Moose::Cookbook::Extending::Mooseish_MooseSugar

NAME
VERSION
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
USING MyApp::Mooseish
CONCLUSION
AUTHORS
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE


NAME

Moose::Cookbook::Extending::Mooseish_MooseSugar − Acting like Moose.pm and providing sugar Moose−style

VERSION

version 2.2014

SYNOPSIS

package MyApp::Mooseish;
use Moose::Exporter;
Moose::Exporter−>setup_import_methods(
with_meta => [‘has_table’],
class_metaroles => {
class => [‘MyApp::Meta::Class::Trait::HasTable’],
},
);
sub has_table {
my $meta = shift;
$meta−>table(shift);
}
package MyApp::Meta::Class::Trait::HasTable;
use Moose::Role;
has table => (
is => ‘rw’,
isa => ‘Str’,
);

DESCRIPTION

This recipe expands on the use of Moose::Exporter we saw in Moose::Cookbook::Extending::ExtensionOverview and the class metaclass trait we saw in Moose::Cookbook::Meta::Table_MetaclassTrait. In this example we provide our own metaclass trait, and we also export a “has_table” sugar function.

The “with_meta” parameter specifies a list of functions that should be wrapped before exporting. The wrapper simply ensures that the importing package’s appropriate metaclass object is the first argument to the function, so we can do “my $meta = shift;”.

See the Moose::Exporter docs for more details on its API.

USING MyApp::Mooseish

The purpose of all this code is to provide a Moose-like interface. Here’s what it would look like in actual use:

package MyApp::User;
use namespace::autoclean;
use Moose;
use MyApp::Mooseish;
has_table ‘User’;
has ‘username’ => ( is => ‘ro’ );
has ‘password’ => ( is => ‘ro’ );
sub login { … }

CONCLUSION

Providing sugar functions can make your extension look much more Moose-ish. See Fey::ORM for a more extensive example.

AUTHORS

Stevan Little

Dave Rolsky

Jesse Luehrs

Shawn M Moore

×××× ×§××’×× (Yuval Kogman)

Karen Etheridge

Florian Ragwitz

Hans Dieter Pearcey

Chris Prather

Matt S Trout

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2006 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.