF authors.first;
d442cc9f 161 authors.list.first.value.last_name IF ! authors.first %]'
55490817 162
d442cc9f 163 [% # Output the rating for the book that was added -%]
164 with a rating of [% book.rating %].</p>
55490817 165
d442cc9f 166 [% # Provide a link back to the list page -%]
167 [% # 'uri_for()' builds a full URI; e.g., 'http://localhost:3000/books/list' -%]
8a7c5151 168 <p><a href="[% c.uri_for('/books/list') %]">Return to list</a></p>
55490817 169
d442cc9f 170 [% # Try out the TT Dumper (for development only!) -%]
171 <pre>
172 Dump of the 'book' variable:
173 [% Dumper.dump(book) %]
174 </pre>
175
55490817 176The TT C<USE> directive allows access to a variety of plugin modules
177(TT plugins, that is, not Catalyst plugins) to add extra functionality
178to the base TT capabilities. Here, the plugin allows
179L<Data::Dumper|Data::Dumper> "pretty printing" of objects and
180variables. Other than that, the rest of the code should be familiar
4b4d3884 181from the examples in Chapter 3.
d442cc9f 182
d442cc9f 183
8a472b34 184=head2 Try the 'url_create' Feature
d442cc9f 185
186If the application is still running from before, use C<Ctrl-C> to kill
187it. Then restart the server:
188
1390ef0e 189 $ DBIC_TRACE=1 script/myapp_server.pl
d442cc9f 190
191Note that new path for C</books/url_create> appears in the startup debug
192output.
193
194B<TIP>: You can use C<script/myapp_server.pl -r> to have the development
195server auto-detect changed files and reload itself (if your browser acts
196odd, you should also try throwing in a C<-k>). If you make changes to
197the TT templates only, you do not need to reload the development server
198(only changes to "compiled code" such as Controller and Model C<.pm>
199files require a reload).
200
201Next, use your browser to enter the following URL:
202
203 http://localhost:3000/books/url_create/TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2/5/4
204
55490817 205Your browser should display "Added book 'TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2' by
206'Stevens' with a rating of 5." along with a dump of the new book model
207object as it was returned by DBIC. You should also see the following
208DBIC debug messages displayed in the development server log messages
fbbb9084 209if you have DBIC_TRACE set:
d442cc9f 210
211 INSERT INTO books (rating, title) VALUES (?, ?): `5', `TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2'
212 INSERT INTO book_authors (author_id, book_id) VALUES (?, ?): `4', `6'
55490817 213 SELECT author.id, author.first_name, author.last_name
214 FROM book_authors me JOIN authors author
d442cc9f 215 ON ( author.id = me.author_id ) WHERE ( me.book_id = ? ): '6'
216
217The C<INSERT> statements are obviously adding the book and linking it to
218the existing record for Richard Stevens. The C<SELECT> statement results
219from DBIC automatically fetching the book for the C<Dumper.dump(book)>.
220
55490817 221If you then click the "Return to list" link, you should find that
222there are now six books shown (if necessary, Shift+Reload or
1390ef0e 223Ctrl+Reload your browser at the C</books/list> page).
d442cc9f 224
d442cc9f 225
89d3dae9 226=head1 CONVERT TO A CHAINED ACTION
227
55490817 228Although the example above uses the same C<Local> action type for the
4b4d3884 229method that we saw in the previous chapter of the tutorial, there is an
55490817 230alternate approach that allows us to be more specific while also
231paving the way for more advanced capabilities. Change the method
232declaration for C<url_create> in C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> you
89d3dae9 233entered above to match the following:
234
235 sub url_create :Chained('/') :PathPart('books/url_create') :Args(3) {
236
55490817 237This converts the method to take advantage of the Chained
72609296 238action/dispatch type. Chaining lets you have a single URL
55490817 239automatically dispatch to several controller methods, each of which
240can have precise control over the number of arguments that it will
89d3dae9 241receive. A chain can essentially be thought of having three parts --
72609296 242a beginning, a middle, and an end. The bullets below summarize the key
89d3dae9 243points behind each of these parts of a chain:
244
245
246=over 4
247
248
249=item *
250
251Beginning
252
253=over 4
254
255=item *
256
257B<Use "C<:Chained('/')>" to start a chain>
258
259=item *
260
261Get arguments through C<CaptureArgs()>
262
263=item *
264
265Specify the path to match with C<PathPart()>
266
267=back
268
269
270=item *
271
272Middle
273
274=over 4
275
276=item *
d442cc9f 277
89d3dae9 278Link to previous part of the chain with C<:Chained('_name_')>
279
280=item *
281
282Get arguments through C<CaptureArgs()>
283
284=item *
285
286Specify the path to match with C<PathPart()>
287
288=back
289
290
291=item *
292
293End
294
295=over 4
296
297=item *
298
299Link to previous part of the chain with C<:Chained('_name_')>
300
301=item *
302
303B<Do NOT get arguments through "C<CaptureArgs()>," use "C<Args()>" instead to end a chain>
304
305=item *
306
307Specify the path to match with C<PathPart()>
308
309=back
310
311
312=back
313
72609296 314In our C<url_create> method above, we have combined all three parts into
315a single method: C<:Chained('/')> to start the chain,
316C<:PathPart('books/url_create')> to specify the base URL to match, and
317C<:Args(3)> to capture exactly three arguments and to end the chain.
89d3dae9 318
55490817 319As we will see shortly, a chain can consist of as many "links" as you
320wish, with each part capturing some arguments and doing some work
321along the way. We will continue to use the Chained action type in this
4b4d3884 322chapter of the tutorial and explore slightly more advanced capabilities
55490817 323with the base method and delete feature below. But Chained dispatch
324is capable of far more. For additional information, see
325L<Catalyst::Manual::Intro/Action types>,
326L<Catalyst::DispatchType::Chained|Catalyst::DispatchType::Chained>,
72609296 327and the 2006 Advent calendar entry on the subject:
89d3dae9 328L<http://www.catalystframework.org/calendar/2006/10>.
329
330
331=head2 Try the Chained Action
332
55490817 333If you look back at the development server startup logs from your
334initial version of the C<url_create> method (the one using the
89d3dae9 335C<:Local> attribute), you will notice that it produced output similar
336to the following:
337
fbbb9084 338 [debug] Loaded Path actions:
339 .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
340 | Path | Private |
341 +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
342 | / | /default |
343 | / | /index |
344 | /books | /books/index |
345 | /books/list | /books/list |
346 | /books/url_create | /books/url_create |
347 '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'
89d3dae9 348
55490817 349Now start the development server with our basic chained method in
350place and the startup debug output should change to something along
89d3dae9 351the lines of the following:
352
fbbb9084 353 [debug] Loaded Path actions:
354 .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
355 | Path | Private |
356 +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
357 | / | /default |
358 | / | /index |
359 | /books | /books/index |
360 | /books/list | /books/list |
361 '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'
55490817 362
fbbb9084 363 [debug] Loaded Chained actions:
364 .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
365 | Path Spec | Private |
366 +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
367 | /books/url_create/*/*/* | /books/url_create |
368 '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'
89d3dae9 369
55490817 370C<url_create> has disappeared form the "Loaded Path actions" section
371but it now shows up under the newly created "Loaded Chained actions"
72609296 372section. And the "/*/*/*" portion clearly shows our requirement for
fbbb9084 373three arguments.
89d3dae9 374
55490817 375As with our non-chained version of C<url_create>, use your browser to
89d3dae9 376enter the following URL:
377
fbbb9084 378 http://localhost:3000/books/url_create/TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2/5/4
89d3dae9 379
55490817 380You should see the same "Added book 'TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2' by
381'Stevens' with a rating of 5." along with a dump of the new book model
72609296 382object. Click the "Return to list" link, and you should find that there
383are now seven books shown (two copies of I<TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2>).
89d3dae9 384
385
8a472b34 386=head2 Refactor to Use a 'base' Method to Start the Chains
89d3dae9 387
55490817 388Let's make a quick update to our initial Chained action to show a
389little more of the power of chaining. First, open
89d3dae9 390C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> in your editor and add the following
391method:
392
fbbb9084 393 =head2 base
55490817 394
fbbb9084 395 Can place common logic to start chained dispatch here
55490817 396
fbbb9084 397 =cut
55490817 398
fbbb9084 399 sub base :Chained('/') :PathPart('books') :CaptureArgs(0) {
400 my ($self, $c) = @_;
55490817 401
1cde0fd6 402 # Store the ResultSet in stash so it's available for other methods
fbbb9084 403 $c->stash->{resultset} = $c->model('DB::Books');
55490817 404
fbbb9084 405 # Print a message to the debug log
406 $c->log->debug('*** INSIDE BASE METHOD ***');
407 }
408
55490817 409Here we print a log message and store the DBIC ResultSet in
410C<$c-E<gt>stash-E<gt>{resultset}> so that it's automatically available
411for other actions that chain off C<base>. If your controller always
72609296 412needs a book ID as its first argument, you could have the base method
55490817 413capture that argument (with C<:CaptureArgs(1)>) and use it to pull the
414book object with C<-E<gt>find($id)> and leave it in the stash for
415later parts of your chains to then act upon. Because we have several
994b66ad 416actions that don't need to retrieve a book (such as the C<url_create>
417we are working with now), we will instead add that functionality
418to a common C<object> action shortly.
419
55490817 420As for C<url_create>, let's modify it to first dispatch to C<base>.
421Open up C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> and edit the declaration for
994b66ad 422C<url_create> to match the following:
89d3dae9 423
424 sub url_create :Chained('base') :PathPart('url_create') :Args(3) {
425
55490817 426Next, try out the refactored chain by restarting the development
427server. Notice that our "Loaded Chained actions" section has changed
fbbb9084 428slightly:
55490817 429
fbbb9084 430 [debug] Loaded Chained actions:
431 .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
432 | Path Spec | Private |
433 +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
434 | /books/url_create/*/*/* | /books/base (0) |
435 | | => /books/url_create |
436 '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'
89d3dae9 437
55490817 438The "Path Spec" is the same, but now it maps to two Private actions as
89d3dae9 439we would expect.
440
441Once again, enter the following URL into your browser:
442
fbbb9084 443 http://localhost:3000/books/url_create/TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2/5/4
89d3dae9 444
55490817 445The same "Added book 'TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2' by 'Stevens' with a
72609296 446rating of 5." message and a dump of the new book object should appear.
55490817 447Also notice the extra debug message in the development server output
72609296 448from the C<base> method. Click the "Return to list" link, and you
449should find that there are now eight books shown.
d442cc9f 450
451
452=head1 MANUALLY BUILDING A CREATE FORM
453
454Although the C<url_create> action in the previous step does begin to
455reveal the power and flexibility of both Catalyst and DBIC, it's
456obviously not a very realistic example of how users should be expected
457to enter data. This section begins to address that concern.
458
459
460=head2 Add Method to Display The Form
461
462Edit C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> and add the following method:
463
464 =head2 form_create
55490817 465
d442cc9f 466 Display form to collect information for book to create
55490817 467
d442cc9f 468 =cut
55490817 469
89d3dae9 470 sub form_create :Chained('base') :PathPart('form_create') :Args(0) {
d442cc9f 471 my ($self, $c) = @_;
55490817 472
d442cc9f 473 # Set the TT template to use
474 $c->stash->{template} = 'books/form_create.tt2';
475 }
476
72609296 477This action simply invokes a view containing a form to create a book.
d442cc9f 478
1390ef0e 479
d442cc9f 480=head2 Add a Template for the Form
481
482Open C<root/src/books/form_create.tt2> in your editor and enter:
483
484 [% META title = 'Manual Form Book Create' -%]
55490817 485
8a7c5151 486 <form method="post" action="[% c.uri_for('form_create_do') %]">
d442cc9f 487 <table>
488 <tr><td>Title:</td><td><input type="text" name="title"></td></tr>
489 <tr><td>Rating:</td><td><input type="text" name="rating"></td></tr>
490 <tr><td>Author ID:</td><td><input type="text" name="author_id"></td></tr>
491 </table>
492 <input type="submit" name="Submit" value="Submit">
493 </form>
494
495Note that we have specified the target of the form data as
496C<form_create_do>, the method created in the section that follows.
497
1390ef0e 498
d442cc9f 499=head2 Add a Method to Process Form Values and Update Database
500
501Edit C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> and add the following method to
502save the form information to the database:
503
504 =head2 form_create_do
55490817 505
d442cc9f 506 Take information from form and add to database
55490817 507
d442cc9f 508 =cut
55490817 509
89d3dae9 510 sub form_create_do :Chained('base') :PathPart('form_create_do') :Args(0) {
d442cc9f 511 my ($self, $c) = @_;
55490817 512
d442cc9f 513 # Retrieve the values from the form
514 my $title = $c->request->params->{title} || 'N/A';
515 my $rating = $c->request->params->{rating} || 'N/A';
516 my $author_id = $c->request->params->{author_id} || '1';
55490817 517
d442cc9f 518 # Create the book
d0496197 519 my $book = $c->model('DB::Books')->create({
d442cc9f 520 title => $title,
521 rating => $rating,
522 });
523 # Handle relationship with author
524 $book->add_to_book_authors({author_id => $author_id});
55490817 525
d442cc9f 526 # Store new model object in stash
527 $c->stash->{book} = $book;
55490817 528
d442cc9f 529 # Avoid Data::Dumper issue mentioned earlier
55490817 530 # You can probably omit this
d442cc9f 531 $Data::Dumper::Useperl = 1;
55490817 532
d442cc9f 533 # Set the TT template to use
534 $c->stash->{template} = 'books/create_done.tt2';
535 }
536
537
538=head2 Test Out The Form
539
540If the application is still running from before, use C<Ctrl-C> to kill
541it. Then restart the server:
542
543 $ script/myapp_server.pl
544
55490817 545Notice that the server startup log reflects the two new chained
89d3dae9 546methods that we added:
547
fbbb9084 548 [debug] Loaded Chained actions:
549 .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
550 | Path Spec | Private |
551 +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
552 | /books/form_create | /books/base (0) |
553 | | => /books/form_create |
554 | /books/form_create_do | /books/base (0) |
555 | | => /books/form_create_do |
556 | /books/url_create/*/*/* | /books/base (0) |
557 | | => /books/url_create |
558 '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'
89d3dae9 559
d442cc9f 560Point your browser to L<http://localhost:3000/books/form_create> and
561enter "TCP/IP Illustrated, Vol 3" for the title, a rating of 5, and an
1390ef0e 562author ID of 4. You should then see the output of the same
d442cc9f 563C<create_done.tt2> template seen in earlier examples. Finally, click
564"Return to list" to view the full list of books.
565
566B<Note:> Having the user enter the primary key ID for the author is
567obviously crude; we will address this concern with a drop-down list in
4b4d3884 568Chapter 9.
d442cc9f 569
570
571=head1 A SIMPLE DELETE FEATURE
572
72609296 573Turning our attention to the Delete portion of CRUD, this section
d442cc9f 574illustrates some basic techniques that can be used to remove information
575from the database.
576
577
578=head2 Include a Delete Link in the List
579
1cde0fd6 580Edit C<root/src/books/list.tt2> and update it to match the following (two
d442cc9f 581sections have changed: 1) the additional '<th>Links</th>' table header,
72609296 582and 2) the four lines for the Delete link near the bottom):
d442cc9f 583
584 [% # This is a TT comment. The '-' at the end "chomps" the newline. You won't -%]
585 [% # see this "chomping" in your browser because HTML ignores blank lines, but -%]
586 [% # it WILL eliminate a blank line if you view the HTML source. It's purely -%]
587 [%- # optional, but both the beginning and the ending TT tags support chomping. -%]
55490817 588
d442cc9f 589 [% # Provide a title to root/lib/site/header -%]
590 [% META title = 'Book List' -%]
55490817 591
d442cc9f 592 <table>
593 <tr><th>Title</th><th>Rating</th><th>Author(s)</th><th>Links</th></tr>
594 [% # Display each book in a table row %]
595 [% FOREACH book IN books -%]
596 <tr>
597 <td>[% book.title %]</td>
598 <td>[% book.rating %]</td>
599 <td>
600 [% # First initialize a TT variable to hold a list. Then use a TT FOREACH -%]
601 [% # loop in 'side effect notation' to load just the last names of the -%]
55490817 602 [% # authors into the list. Note that the 'push' TT vmethod doesn't return -%]
d442cc9f 603 [% # a value, so nothing will be printed here. But, if you have something -%]
55490817 604 [% # in TT that does return a value and you don't want it printed, you can -%]
605 [% # 1) assign it to a bogus value, or -%]
606 [% # 2) use the CALL keyword to call it and discard the return value. -%]
d442cc9f 607 [% tt_authors = [ ];
608 tt_authors.push(author.last_name) FOREACH author = book.authors %]
609 [% # Now use a TT 'virtual method' to display the author count in parens -%]
610 ([% tt_authors.size %])
611 [% # Use another TT vmethod to join & print the names & comma separators -%]
612 [% tt_authors.join(', ') %]
613 </td>
614 <td>
615 [% # Add a link to delete a book %]
e075db0c 616 <a href="[% c.uri_for(c.controller.action_for('delete'), [book.id]) %]">Delete</a>
d442cc9f 617 </td>
618 </tr>
619 [% END -%]
620 </table>
621
55490817 622The additional code is obviously designed to add a new column to the
72609296 623right side of the table with a C<Delete> "button" (for simplicity, links
624will be used instead of full HTML buttons; in practice, anything that
625modifies data should be handled with a form sending a PUT request).
fe01b24f 626
55490817 627Also notice that we are using a more advanced form of C<uri_for> than
628we have seen before. Here we use
629C<$c-E<gt>controller-E<gt>action_for> to automatically generate a URI
630appropriate for that action based on the method we want to link to
631while inserting the C<book.id> value into the appropriate place. Now,
632if you ever change C<:PathPart('delete')> in your controller method to
633C<:PathPart('kill')>, then your links will automatically update
634without any changes to your .tt2 template file. As long as the name
72609296 635of your method does not change (here, "delete"), then your links will
55490817 636still be correct. There are a few shortcuts and options when using
0416017e 637C<action_for()>:
638
639=over 4
640
641=item *
642
643If you are referring to a method in the current controller, you can
644use C<$self-E<gt>action_for('_method_name_')>.
645
646=item *
647
648If you are referring to a method in a different controller, you need
fbbb9084 649to include that controller's name as an argument to C<controller()>, as in
0416017e 650C<$c-E<gt>controller('_controller_name_')-E<gt>action_for('_method_name_')>.
651
652=back
b2ad8bbd 653
55490817 654B<Note:> In practice you should B<never> use a GET request to delete a
655record -- always use POST for actions that will modify data. We are
c5d94181 656doing it here for illustrative and simplicity purposes only.
d442cc9f 657
1390ef0e 658
994b66ad 659=head2 Add a Common Method to Retrieve a Book for the Chain
660
55490817 661As mentioned earlier, since we have a mixture of actions that operate
662on a single book ID and others that do not, we should not have C<base>
663capture the book ID, find the corresponding book in the database and
664save it in the stash for later links in the chain. However, just
665because that logic does not belong in C<base> doesn't mean that we
666can't create another location to centralize the book lookup code. In
667our case, we will create a method called C<object> that will store the
668specific book in the stash. Chains that always operate on a single
669existing book can chain off this method, but methods such as
670C<url_create> that don't operate on an existing book can chain
fbbb9084 671directly off base.
994b66ad 672
673To add the C<object> method, edit C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm>
674and add the following code:
675
e075db0c 676 =head2 object
55490817 677
e075db0c 678 Fetch the specified book object based on the book ID and store
679 it in the stash
55490817 680
e075db0c 681 =cut
55490817 682
994b66ad 683 sub object :Chained('base') :PathPart('id') :CaptureArgs(1) {
fbbb9084 684 # $id = primary key of book to delete
994b66ad 685 my ($self, $c, $id) = @_;
55490817 686
994b66ad 687 # Find the book object and store it in the stash
688 $c->stash(object => $c->stash->{resultset}->find($id));
55490817 689
994b66ad 690 # Make sure the lookup was successful. You would probably
691 # want to do something like this in a real app:
692 # $c->detach('/error_404') if !$c->stash->{object};
693 die "Book $id not found!" if !$c->stash->{object};
694 }
695
696Now, any other method that chains off C<object> will automatically
55490817 697have the appropriate book waiting for it in
acbd7bdd 698C<$c-E<gt>stash-E<gt>{object}>.
994b66ad 699
72609296 700Also note that we are using a different technique for setting
701C<$c-E<gt>stash>. The advantage of this style is that it lets you set
702multiple stash variables at a time. For example:
994b66ad 703
704 $c->stash(object => $c->stash->{resultset}->find($id),
705 another_thing => 1);
706
707or as a hashref:
708
709 $c->stash({object => $c->stash->{resultset}->find($id),
710 another_thing => 1});
711
fbbb9084 712Either format works, but the C<$c-E<gt>stash(name =E<gt> value);>
72609296 713style is growing in popularity -- you may wish to use it all
994b66ad 714the time (even when you are only setting a single value).
715
716
d442cc9f 717=head2 Add a Delete Action to the Controller
718
719Open C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> in your editor and add the
720following method:
721
1390ef0e 722 =head2 delete
55490817 723
d442cc9f 724 Delete a book
55490817 725
d442cc9f 726 =cut
55490817 727
994b66ad 728 sub delete :Chained('object') :PathPart('delete') :Args(0) {
994b66ad 729 my ($self, $c) = @_;
55490817 730
994b66ad 731 # Use the book object saved by 'object' and delete it along
732 # with related 'book_authors' entries
733 $c->stash->{object}->delete;
55490817 734
d442cc9f 735 # Set a status message to be displayed at the top of the view
736 $c->stash->{status_msg} = "Book deleted.";
55490817 737
d442cc9f 738 # Forward to the list action/method in this controller
739 $c->forward('list');
740 }
741
55490817 742This method first deletes the book object saved by the C<object> method.
743However, it also removes the corresponding entry from the
fbbb9084 744C<book_authors> table with a cascading delete.
d442cc9f 745
746Then, rather than forwarding to a "delete done" page as we did with the
747earlier create example, it simply sets the C<status_msg> to display a
748notification to the user as the normal list view is rendered.
749
750The C<delete> action uses the context C<forward> method to return the
751user to the book list. The C<detach> method could have also been used.
752Whereas C<forward> I<returns> to the original action once it is
753completed, C<detach> does I<not> return. Other than that, the two are
754equivalent.
755
756
757=head2 Try the Delete Feature
758
759If the application is still running from before, use C<Ctrl-C> to kill
760it. Then restart the server:
761
994b66ad 762 $ DBIC_TRACE=1 script/myapp_server.pl
d442cc9f 763
89d3dae9 764The C<delete> method now appears in the "Loaded Chained actions" section
765of the startup debug output:
766
fbbb9084 767 [debug] Loaded Chained actions:
994b66ad 768 .-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------.
769 | Path Spec | Private |
770 +-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+
771 | /books/id/*/delete | /books/base (0) |
772 | | -> /books/object (1) |
773 | | => /books/delete |
774 | /books/form_create | /books/base (0) |
775 | | => /books/form_create |
776 | /books/form_create_do | /books/base (0) |
777 | | => /books/form_create_do |
778 | /books/url_create/*/*/* | /books/base (0) |
779 | | => /books/url_create |
780 '-------------------------------------+--------------------------------------'
89d3dae9 781
d442cc9f 782Then point your browser to L<http://localhost:3000/books/list> and click
55490817 783the "Delete" link next to the first "TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2". A green
784"Book deleted" status message should display at the top of the page,
994b66ad 785along with a list of the eight remaining books. You will also see the
786cascading delete operation via the DBIC_TRACE output:
787
acbd7bdd 788 SELECT me.id, me.title, me.rating FROM books me WHERE ( ( me.id = ? ) ): '6'
994b66ad 789 DELETE FROM books WHERE ( id = ? ): '6'
790 SELECT me.book_id, me.author_id FROM book_authors me WHERE ( me.book_id = ? ): '6'
791 DELETE FROM book_authors WHERE ( author_id = ? AND book_id = ? ): '4', '6'
d442cc9f 792
793
794=head2 Fixing a Dangerous URL
795
55490817 796Note the URL in your browser once you have performed the deletion in the
d442cc9f 797prior step -- it is still referencing the delete action:
798
acbd7bdd 799 http://localhost:3000/books/id/6/delete
d442cc9f 800
55490817 801What if the user were to press reload with this URL still active? In
802this case the redundant delete is harmless (although it does generate
803an exception screen, it doesn't perform any undesirable actions on the
804application or database), but in other cases this could clearly be
fbbb9084 805extremely dangerous.
d442cc9f 806
807We can improve the logic by converting to a redirect. Unlike
808C<$c-E<gt>forward('list'))> or C<$c-E<gt>detach('list'))> that perform
809a server-side alteration in the flow of processing, a redirect is a
3533daff 810client-side mechanism that causes the browser to issue an entirely
d442cc9f 811new request. As a result, the URL in the browser is updated to match
812the destination of the redirection URL.
813
814To convert the forward used in the previous section to a redirect,
55490817 815open C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> and edit the existing
d442cc9f 816C<sub delete> method to match:
817
994b66ad 818 =head2 delete
55490817 819
d442cc9f 820 Delete a book
55490817 821
d442cc9f 822 =cut
55490817 823
994b66ad 824 sub delete :Chained('object') :PathPart('delete') :Args(0) {
fbbb9084 825 my ($self, $c) = @_;
55490817 826
994b66ad 827 # Use the book object saved by 'object' and delete it along
828 # with related 'book_authors' entries
829 $c->stash->{object}->delete;
55490817 830
d442cc9f 831 # Set a status message to be displayed at the top of the view
832 $c->stash->{status_msg} = "Book deleted.";
55490817 833
0416017e 834 # Redirect the user back to the list page. Note the use
835 # of $self->action_for as earlier in this section (BasicCRUD)
fbbb9084 836 $c->response->redirect($c->uri_for($self->action_for('list')));
d442cc9f 837 }
838
839
840=head2 Try the Delete and Redirect Logic
841
55490817 842Restart the development server and point your browser to
843L<http://localhost:3000/books/list> (don't just hit "Refresh" in your
844browser since we left the URL in an invalid state in the previous
845section!) and delete the first copy of the remaining two
846"TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2" books. The URL in your browser should return
847to the L<http://localhost:3000/books/list> URL, so that is an
848improvement, but notice that I<no green "Book deleted" status message is
849displayed>. Because the stash is reset on every request (and a redirect
850involves a second request), the C<status_msg> is cleared before it can
994b66ad 851be displayed.
d442cc9f 852
853
8a472b34 854=head2 Using 'uri_for' to Pass Query Parameters
d442cc9f 855
4b4d3884 856There are several ways to pass information across a redirect. One
857option is to use the C<flash> technique that we will see in Chapter 5
72609296 858of this tutorial; however, here we will pass the information via query
4b4d3884 859parameters on the redirect itself. Open
860C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> and update the existing C<sub delete>
89d3dae9 861method to match the following:
d442cc9f 862
55490817 863 =head2 delete
864
d442cc9f 865 Delete a book
55490817 866
d442cc9f 867 =cut
55490817 868
994b66ad 869 sub delete :Chained('object') :PathPart('delete') :Args(0) {
fbbb9084 870 my ($self, $c) = @_;
55490817 871
994b66ad 872 # Use the book object saved by 'object' and delete it along
873 # with related 'book_authors' entries
874 $c->stash->{object}->delete;
55490817 875
d442cc9f 876 # Redirect the user back to the list page with status msg as an arg
55490817 877 $c->response->redirect($c->uri_for($self->action_for('list'),
d442cc9f 878 {status_msg => "Book deleted."}));
879 }
880
881This modification simply leverages the ability of C<uri_for> to include
55490817 882an arbitrary number of name/value pairs in a hash reference. Next, we
883need to update C<root/src/wrapper.tt2> to handle C<status_msg> as a
d442cc9f 884query parameter:
885
1390ef0e 886 ...
d442cc9f 887 <div id="content">
1390ef0e 888 [%# Status and error messages %]
889 <span class="message">[% status_msg || c.request.params.status_msg %]</span>
890 <span class="error">[% error_msg %]</span>
891 [%# This is where TT will stick all of your template's contents. -%]
892 [% content %]
893 </div><!-- end content -->
894 ...
895
55490817 896Although the sample above only shows the C<content> div, leave the
1390ef0e 897rest of the file intact -- the only change we made to the C<wrapper.tt2>
55490817 898was to add "C<|| c.request.params.status_msg>" to the
1390ef0e 899C<E<lt>span class="message"E<gt>> line.
d442cc9f 900
901
902=head2 Try the Delete and Redirect With Query Param Logic
903
55490817 904Restart the development server and point your browser to
905L<http://localhost:3000/books/list> (you should now be able to safely
906hit "refresh" in your browser). Then delete the remaining copy of
907"TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2". The green "Book deleted" status message
d442cc9f 908should return.
909
55490817 910B<NOTE:> Another popular method for maintaining server-side
911information across a redirect is to use the C<flash> technique we
4b4d3884 912discuss in the next chapter of the tutorial,
55490817 913L<Authentication|Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::Authentication>. While
914C<flash> is a "slicker" mechanism in that it's all handled by the
915server and doesn't "pollute" your URLs, B<it is important to note that
916C<flash> can lead to situations where the wrong information shows up
917in the wrong browser window if the user has multiple windows or
72609296 918browser tabs open>. For example, Window A causes something to be
55490817 919placed in the stash, but before that window performs a redirect,
920Window B makes a request to the server and gets the status information
994b66ad 921that should really go to Window A. For this reason, you may wish
89d3dae9 922to use the "query param" technique shown here in your applications.
d442cc9f 923
924
1cde0fd6 925=head1 EXPLORING THE POWER OF DBIC
926
55490817 927In this section we will explore some additional capabilities offered
928by DBIx::Class. Although these features have relatively little to do
929with Catalyst per se, you will almost certainly want to take advantage
1cde0fd6 930of them in your applications.
931
932
1cde0fd6 933=head2 Add Datetime Columns to Our Existing Books Table
934
55490817 935Let's add two columns to our existing C<books> table to track when
1cde0fd6 936each book was added and when each book is updated:
937
938 $ sqlite3 myapp.db
939 sqlite> ALTER TABLE books ADD created INTEGER;
940 sqlite> ALTER TABLE books ADD updated INTEGER;
941 sqlite> UPDATE books SET created = DATETIME('NOW'), updated = DATETIME('NOW');
942 sqlite> SELECT * FROM books;
acbd7bdd 943 1|CCSP SNRS Exam Certification Guide|5|2009-03-08 16:26:35|2009-03-08 16:26:35
944 2|TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1|5|2009-03-08 16:26:35|2009-03-08 16:26:35
945 3|Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol.1|4|2009-03-08 16:26:35|2009-03-08 16:26:35
946 4|Perl Cookbook|5|2009-03-08 16:26:35|2009-03-08 16:26:35
947 5|Designing with Web Standards|5|2009-03-08 16:26:35|2009-03-08 16:26:35
948 9|TCP/IP Illustrated, Vol 3|5|2009-03-08 16:26:35|2009-03-08 16:26:35
1cde0fd6 949 sqlite> .quit
950 $
951
952This will modify the C<books> table to include the two new fields
953and populate those fields with the current time.
954
acbd7bdd 955
a46b474e 956=head2 Update DBIx::Class to Automatically Handle the Datetime Columns
1cde0fd6 957
958Next, we should re-run the DBIC helper to update the Result Classes
959with the new fields:
960
961 $ script/myapp_create.pl model DB DBIC::Schema MyApp::Schema \
962 create=static components=TimeStamp dbi:SQLite:myapp.db
963 exists "/root/dev/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Model"
964 exists "/root/dev/MyApp/script/../t"
965 Dumping manual schema for MyApp::Schema to directory /root/dev/MyApp/script/../lib ...
966 Schema dump completed.
967 exists "/root/dev/MyApp/script/../lib/MyApp/Model/DB.pm"
968
969Notice that we modified our use of the helper slightly: we told
d05dbc42 970it to include the L<DBIx::Class::TimeStamp|DBIx::Class::TimeStamp>
1cde0fd6 971in the C<load_components> line of the Result Classes.
972
55490817 973If you open C<lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/Books.pm> in your editor you
974should see that the C<created> and C<updated> fields are now included
72609296 975in the call to C<add_columns()>, but our relationship information below
55490817 976the "C<# DO NOT MODIFY...>" line was automatically preserved.
1cde0fd6 977
55490817 978While we have this file open, let's update it with some additional
979information to have DBIC automatically handle the updating of these
980two fields for us. Insert the following code at the bottom of the
981file (it B<must> be B<below> the "C<# DO NOT MODIFY...>" line and
1cde0fd6 982B<above> the C<1;> on the last line):
983
984 #
985 # Enable automatic date handling
986 #
987 __PACKAGE__->add_columns(
988 "created",
989 { data_type => 'datetime', set_on_create => 1 },
990 "updated",
991 { data_type => 'datetime', set_on_create => 1, set_on_update => 1 },
55490817 992 );
1cde0fd6 993
a46b474e 994This will override the definition for these fields that Schema::Loader
995placed at the top of the file. The C<set_on_create> and
996C<set_on_update> options will cause DBIx::Class to automatically
997update the timestamps in these columns whenever a row is created or
998modified.
1cde0fd6 999
1000To test this out, restart the development server using the
1001C<DBIC_TRACE=1> option:
1002
1003 DBIC_TRACE=1 script/myapp_server.pl
1004
1005Then enter the following URL into your web browser:
1006
1007 http://localhost:3000/books/url_create/TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2/5/4
1008
1009You should get the same "Book Created" screen we saw above. However,
1010if you now use the sqlite3 command-line tool to dump the C<books> table,
1011you will see that the new book we added has an appropriate date and
1012time entered for it (see the last line in the listing below):
1013
1014 sqlite3 myapp.db "select * from books"
acbd7bdd 1015 1|CCSP SNRS Exam Certification Guide|5|2009-03-08 16:26:35|2009-03-08 16:26:35
1016 2|TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1|5|2009-03-08 16:26:35|2009-03-08 16:26:35
1017 3|Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol.1|4|2009-03-08 16:26:35|2009-03-08 16:26:35
1018 4|Perl Cookbook|5|2009-03-08 16:26:35|2009-03-08 16:26:35
1019 5|Designing with Web Standards|5|2009-03-08 16:26:35|2009-03-08 16:26:35
1020 9|TCP/IP Illustrated, Vol 3|5|2009-03-08 16:26:35|2009-03-08 16:26:35
1021 10|TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2|5|2009-03-08 16:29:08|2009-03-08 16:29:08
1cde0fd6 1022
55490817 1023Notice in the debug log that the SQL DBIC generated has changed to
1cde0fd6 1024incorporate the datetime logic:
1025
55490817 1026 INSERT INTO books (created, rating, title, updated) VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?):
acbd7bdd 1027 '2009-03-08 16:29:08', '5', 'TCPIP_Illustrated_Vol-2', '2009-03-08 16:29:08'
1cde0fd6 1028 INSERT INTO book_authors (author_id, book_id) VALUES (?, ?): '4', '10'
1029
1030
1031=head2 Create a ResultSet Class
1032
55490817 1033An often overlooked but extremely powerful features of DBIC is that it
1034allows you to supply your own subclasses of C<DBIx::Class::ResultSet>.
1035It allows you to pull complex and unsightly "query code" out of your
1cde0fd6 1036controllers and encapsulate it in a method of your ResultSet Class.
1037These "canned queries" in your ResultSet Class can then be invoked
1038via a single call, resulting in much cleaner and easier to read
1039controller code.
1040
55490817 1041To illustrate the concept with a fairly simple example, let's create a
1cde0fd6 1042method that returns books added in the last 10 minutes. Start by
a46b474e 1043making a directory where DBIx::Class will look for our ResultSet Class:
1cde0fd6 1044
1045 mkdir lib/MyApp/Schema/ResultSet
1046
55490817 1047Then open C<lib/MyApp/Schema/ResultSet/Books.pm> and enter the following:
1cde0fd6 1048
1049 package MyApp::Schema::ResultSet::Books;
55490817 1050
1cde0fd6 1051 use strict;
1052 use warnings;
1053 use base 'DBIx::Class::ResultSet';
55490817 1054
1cde0fd6 1055 =head2 created_after
55490817 1056
1cde0fd6 1057 A predefined search for recently added books
55490817 1058
1cde0fd6 1059 =cut
55490817 1060
1cde0fd6 1061 sub created_after {
fadc4ae7 1062 my ($self, $datetime) = @_;
55490817 1063
fadc4ae7 1064 my $date_str = $self->_source_handle->schema->storage
1065 ->datetime_parser->format_datetime($datetime);
55490817 1066
fadc4ae7 1067 return $self->search({
1068 created => { '>' => $date_str }
1069 });
1cde0fd6 1070 }
55490817 1071
1cde0fd6 1072 1;
1073
55490817 1074Then we need to tell the Result Class to to treat this as a ResultSet
1075Class. Open C<lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/Books.pm> and add the following
1cde0fd6 1076above the "C<1;>" at the bottom of the file:
1077
1078 #
1079 # Set ResultSet Class
1080 #
1081 __PACKAGE__->resultset_class('MyApp::Schema::ResultSet::Books');
1082
1083Then add the following method to the C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm>:
1084
1085 =head2 list_recent
55490817 1086
1cde0fd6 1087 List recently created books
55490817 1088
1cde0fd6 1089 =cut
55490817 1090
1cde0fd6 1091 sub list_recent :Chained('base') :PathPart('list_recent') :Args(1) {
1092 my ($self, $c, $mins) = @_;
55490817 1093
1cde0fd6 1094 # Retrieve all of the book records as book model objects and store in the
1095 # stash where they can be accessed by the TT template, but only
1096 # retrieve books created within the last $min number of minutes
1097 $c->stash->{books} = [$c->model('DB::Books')
1098 ->created_after(DateTime->now->subtract(minutes => $mins))];
55490817 1099
1cde0fd6 1100 # Set the TT template to use. You will almost always want to do this
1101 # in your action methods (action methods respond to user input in
1102 # your controllers).
1103 $c->stash->{template} = 'books/list.tt2';
1104 }
1105
55490817 1106Now start the development server with C<DBIC_TRACE=1> and try
1107different values for the minutes argument (the final number value) for
1108the URL C<http://localhost:3000/books/list_recent/10>. For example,
1cde0fd6 1109this would list all books added in the last fifteen minutes:
1110
1111 http://localhost:3000/books/list_recent/15
1112
1113Depending on how recently you added books, you might want to
1114try a higher or lower value.
1115
1116
1117=head2 Chaining ResultSets
1118
a46b474e 1119One of the most helpful and powerful features in DBIx::Class is that
1120it allows you to "chain together" a series of queries (note that this
1121has nothing to do with the "Chained Dispatch" for Catalyst that we
1122were discussing above). Because each ResultSet returns another
1123ResultSet, you can take an initial query and immediately feed that
1124into a second query (and so on for as many queries you need). Note
1125that no matter how many ResultSets you chain together, the database
1126itself will not be hit until you use a method that attempts to access
1127the data. And, because this technique carries over to the ResultSet
1128Class feature we implemented in the previous section for our "canned
1129search", we can combine the two capabilities. For example, let's add
1130an action to our C<Books> controller that lists books that are both
1131recent I<and> have "TCP" in the title. Open up
1132C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> and add the following method:
1cde0fd6 1133
acbd7bdd 1134 =head2 list_recent_tcp
55490817 1135
1cde0fd6 1136 List recently created books
55490817 1137
1cde0fd6 1138 =cut
55490817 1139
1cde0fd6 1140 sub list_recent_tcp :Chained('base') :PathPart('list_recent_tcp') :Args(1) {
1141 my ($self, $c, $mins) = @_;
55490817 1142
1cde0fd6 1143 # Retrieve all of the book records as book model objects and store in the
1144 # stash where they can be accessed by the TT template, but only
1145 # retrieve books created within the last $min number of minutes
1146 # AND that have 'TCP' in the title
1147 $c->stash->{books} = [$c->model('DB::Books')
1148 ->created_after(DateTime->now->subtract(minutes => $mins))
1149 ->search({title => {'like', '%TCP%'}})
1150 ];
55490817 1151
1cde0fd6 1152 # Set the TT template to use. You will almost always want to do this
1153 # in your action methods (action methods respond to user input in
1154 # your controllers).
1155 $c->stash->{template} = 'books/list.tt2';
1156 }
1157
1158To try this out, restart the development server with:
1159
1160 DBIC_TRACE=1 script/myapp_server.pl
1161
1162And enter the following URL into your browser:
1163
1164 http://localhost:3000/books/list_recent_tcp/100
1165
55490817 1166And you should get a list of books added in the last 100 minutes that
1167contain the string "TCP" in the title. However, if you look at all
1168books within the last 100 minutes, you should get a longer list
1169(again, you might have to adjust the number of minutes depending on
1cde0fd6 1170how recently you added books to your database):
1171
1172 http://localhost:3000/books/list_recent/100
1173
55490817 1174Take a look at the DBIC_TRACE output in the development server log for
1cde0fd6 1175the first URL and you should see something similar to the following:
1176
55490817 1177 SELECT me.id, me.title, me.rating, me.created, me.updated FROM books me
acbd7bdd 1178 WHERE ( ( ( title LIKE ? ) AND ( created > ? ) ) ): '%TCP%', '2009-03-08 14:52:54'
1cde0fd6 1179
55490817 1180However, let's not pollute our controller code with this raw "TCP"
1181query -- it would be cleaner to encapsulate that code in a method on
1182our ResultSet Class. To do this, open
1cde0fd6 1183C<lib/MyApp/Schema/ResultSet/Books.pm> and add the following method:
1184
1185 =head2 title_like
55490817 1186
1cde0fd6 1187 A predefined search for books with a 'LIKE' search in the string
55490817 1188
1cde0fd6 1189 =cut
55490817 1190
1cde0fd6 1191 sub title_like {
fadc4ae7 1192 my ($self, $title_str) = @_;
55490817 1193
fadc4ae7 1194 return $self->search({
1195 title => { 'like' => "%$title_str%" }
1196 });
1cde0fd6 1197 }
1198
55490817 1199We defined the search string as C<$title_str> to make the method more
1200flexible. Now update the C<list_recent_tcp> method in
1201C<lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm> to match the following (we have
1202replaced the C<-E<gt>search> line with the C<-E<gt>title_like> line
1cde0fd6 1203shown here -- the rest of the method should be the same):
1204
1205 =head2 list_recent_tcp
55490817 1206
1cde0fd6 1207 List recently created books
55490817 1208
1cde0fd6 1209 =cut
55490817 1210
1cde0fd6 1211 sub list_recent_tcp :Chained('base') :PathPart('list_recent_tcp') :Args(1) {
1212 my ($self, $c, $mins) = @_;
55490817 1213
1cde0fd6 1214 # Retrieve all of the book records as book model objects and store in the
1215 # stash where they can be accessed by the TT template, but only
1216 # retrieve books created within the last $min number of minutes
1217 # AND that have 'TCP' in the title
1218 $c->stash->{books} = [$c->model('DB::Books')
1219 ->created_after(DateTime->now->subtract(minutes => $mins))
1220 ->title_like('TCP')
1221 ];
55490817 1222
1cde0fd6 1223 # Set the TT template to use. You will almost always want to do this
1224 # in your action methods (action methods respond to user input in
1225 # your controllers).
1226 $c->stash->{template} = 'books/list.tt2';
1227 }
1228
55490817 1229Then restart the development server and try out the C<list_recent_tcp>
1230and C<list_recent> URL as we did above. It should work just the same,
1231but our code is obviously cleaner and more modular, while also being
1cde0fd6 1232more flexible at the same time.
1233
1234
1235=head2 Adding Methods to Result Classes
1236
a46b474e 1237In the previous two sections we saw a good example of how we could use
1238DBIx::Class ResultSet Classes to clean up our code for an entire query
1239(for example, our "canned searches" that filtered the entire query).
1240We can do a similar improvement when working with individual rows as
1241well. Whereas the ResultSet construct is used in DBIC to correspond
1242to an entire query, the Result Class construct is used to represent a
1243row. Therefore, we can add row-specific "helper methods" to our Result
1244Classes stored in C<lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/>. For example, open
1245C<lib/MyApp/Schema/Result/Authors.pm> and add the following method (as
1246always, it must be above the closing "C<1;>"):
1cde0fd6 1247
1248 #
1249 # Helper methods
1250 #
1251 sub full_name {
1252 my ($self) = @_;
55490817 1253
1cde0fd6 1254 return $self->first_name . ' ' . $self->last_name;
1255 }
1256
55490817 1257This will allow us to conveniently retrieve both the first and last
1258name for an author in one shot. Now open C<root/src/books/list.tt2>
1cde0fd6 1259and change the definition of C<tt_authors> from this:
1260
acbd7bdd 1261 ...
1cde0fd6 1262 [% tt_authors = [ ];
1263 tt_authors.push(author.last_name) FOREACH author = book.authors %]
acbd7bdd 1264 ...
1cde0fd6 1265
1266to:
1267
acbd7bdd 1268 ...
1cde0fd6 1269 [% tt_authors = [ ];
1270 tt_authors.push(author.full_name) FOREACH author = book.authors %]
acbd7bdd 1271 ...
1cde0fd6 1272
55490817 1273(Only C<author.last_name> was changed to C<author.full_name> -- the
1cde0fd6 1274rest of the file should remain the same.)
1275
1276Now restart the development server and go to the standard book list
1277URL:
1278
1279 http://localhost:3000/books/list
1280
55490817 1281The "Author(s)" column will now contain both the first and last name.
1282And, because the concatenation logic was encapsulated inside our
1283Result Class, it keeps the code inside our .tt template nice and clean
1284(remember, we want the templates to be as close to pure HTML markup as
1285possible). Obviously, this capability becomes even more useful as you
1286use to to remove even more complicated row-specific logic from your
1cde0fd6 1287templates!
1288
1289
d442cc9f 1290=head1 AUTHOR
1291
1292Kennedy Clark, C<hkclark@gmail.com>
1293
1294Please report any errors, issues or suggestions to the author. The
1295most recent version of the Catalyst Tutorial can be found at
82ab4bbf 1296L<http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/repos/Catalyst/Catalyst-Manual/5.70/trunk/lib/Catalyst/Manual/Tutorial/>.
d442cc9f 1297
45c7830f 1298Copyright 2006-2008, Kennedy Clark, under Creative Commons License
95674086 1299(L<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/us/>).