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[gitmo/Moose.git] / lib / Moose.pm
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fcd84ca9 1
2package Moose;
3
4use strict;
5use warnings;
6
ecb1297a 7use 5.008;
8
fb4fcfee 9our $VERSION = '0.57';
75b95414 10$VERSION = eval $VERSION;
d44714be 11our $AUTHORITY = 'cpan:STEVAN';
fcd84ca9 12
21f1e231 13use Scalar::Util 'blessed';
c0b37457 14use Carp 'confess', 'croak', 'cluck';
fcd84ca9 15
5bd4db9b 16use Moose::Exporter;
7f18097c 17
ecfea998 18use Class::MOP 0.65;
ef1d5f4b 19
c0e30cf5 20use Moose::Meta::Class;
7415b2cb 21use Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint;
7c13858b 22use Moose::Meta::TypeCoercion;
78cd1d3b 23use Moose::Meta::Attribute;
ddd0ec20 24use Moose::Meta::Instance;
c0e30cf5 25
0779da92 26use Moose::Object;
27
d67145ed 28use Moose::Meta::Role;
0779da92 29use Moose::Meta::Role::Composite;
30use Moose::Meta::Role::Application;
31use Moose::Meta::Role::Application::RoleSummation;
32use Moose::Meta::Role::Application::ToClass;
33use Moose::Meta::Role::Application::ToRole;
34use Moose::Meta::Role::Application::ToInstance;
d67145ed 35
7415b2cb 36use Moose::Util::TypeConstraints;
d7d8a8c7 37use Moose::Util ();
a15dff8d 38
c245d69b 39sub throw_error {
40 # FIXME This
41 shift;
42 goto \&confess
43}
4c0b3599 44
5bd4db9b 45sub extends {
97a93056 46 my $class = shift;
3d544ed5 47
5bd4db9b 48 croak "Must derive at least one class" unless @_;
9bcfbab1 49
5bd4db9b 50 my @supers = @_;
51 foreach my $super (@supers) {
52 Class::MOP::load_class($super);
53 croak "You cannot inherit from a Moose Role ($super)"
54 if $super->can('meta') &&
55 blessed $super->meta &&
56 $super->meta->isa('Moose::Meta::Role')
c92c1205 57 }
5bee491d 58
26fbace8 59
86dd5d11 60
5bd4db9b 61 # this checks the metaclass to make sure
62 # it is correct, sometimes it can get out
63 # of sync when the classes are being built
50d5df60 64 my $meta = Moose::Meta::Class->initialize($class)->_fix_metaclass_incompatability(@supers);
5bd4db9b 65 $meta->superclasses(@supers);
66}
a3c7e2fe 67
5bd4db9b 68sub with {
97a93056 69 my $class = shift;
aedcb7d9 70 Moose::Util::apply_all_roles(Class::MOP::Class->initialize($class), @_);
5bd4db9b 71}
9bcfbab1 72
5bd4db9b 73sub has {
97a93056 74 my $class = shift;
5bd4db9b 75 my $name = shift;
76 croak 'Usage: has \'name\' => ( key => value, ... )' if @_ == 1;
77 my %options = @_;
78 my $attrs = ( ref($name) eq 'ARRAY' ) ? $name : [ ($name) ];
aedcb7d9 79 Class::MOP::Class->initialize($class)->add_attribute( $_, %options ) for @$attrs;
5bd4db9b 80}
9bcfbab1 81
5bd4db9b 82sub before {
97a93056 83 my $class = shift;
5bd4db9b 84 Moose::Util::add_method_modifier($class, 'before', \@_);
85}
86
87sub after {
97a93056 88 my $class = shift;
5bd4db9b 89 Moose::Util::add_method_modifier($class, 'after', \@_);
90}
91
92sub around {
97a93056 93 my $class = shift;
5bd4db9b 94 Moose::Util::add_method_modifier($class, 'around', \@_);
95}
96
97sub super {
98 return unless our $SUPER_BODY; $SUPER_BODY->(our @SUPER_ARGS);
99}
9bcfbab1 100
5bd4db9b 101sub override {
97a93056 102 my $class = shift;
5bd4db9b 103 my ( $name, $method ) = @_;
aedcb7d9 104 Class::MOP::Class->initialize($class)->add_override_method_modifier( $name => $method );
5bd4db9b 105}
9bcfbab1 106
5bd4db9b 107sub inner {
108 my $pkg = caller();
109 our ( %INNER_BODY, %INNER_ARGS );
110
111 if ( my $body = $INNER_BODY{$pkg} ) {
112 my @args = @{ $INNER_ARGS{$pkg} };
113 local $INNER_ARGS{$pkg};
114 local $INNER_BODY{$pkg};
115 return $body->(@args);
116 } else {
117 return;
ce265cc3 118 }
5bd4db9b 119}
9bcfbab1 120
5bd4db9b 121sub augment {
97a93056 122 my $class = shift;
5bd4db9b 123 my ( $name, $method ) = @_;
aedcb7d9 124 Class::MOP::Class->initialize($class)->add_augment_method_modifier( $name => $method );
ce265cc3 125}
9bcfbab1 126
5bd4db9b 127sub make_immutable {
97a93056 128 my $class = shift;
5bd4db9b 129 cluck "The make_immutable keyword has been deprecated, " .
130 "please go back to __PACKAGE__->meta->make_immutable\n";
aedcb7d9 131 Class::MOP::Class->initialize($class)->make_immutable(@_);
5bd4db9b 132}
9bcfbab1 133
aedcb7d9 134Moose::Exporter->setup_import_methods(
97a93056 135 with_caller => [
136 qw( extends with has before after around override augment make_immutable )
137 ],
138 as_is => [
139 qw( super inner ),
5bd4db9b 140 \&Carp::confess,
141 \&Scalar::Util::blessed,
142 ],
143);
144
cc841c0e 145sub init_meta {
085fba61 146 # This used to be called as a function. This hack preserves
147 # backwards compatibility.
148 if ( $_[0] ne __PACKAGE__ ) {
149 return __PACKAGE__->init_meta(
150 for_class => $_[0],
151 base_class => $_[1],
152 metaclass => $_[2],
153 );
154 }
7c4676ef 155
0338a411 156 shift;
157 my %args = @_;
158
159 my $class = $args{for_class}
c245d69b 160 or Moose->throw_error("Cannot call init_meta without specifying a for_class");
085fba61 161 my $base_class = $args{base_class} || 'Moose::Object';
162 my $metaclass = $args{metaclass} || 'Moose::Meta::Class';
cc841c0e 163
c245d69b 164 Moose->throw_error("The Metaclass $metaclass must be a subclass of Moose::Meta::Class.")
cc841c0e 165 unless $metaclass->isa('Moose::Meta::Class');
166
167 # make a subtype for each Moose class
168 class_type($class)
169 unless find_type_constraint($class);
170
171 my $meta;
50d5df60 172
173 if ( $meta = Class::MOP::get_metaclass_by_name($class) ) {
174 unless ( $meta->isa("Moose::Meta::Class") ) {
c245d69b 175 Moose->throw_error("$class already has a metaclass, but it does not inherit $metaclass ($meta)");
50d5df60 176 }
177 } else {
178 # no metaclass, no 'meta' method
179
180 # now we check whether our ancestors have metaclass, and if so borrow that
181 my ( undef, @isa ) = @{ $class->mro::get_linear_isa };
182
183 foreach my $ancestor ( @isa ) {
184 my $ancestor_meta = Class::MOP::get_metaclass_by_name($ancestor) || next;
185
186 my $ancestor_meta_class = ($ancestor_meta->is_immutable
187 ? $ancestor_meta->get_mutable_metaclass_name
188 : ref($ancestor_meta));
189
190 # if we have an ancestor metaclass that inherits $metaclass, we use
191 # that. This is like _fix_metaclass_incompatability, but we can do it now.
192
193 # the case of having an ancestry is not very common, but arises in
194 # e.g. Reaction
195 unless ( $metaclass->isa( $ancestor_meta_class ) ) {
196 if ( $ancestor_meta_class->isa($metaclass) ) {
197 $metaclass = $ancestor_meta_class;
198 }
199 }
200 }
201
202 $meta = $metaclass->initialize($class);
203 }
204
cc841c0e 205 if ( $class->can('meta') ) {
50d5df60 206 # check 'meta' method
207
208 # it may be inherited
209
cc841c0e 210 # NOTE:
211 # this is the case where the metaclass pragma
212 # was used before the 'use Moose' statement to
213 # override a specific class
50d5df60 214 my $method_meta = $class->meta;
215
216 ( blessed($method_meta) && $method_meta->isa('Moose::Meta::Class') )
c245d69b 217 || Moose->throw_error("$class already has a &meta function, but it does not return a Moose::Meta::Class ($meta)");
50d5df60 218
219 $meta = $method_meta;
cc841c0e 220 }
50d5df60 221
222 unless ( $meta->has_method("meta") ) { # don't overwrite
223 # also check for inherited non moose 'meta' method?
224 # FIXME also skip this if the user requested by passing an option
cc841c0e 225 $meta->add_method(
226 'meta' => sub {
227 # re-initialize so it inherits properly
50d5df60 228 $metaclass->initialize( ref($_[0]) || $_[0] );
cc841c0e 229 }
230 );
231 }
232
233 # make sure they inherit from Moose::Object
234 $meta->superclasses($base_class)
235 unless $meta->superclasses();
236
237 return $meta;
238}
239
085fba61 240# This may be used in some older MooseX extensions.
241sub _get_caller {
242 goto &Moose::Exporter::_get_caller;
243}
244
8ecb1fa0 245## make 'em all immutable
246
247$_->meta->make_immutable(
0779da92 248 inline_constructor => 1,
249 constructor_name => "_new",
77a18c28 250 inline_accessors => 1, # these are Class::MOP accessors, so they need inlining
9bcfbab1 251 )
0779da92 252 for (qw(
253 Moose::Meta::Attribute
254 Moose::Meta::Class
255 Moose::Meta::Instance
256
257 Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint
258 Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Union
259 Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Parameterized
9ad786af 260 Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Parameterizable
0779da92 261 Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Enum
262 Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Class
263 Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Role
264 Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Registry
265 Moose::Meta::TypeCoercion
266 Moose::Meta::TypeCoercion::Union
267
268 Moose::Meta::Method
269 Moose::Meta::Method::Accessor
270 Moose::Meta::Method::Constructor
271 Moose::Meta::Method::Destructor
272 Moose::Meta::Method::Overriden
273 Moose::Meta::Method::Augmented
274
275 Moose::Meta::Role
276 Moose::Meta::Role::Method
277 Moose::Meta::Role::Method::Required
278
279 Moose::Meta::Role::Composite
280
281 Moose::Meta::Role::Application
282 Moose::Meta::Role::Application::RoleSummation
283 Moose::Meta::Role::Application::ToClass
284 Moose::Meta::Role::Application::ToRole
285 Moose::Meta::Role::Application::ToInstance
0779da92 286));
8ecb1fa0 287
fcd84ca9 2881;
289
290__END__
291
292=pod
293
294=head1 NAME
295
8bdc7f13 296Moose - A postmodern object system for Perl 5
fcd84ca9 297
298=head1 SYNOPSIS
e522431d 299
300 package Point;
1cd45431 301 use Moose; # automatically turns on strict and warnings
26fbace8 302
43d599e5 303 has 'x' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Int');
304 has 'y' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Int');
26fbace8 305
e522431d 306 sub clear {
307 my $self = shift;
308 $self->x(0);
26fbace8 309 $self->y(0);
e522431d 310 }
26fbace8 311
e522431d 312 package Point3D;
313 use Moose;
26fbace8 314
e522431d 315 extends 'Point';
26fbace8 316
43d599e5 317 has 'z' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Int');
26fbace8 318
e522431d 319 after 'clear' => sub {
320 my $self = shift;
43d599e5 321 $self->z(0);
26fbace8 322 };
2c0cbef7 323
fcd84ca9 324=head1 DESCRIPTION
325
26fbace8 326Moose is an extension of the Perl 5 object system.
e522431d 327
9b9da6f1 328The main goal of Moose is to make Perl 5 Object Oriented programming
329easier, more consistent and less tedious. With Moose you can to think
6f894f30 330more about what you want to do and less about the mechanics of OOP.
fcd84ca9 331
6f894f30 332Additionally, Moose is built on top of L<Class::MOP>, which is a
333metaclass system for Perl 5. This means that Moose not only makes
334building normal Perl 5 objects better, but it provides the power of
335metaclass programming as well.
8bdc7f13 336
f5909dca 337=head2 New to Moose?
338
6f894f30 339If you're new to Moose, the best place to start is the L<Moose::Intro>
340docs, followed by the L<Moose::Cookbook>. The intro will show you what
341Moose is, and how it makes Perl 5 OO better.
342
343The cookbook recipes on Moose basics will get you up to speed with
344many of Moose's features quickly. Once you have an idea of what Moose
345can do, you can use the API documentation to get more detail on
346features which interest you.
f5909dca 347
28669f89 348=head2 Moose Extensions
349
12aed9a0 350The C<MooseX::> namespace is the official place to find Moose extensions.
351These extensions can be found on the CPAN. The easiest way to find them
352is to search for them (L<http://search.cpan.org/search?query=MooseX::>),
353or to examine L<Task::Moose> which aims to keep an up-to-date, easily
354installable list of Moose extensions.
28669f89 355
6ba6d68c 356=head1 BUILDING CLASSES WITH MOOSE
357
68efb014 358Moose makes every attempt to provide as much convenience as possible during
359class construction/definition, but still stay out of your way if you want it
360to. Here are a few items to note when building classes with Moose.
6ba6d68c 361
26fbace8 362Unless specified with C<extends>, any class which uses Moose will
6ba6d68c 363inherit from L<Moose::Object>.
364
1cd45431 365Moose will also manage all attributes (including inherited ones) that are
366defined with C<has>. And (assuming you call C<new>, which is inherited from
367L<Moose::Object>) this includes properly initializing all instance slots,
368setting defaults where appropriate, and performing any type constraint checking
369or coercion.
6ba6d68c 370
004222dc 371=head1 PROVIDED METHODS
6ba6d68c 372
004222dc 373Moose provides a number of methods to all your classes, mostly through the
374inheritance of L<Moose::Object>. There is however, one exception.
6ba6d68c 375
376=over 4
377
378=item B<meta>
379
380This is a method which provides access to the current class's metaclass.
381
004222dc 382=back
383
384=head1 EXPORTED FUNCTIONS
385
386Moose will export a number of functions into the class's namespace which
387may then be used to set up the class. These functions all work directly
388on the current class.
389
390=over 4
391
6ba6d68c 392=item B<extends (@superclasses)>
393
394This function will set the superclass(es) for the current class.
395
26fbace8 396This approach is recommended instead of C<use base>, because C<use base>
397actually C<push>es onto the class's C<@ISA>, whereas C<extends> will
398replace it. This is important to ensure that classes which do not have
68efb014 399superclasses still properly inherit from L<Moose::Object>.
6ba6d68c 400
43d599e5 401=item B<with (@roles)>
e9ec68d6 402
004222dc 403This will apply a given set of C<@roles> to the local class.
e9ec68d6 404
cd7eeaf5 405=item B<has $name =E<gt> %options>
6ba6d68c 406
26fbace8 407This will install an attribute of a given C<$name> into the current class.
408The C<%options> are the same as those provided by
409L<Class::MOP::Attribute>, in addition to the list below which are provided
43d599e5 410by Moose (L<Moose::Meta::Attribute> to be more specific):
6ba6d68c 411
412=over 4
413
076c81ed 414=item I<is =E<gt> 'rw'|'ro'>
6ba6d68c 415
26fbace8 416The I<is> option accepts either I<rw> (for read/write) or I<ro> (for read
417only). These will create either a read/write accessor or a read-only
6ba6d68c 418accessor respectively, using the same name as the C<$name> of the attribute.
419
1cd45431 420If you need more control over how your accessors are named, you can use the
421I<reader>, I<writer> and I<accessor> options inherited from
004222dc 422L<Class::MOP::Attribute>, however if you use those, you won't need the I<is>
423option.
6ba6d68c 424
076c81ed 425=item I<isa =E<gt> $type_name>
6ba6d68c 426
26fbace8 427The I<isa> option uses Moose's type constraint facilities to set up runtime
428type checking for this attribute. Moose will perform the checks during class
429construction, and within any accessors. The C<$type_name> argument must be a
430string. The string may be either a class name or a type defined using
9cca2e9e 431Moose's type definition features. (Refer to L<Moose::Util::TypeConstraints>
c2a69ef1 432for information on how to define a new type, and how to retrieve type meta-data).
6ba6d68c 433
daea75c9 434=item I<coerce =E<gt> (1|0)>
435
26fbace8 436This will attempt to use coercion with the supplied type constraint to change
437the value passed into any accessors or constructors. You B<must> have supplied
5cfe3805 438a type constraint in order for this to work. See L<Moose::Cookbook::Basics::Recipe5>
1cd45431 439for an example.
daea75c9 440
441=item I<does =E<gt> $role_name>
442
26fbace8 443This will accept the name of a role which the value stored in this attribute
daea75c9 444is expected to have consumed.
445
446=item I<required =E<gt> (1|0)>
447
26fbace8 448This marks the attribute as being required. This means a I<defined> value must be
449supplied during class construction, and the attribute may never be set to
450C<undef> with an accessor.
daea75c9 451
452=item I<weak_ref =E<gt> (1|0)>
453
68efb014 454This will tell the class to store the value of this attribute as a weakened
455reference. If an attribute is a weakened reference, it B<cannot> also be
456coerced.
daea75c9 457
458=item I<lazy =E<gt> (1|0)>
459
26fbace8 460This will tell the class to not create this slot until absolutely necessary.
daea75c9 461If an attribute is marked as lazy it B<must> have a default supplied.
462
9e93dd19 463=item I<auto_deref =E<gt> (1|0)>
464
26fbace8 465This tells the accessor whether to automatically dereference the value returned.
1cd45431 466This is only legal if your C<isa> option is either C<ArrayRef> or C<HashRef>.
9e93dd19 467
65e14c86 468=item I<trigger =E<gt> $code>
469
470The I<trigger> option is a CODE reference which will be called after the value of
471the attribute is set. The CODE ref will be passed the instance itself, the
472updated value and the attribute meta-object (this is for more advanced fiddling
473and can typically be ignored). You B<cannot> have a trigger on a read-only
474attribute.
daea75c9 475
c84f324f 476=item I<handles =E<gt> ARRAY | HASH | REGEXP | ROLE | CODE>
2c0cbef7 477
26fbace8 478The I<handles> option provides Moose classes with automated delegation features.
479This is a pretty complex and powerful option. It accepts many different option
480formats, each with its own benefits and drawbacks.
38e3283b 481
1cd45431 482B<NOTE:> The class being delegated to does not need to be a Moose based class,
483which is why this feature is especially useful when wrapping non-Moose classes.
38e3283b 484
1cd45431 485All I<handles> option formats share the following traits:
38e3283b 486
1cd45431 487You cannot override a locally defined method with a delegated method; an
488exception will be thrown if you try. That is to say, if you define C<foo> in
489your class, you cannot override it with a delegated C<foo>. This is almost never
490something you would want to do, and if it is, you should do it by hand and not
491use Moose.
38e3283b 492
1cd45431 493You cannot override any of the methods found in Moose::Object, or the C<BUILD>
494and C<DEMOLISH> methods. These will not throw an exception, but will silently
495move on to the next method in the list. My reasoning for this is that you would
496almost never want to do this, since it usually breaks your class. As with
497overriding locally defined methods, if you do want to do this, you should do it
498manually, not with Moose.
38e3283b 499
f3c4e20e 500You do not I<need> to have a reader (or accessor) for the attribute in order
501to delegate to it. Moose will create a means of accessing the value for you,
502however this will be several times B<less> efficient then if you had given
503the attribute a reader (or accessor) to use.
504
38e3283b 505Below is the documentation for each option format:
506
507=over 4
508
509=item C<ARRAY>
510
26fbace8 511This is the most common usage for I<handles>. You basically pass a list of
512method names to be delegated, and Moose will install a delegation method
1cd45431 513for each one.
38e3283b 514
515=item C<HASH>
516
26fbace8 517This is the second most common usage for I<handles>. Instead of a list of
518method names, you pass a HASH ref where each key is the method name you
519want installed locally, and its value is the name of the original method
520in the class being delegated to.
fd595040 521
26fbace8 522This can be very useful for recursive classes like trees. Here is a
5cfe3805 523quick example (soon to be expanded into a Moose::Cookbook recipe):
38e3283b 524
1cd45431 525 package Tree;
38e3283b 526 use Moose;
26fbace8 527
38e3283b 528 has 'node' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Any');
26fbace8 529
38e3283b 530 has 'children' => (
531 is => 'ro',
532 isa => 'ArrayRef',
533 default => sub { [] }
534 );
26fbace8 535
38e3283b 536 has 'parent' => (
537 is => 'rw',
538 isa => 'Tree',
a4e516f6 539 weak_ref => 1,
38e3283b 540 handles => {
541 parent_node => 'node',
26fbace8 542 siblings => 'children',
38e3283b 543 }
544 );
545
1cd45431 546In this example, the Tree package gets C<parent_node> and C<siblings> methods,
547which delegate to the C<node> and C<children> methods (respectively) of the Tree
26fbace8 548instance stored in the C<parent> slot.
38e3283b 549
550=item C<REGEXP>
551
26fbace8 552The regexp option works very similar to the ARRAY option, except that it builds
553the list of methods for you. It starts by collecting all possible methods of the
554class being delegated to, then filters that list using the regexp supplied here.
38e3283b 555
26fbace8 556B<NOTE:> An I<isa> option is required when using the regexp option format. This
557is so that we can determine (at compile time) the method list from the class.
38e3283b 558Without an I<isa> this is just not possible.
559
c84f324f 560=item C<ROLE>
561
26fbace8 562With the role option, you specify the name of a role whose "interface" then
563becomes the list of methods to handle. The "interface" can be defined as; the
564methods of the role and any required methods of the role. It should be noted
565that this does B<not> include any method modifiers or generated attribute
c84f324f 566methods (which is consistent with role composition).
567
38e3283b 568=item C<CODE>
569
1cd45431 570This is the option to use when you really want to do something funky. You should
571only use it if you really know what you are doing, as it involves manual
572metaclass twiddling.
38e3283b 573
1cd45431 574This takes a code reference, which should expect two arguments. The first is the
575attribute meta-object this I<handles> is attached to. The second is the
576metaclass of the class being delegated to. It expects you to return a hash (not
26fbace8 577a HASH ref) of the methods you want mapped.
38e3283b 578
579=back
2c0cbef7 580
004222dc 581=item I<metaclass =E<gt> $metaclass_name>
582
583This tells the class to use a custom attribute metaclass for this particular
584attribute. Custom attribute metaclasses are useful for extending the
585capabilities of the I<has> keyword: they are the simplest way to extend the MOP,
586but they are still a fairly advanced topic and too much to cover here, see
5cfe3805 587L<Moose::Cookbook::Meta::Recipe1> for more information.
004222dc 588
589The default behavior here is to just load C<$metaclass_name>; however, we also
590have a way to alias to a shorter name. This will first look to see if
591B<Moose::Meta::Attribute::Custom::$metaclass_name> exists. If it does, Moose
592will then check to see if that has the method C<register_implementation>, which
593should return the actual name of the custom attribute metaclass. If there is no
594C<register_implementation> method, it will fall back to using
595B<Moose::Meta::Attribute::Custom::$metaclass_name> as the metaclass name.
596
597=item I<traits =E<gt> [ @role_names ]>
598
599This tells Moose to take the list of C<@role_names> and apply them to the
600attribute meta-object. This is very similar to the I<metaclass> option, but
54f2996d 601allows you to use more than one extension at a time.
004222dc 602
54f2996d 603See L<TRAIT NAME RESOLUTION> for details on how a trait name is
604resolved to a class name.
605
606Also see L<Moose::Cookbook::Meta::Recipe3> for a metaclass trait
607example.
004222dc 608
6ba6d68c 609=back
610
cd7eeaf5 611=item B<has +$name =E<gt> %options>
612
26fbace8 613This is variation on the normal attibute creator C<has> which allows you to
8d62bf6d 614clone and extend an attribute from a superclass or from a role. Here is an
615example of the superclass usage:
cd7eeaf5 616
617 package Foo;
618 use Moose;
26fbace8 619
cd7eeaf5 620 has 'message' => (
26fbace8 621 is => 'rw',
cd7eeaf5 622 isa => 'Str',
623 default => 'Hello, I am a Foo'
624 );
26fbace8 625
cd7eeaf5 626 package My::Foo;
627 use Moose;
26fbace8 628
cd7eeaf5 629 extends 'Foo';
26fbace8 630
cd7eeaf5 631 has '+message' => (default => 'Hello I am My::Foo');
632
1cd45431 633What is happening here is that B<My::Foo> is cloning the C<message> attribute
634from its parent class B<Foo>, retaining the C<is =E<gt> 'rw'> and C<isa =E<gt>
635'Str'> characteristics, but changing the value in C<default>.
cd7eeaf5 636
8d62bf6d 637Here is another example, but within the context of a role:
638
639 package Foo::Role;
640 use Moose::Role;
986d175a 641
8d62bf6d 642 has 'message' => (
643 is => 'rw',
644 isa => 'Str',
645 default => 'Hello, I am a Foo'
646 );
986d175a 647
8d62bf6d 648 package My::Foo;
649 use Moose;
986d175a 650
8d62bf6d 651 with 'Foo::Role';
986d175a 652
8d62bf6d 653 has '+message' => (default => 'Hello I am My::Foo');
654
655In this case, we are basically taking the attribute which the role supplied
4032c9bb 656and altering it within the bounds of this feature.
8d62bf6d 657
4032c9bb 658Aside from where the attributes come from (one from superclass, the other
659from a role), this feature works exactly the same. This feature is restricted
660somewhat, so as to try and force at least I<some> sanity into it. You are only
661allowed to change the following attributes:
cd7eeaf5 662
663=over 4
664
26fbace8 665=item I<default>
cd7eeaf5 666
667Change the default value of an attribute.
668
26fbace8 669=item I<coerce>
cd7eeaf5 670
671Change whether the attribute attempts to coerce a value passed to it.
672
26fbace8 673=item I<required>
cd7eeaf5 674
675Change if the attribute is required to have a value.
676
677=item I<documentation>
678
679Change the documentation string associated with the attribute.
680
83cc9094 681=item I<lazy>
682
683Change if the attribute lazily initializes the slot.
684
cd7eeaf5 685=item I<isa>
686
aed87761 687You I<are> allowed to change the type without restriction.
688
689It is recommended that you use this freedom with caution. We used to
690only allow for extension only if the type was a subtype of the parent's
691type, but we felt that was too restrictive and is better left as a
692policy descision.
cd7eeaf5 693
83cc9094 694=item I<handles>
695
26fbace8 696You are allowed to B<add> a new C<handles> definition, but you are B<not>
697allowed to I<change> one.
83cc9094 698
8d62bf6d 699=item I<builder>
700
701You are allowed to B<add> a new C<builder> definition, but you are B<not>
702allowed to I<change> one.
703
13284479 704=item I<metaclass>
705
706You are allowed to B<add> a new C<metaclass> definition, but you are
707B<not> allowed to I<change> one.
708
709=item I<traits>
710
711You are allowed to B<add> additional traits to the C<traits> definition.
712These traits will be composed into the attribute, but pre-existing traits
713B<are not> overridden, or removed.
714
cd7eeaf5 715=back
716
076c81ed 717=item B<before $name|@names =E<gt> sub { ... }>
6ba6d68c 718
076c81ed 719=item B<after $name|@names =E<gt> sub { ... }>
6ba6d68c 720
076c81ed 721=item B<around $name|@names =E<gt> sub { ... }>
6ba6d68c 722
d8af92ae 723This three items are syntactic sugar for the before, after, and around method
724modifier features that L<Class::MOP> provides. More information on these may be
725found in the L<Class::MOP::Class documentation|Class::MOP::Class/"Method
726Modifiers"> for now.
6ba6d68c 727
159da176 728=item B<super>
729
26fbace8 730The keyword C<super> is a no-op when called outside of an C<override> method. In
731the context of an C<override> method, it will call the next most appropriate
159da176 732superclass method with the same arguments as the original method.
733
734=item B<override ($name, &sub)>
735
26fbace8 736An C<override> method is a way of explicitly saying "I am overriding this
737method from my superclass". You can call C<super> within this method, and
738it will work as expected. The same thing I<can> be accomplished with a normal
739method call and the C<SUPER::> pseudo-package; it is really your choice.
159da176 740
741=item B<inner>
742
26fbace8 743The keyword C<inner>, much like C<super>, is a no-op outside of the context of
744an C<augment> method. You can think of C<inner> as being the inverse of
68efb014 745C<super>; the details of how C<inner> and C<augment> work is best described in
5cfe3805 746the L<Moose::Cookbook::Basics::Recipe6>.
159da176 747
748=item B<augment ($name, &sub)>
749
26fbace8 750An C<augment> method, is a way of explicitly saying "I am augmenting this
751method from my superclass". Once again, the details of how C<inner> and
5cfe3805 752C<augment> work is best described in the L<Moose::Cookbook::Basics::Recipe6>.
159da176 753
6ba6d68c 754=item B<confess>
755
68efb014 756This is the C<Carp::confess> function, and exported here because I use it
004222dc 757all the time.
6ba6d68c 758
759=item B<blessed>
760
1cd45431 761This is the C<Scalar::Util::blessed> function, it is exported here because I
26fbace8 762use it all the time. It is highly recommended that this is used instead of
6ba6d68c 763C<ref> anywhere you need to test for an object's class name.
764
765=back
766
54f2996d 767=head1 METACLASS TRAITS
768
769When you use Moose, you can also specify traits which will be applied
770to your metaclass:
771
772 use Moose -traits => 'My::Trait';
773
774This is very similar to the attribute traits feature. When you do
775this, your class's C<meta> object will have the specified traits
776applied to it. See L<TRAIT NAME RESOLUTION> for more details.
777
778=head1 TRAIT NAME RESOLUTION
779
780By default, when given a trait name, Moose simply tries to load a
781class of the same name. If such a class does not exist, it then looks
782for for a class matching
783B<Moose::Meta::$type::Custom::Trait::$trait_name>. The C<$type>
784variable here will be one of B<Attribute> or B<Class>, depending on
785what the trait is being applied to.
786
787If a class with this long name exists, Moose checks to see if it has
788the method C<register_implementation>. This method is expected to
789return the I<real> class name of the trait. If there is no
790C<register_implementation> method, it will fall back to using
791B<Moose::Meta::$type::Custom::Trait::$trait> as the trait name.
792
793If all this is confusing, take a look at
794L<Moose::Cookbook::Meta::Recipe3>, which demonstrates how to create an
795attribute trait.
796
1cd45431 797=head1 UNIMPORTING FUNCTIONS
31f8ec72 798
799=head2 B<unimport>
800
1cd45431 801Moose offers a way to remove the keywords it exports, through the C<unimport>
31f8ec72 802method. You simply have to say C<no Moose> at the bottom of your code for this
803to work. Here is an example:
804
805 package Person;
806 use Moose;
807
808 has 'first_name' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Str');
809 has 'last_name' => (is => 'rw', isa => 'Str');
26fbace8 810
811 sub full_name {
31f8ec72 812 my $self = shift;
26fbace8 813 $self->first_name . ' ' . $self->last_name
31f8ec72 814 }
26fbace8 815
816 no Moose; # keywords are removed from the Person package
31f8ec72 817
9bcfbab1 818=head1 EXTENDING AND EMBEDDING MOOSE
819
5e86efbe 820To learn more about extending Moose, we recommend checking out the
821"Extending" recipes in the L<Moose::Cookbook>, starting with
822L<Moose::Cookbook::Extending::Recipe1>, which provides an overview of
823all the different ways you might extend Moose.
554b7648 824
825=head2 B<< Moose->init_meta(for_class => $class, base_class => $baseclass, metaclass => $metaclass) >>
9bcfbab1 826
554b7648 827The C<init_meta> method sets up the metaclass object for the class
b143539e 828specified by C<for_class>. This method injects a a C<meta> accessor
829into the class so you can get at this object. It also sets the class's
554b7648 830superclass to C<base_class>, with L<Moose::Object> as the default.
9bcfbab1 831
554b7648 832You can specify an alternate metaclass with the C<metaclass> parameter.
26fbace8 833
80837fe1 834For more detail on this topic, see L<Moose::Cookbook::Extending::Recipe2>.
835
554b7648 836This method used to be documented as a function which accepted
837positional parameters. This calling style will still work for
4a66a4b3 838backwards compatibility, but is deprecated.
554b7648 839
840=head2 B<import>
841
842Moose's C<import> method supports the L<Sub::Exporter> form of C<{into =E<gt> $pkg}>
843and C<{into_level =E<gt> 1}>.
844
845B<NOTE>: Doing this is more or less deprecated. Use L<Moose::Exporter>
846instead, which lets you stack multiple C<Moose.pm>-alike modules
847sanely. It handles getting the exported functions into the right place
848for you.
849
4c0b3599 850=head2 throw_error
851
852An alias for C<confess>, used by internally by Moose.
853
05d9eaf6 854=head1 CAVEATS
855
856=over 4
857
858=item *
859
1cd45431 860It should be noted that C<super> and C<inner> B<cannot> be used in the same
861method. However, they may be combined within the same class hierarchy; see
862F<t/014_override_augment_inner_super.t> for an example.
05d9eaf6 863
26fbace8 864The reason for this is that C<super> is only valid within a method
865with the C<override> modifier, and C<inner> will never be valid within an
866C<override> method. In fact, C<augment> will skip over any C<override> methods
68efb014 867when searching for its appropriate C<inner>.
05d9eaf6 868
1cd45431 869This might seem like a restriction, but I am of the opinion that keeping these
870two features separate (yet interoperable) actually makes them easy to use, since
871their behavior is then easier to predict. Time will tell whether I am right or
c84f324f 872not (UPDATE: so far so good).
05d9eaf6 873
9b9da6f1 874=back
875
5569c072 876=head1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
877
878=over 4
879
54c189df 880=item I blame Sam Vilain for introducing me to the insanity that is meta-models.
5569c072 881
54c189df 882=item I blame Audrey Tang for then encouraging my meta-model habit in #perl6.
5569c072 883
26fbace8 884=item Without Yuval "nothingmuch" Kogman this module would not be possible,
54c189df 885and it certainly wouldn't have this name ;P
5569c072 886
26fbace8 887=item The basis of the TypeContraints module was Rob Kinyon's idea
5569c072 888originally, I just ran with it.
889
638585e1 890=item Thanks to mst & chansen and the whole #moose posse for all the
c84f324f 891early ideas/feature-requests/encouragement/bug-finding.
d46a48f3 892
68efb014 893=item Thanks to David "Theory" Wheeler for meta-discussions and spelling fixes.
894
5569c072 895=back
896
e90c03d0 897=head1 SEE ALSO
898
899=over 4
900
c84f324f 901=item L<http://www.iinteractive.com/moose>
902
903This is the official web home of Moose, it contains links to our public SVN repo
26fbace8 904as well as links to a number of talks and articles on Moose and Moose related
905technologies.
c84f324f 906
196064ab 907=item L<Moose::Cookbook> - How to cook a Moose
908
909=item The Moose is flying, a tutorial by Randal Schwartz
910
911Part 1 - L<http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/LinuxMag/col94.html>
912
913Part 2 - L<http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/LinuxMag/col95.html>
914
6ba6d68c 915=item L<Class::MOP> documentation
916
917=item The #moose channel on irc.perl.org
918
e67a0fca 919=item The Moose mailing list - moose@perl.org
920
9e0361e1 921=item Moose stats on ohloh.net - L<http://www.ohloh.net/projects/moose>
c84f324f 922
12aed9a0 923=item Several Moose extension modules in the C<MooseX::> namespace.
924
925See L<http://search.cpan.org/search?query=MooseX::> for extensions.
28669f89 926
c84f324f 927=back
928
004222dc 929=head2 Books
930
931=over 4
932
933=item The Art of the MetaObject Protocol
934
935I mention this in the L<Class::MOP> docs too, this book was critical in
936the development of both modules and is highly recommended.
937
938=back
939
26fbace8 940=head2 Papers
c84f324f 941
942=over 4
e90c03d0 943
159da176 944=item L<http://www.cs.utah.edu/plt/publications/oopsla04-gff.pdf>
945
26fbace8 946This paper (suggested by lbr on #moose) was what lead to the implementation
947of the C<super>/C<override> and C<inner>/C<augment> features. If you really
1cd45431 948want to understand them, I suggest you read this.
159da176 949
e90c03d0 950=back
951
fcd84ca9 952=head1 BUGS
953
26fbace8 954All complex software has bugs lurking in it, and this module is no
fcd84ca9 955exception. If you find a bug please either email me, or add the bug
956to cpan-RT.
957
47b19570 958=head1 FEATURE REQUESTS
959
960We are very strict about what features we add to the Moose core, especially
961the user-visible features. Instead we have made sure that the underlying
962meta-system of Moose is as extensible as possible so that you can add your
963own features easily. That said, occasionally there is a feature needed in the
964meta-system to support your planned extension, in which case you should
965either email the mailing list or join us on irc at #moose to discuss.
966
fcd84ca9 967=head1 AUTHOR
968
969Stevan Little E<lt>stevan@iinteractive.comE<gt>
970
9af1d28b 971B<with contributions from:>
db1ab48d 972
9af1d28b 973Aankhen
974
975Adam (Alias) Kennedy
976
977Anders (Debolaz) Nor Berle
978
5868294f 979Nathan (kolibre) Gray
980
9af1d28b 981Christian (chansen) Hansen
982
e7f8d0c2 983Hans Dieter (confound) Pearcey
984
9af1d28b 985Eric (ewilhelm) Wilhelm
986
987Guillermo (groditi) Roditi
988
989Jess (castaway) Robinson
990
991Matt (mst) Trout
992
993Robert (phaylon) Sedlacek
994
995Robert (rlb3) Boone
996
997Scott (konobi) McWhirter
998
f44ae52f 999Shlomi (rindolf) Fish
1000
9af1d28b 1001Yuval (nothingmuch) Kogman
1002
cbe25729 1003Chris (perigrin) Prather
1004
68b6146c 1005Wallace (wreis) Reis
1006
e46f5cc2 1007Jonathan (jrockway) Rockway
1008
abfdc2b4 1009Dave (autarch) Rolsky
1010
3ccdc84a 1011Piotr (dexter) Roszatycki
1012
26fbace8 1013Sam (mugwump) Vilain
f1917f58 1014
ac211120 1015Shawn (sartak) Moore
1016
9af1d28b 1017... and many other #moose folks
98aae381 1018
fcd84ca9 1019=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
1020
778db3ac 1021Copyright 2006-2008 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
fcd84ca9 1022
1023L<http://www.iinteractive.com>
1024
1025This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
26fbace8 1026it under the same terms as Perl itself.
fcd84ca9 1027
ddd0ec20 1028=cut