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3fea05b9 1=pod
2
3=head1 NAME
4
5Moose::Manual::MethodModifiers - Moose's method modifiers
6
7=head1 WHAT IS A METHOD MODIFIER?
8
9Moose provides a feature called "method modifiers". You can also think
10of these as "hooks" or "advice".
11
12It's probably easiest to understand this feature with a few examples:
13
14 package Example;
15
16 use Moose;
17
18 sub foo {
19 print "foo\n";
20 }
21
22 before 'foo' => sub { print "about to call foo\n"; };
23 after 'foo' => sub { print "just called foo\n"; };
24
25 around 'foo' => sub {
26 my $orig = shift;
27 my $self = shift;
28
29 print "I'm around foo\n";
30
31 $self->$orig(@_);
32
33 print "I'm still around foo\n";
34 };
35
36Now if I call C<< Example->new->foo >> I'll get the following output:
37
38 about to call foo
39 I'm around foo
40 foo
41 I'm still around foo
42 just called foo
43
44You probably could have figured that out from the names "before",
45"after", and "around".
46
47Also, as you can see, the before modifiers come before around
48modifiers, and after modifiers come last.
49
50When there are multiple modifiers of the same type, the before and
51around modifiers run from the last added to the first, and after
52modifiers run from first added to last:
53
54 before 2
55 before 1
56 around 2
57 around 1
58 primary
59 around 1
60 around 2
61 after 1
62 after 2
63
64=head1 WHY USE THEM?
65
66Method modifiers have many uses. One very common use is in roles. This
67lets roles alter the behavior of methods in the classes that use
68them. See L<Moose::Manual::Roles> for more information about roles.
69
70Since modifiers are mostly useful in roles, some of the examples below
71are a bit artificial. They're intended to give you an idea of how
72modifiers work, but may not be the most natural usage.
73
74=head1 BEFORE, AFTER, AND AROUND
75
76Method modifiers can be used to add behavior to a method that Moose
77generates for you, such as an attribute accessor:
78
79 has 'size' => ( is => 'rw' );
80
81 before 'size' => sub {
82 my $self = shift;
83
84 if (@_) {
85 Carp::cluck('Someone is setting size');
86 }
87 };
88
89Another use for the before modifier would be to do some sort of
90prechecking on a method call. For example:
91
92 before 'size' => sub {
93 my $self = shift;
94
95 die 'Cannot set size while the person is growing'
96 if @_ && $self->is_growing;
97 };
98
99This lets us implement logical checks that don't make sense as type
100constraints. In particular, they're useful for defining logical rules
101about an object's state changes.
102
103Similarly, an after modifier could be used for logging an action that
104was taken.
105
106Note that the return values of both before and after modifiers are
107ignored.
108
109An around modifier is a bit more powerful than either a before or
110after modifier. It can modify the arguments being passed to the
111original method, and you can even decide to simply not call the
112original method at all. You can also modify the return value with an
113around modifier.
114
115An around modifier receives the original method as its first argument,
116I<then> the object, and finally any arguments passed to the method.
117
118 around 'size' => sub {
119 my $orig = shift;
120 my $self = shift;
121
122 return $self->$orig()
123 unless @_;
124
125 my $size = shift;
126 $size = $size / 2
127 if $self->likes_small_things();
128
129 return $self->$orig($size);
130 };
131
132=head1 INNER AND AUGMENT
133
134Augment and inner are two halves of the same feature. The augment
135modifier provides a sort of inverted subclassing. You provide part of
136the implementation in a superclass, and then document that subclasses
137are expected to provide the rest.
138
139The superclass calls C<inner()>, which then calls the C<augment>
140modifier in the subclass:
141
142 package Document;
143
144 use Moose;
145
146 sub as_xml {
147 my $self = shift;
148
149 my $xml = "<document>\n";
150 $xml .= inner();
151 $xml .= "</document>\n";
152
153 return $xml;
154 }
155
156Using C<inner()> in this method makes it possible for one or more
157subclasses to then augment this method with their own specific
158implementation:
159
160 package Report;
161
162 use Moose;
163
164 extends 'Document';
165
166 augment 'as_xml' => sub {
167 my $self = shift;
168
169 my $xml = "<report>\n";
170 $xml .= inner();
171 $xml .= "</report>\n";
172
173 return $xml;
174 };
175
176When we call C<as_xml> on a Report object, we get something like this:
177
178 <document>
179 <report>
180 </report>
181 </document>
182
183But we also called C<inner()> in C<Report>, so we can continue
184subclassing and adding more content inside the document:
185
186 package Report::IncomeAndExpenses;
187
188 use Moose;
189
190 extends 'Report';
191
192 augment 'as_xml' => sub {
193 my $self = shift;
194
195 my $xml = '<income>' . $self->income . '</income>';
196 $xml .= "\n";
197 $xml .= '<expenses>' . $self->expenses . '</expenses>';
198 $xml .= "\n";
199
200 $xml .= inner() || q{};
201
202 return $xml;
203 };
204
205Now our report has some content:
206
207 <document>
208 <report>
209 <income>$10</income>
210 <expenses>$8</expenses>
211 </report>
212 </document>
213
214What makes this combination of C<augment> and C<inner()> special is
215that it allows us to have methods which are called from parent (least
216specific) to child (most specific). This inverts the normal
217inheritance pattern.
218
219Note that in C<Report::IncomeAndExpenses> we call C<inner()> again. If
220the object is an instance of C<Report::IncomeAndExpenses> then this
221call is a no-op, and just returns false.
222
223=head1 OVERRIDE AND SUPER
224
225Finally, Moose provides some simple sugar for Perl's built-in method
226overriding scheme. If you want to override a method from a parent
227class, you can do this with C<override>:
228
229 package Employee;
230
231 use Moose;
232
233 extends 'Person';
234
235 has 'job_title' => ( is => 'rw' );
236
237 override 'display_name' => sub {
238 my $self = shift;
239
240 return super() . q{, } . $self->title();
241 };
242
243The call to C<super()> is almost the same as calling C<<
244$self->SUPER::display_name >>. The difference is that the arguments
245passed to the superclass's method will always be the same as the ones
246passed to the method modifier, and cannot be changed.
247
248All arguments passed to C<super()> are ignored, as are any changes
249made to C<@_> before C<super()> is called.
250
251=head1 SEMI-COLONS
252
253Because all of these method modifiers are implemented as Perl
254functions, you must always end the modifier declaration with a
255semi-colon:
256
257 after 'foo' => sub { };
258
259=head1 AUTHOR
260
261Dave Rolsky E<lt>autarch@urth.orgE<gt>
262
263=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
264
265Copyright 2008-2009 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
266
267L<http://www.iinteractive.com>
268
269This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
270it under the same terms as Perl itself.
271
272=cut