1MooseX::Types(3)      User Contributed Perl Documentation     MooseX::Types(3)
2
3
4

NAME

6       MooseX::Types - Organise your Moose types in libraries
7

SYNOPSIS

9   Library Definition
10         package MyLibrary;
11
12         # predeclare our own types
13         use MooseX::Types
14           -declare => [qw(
15               PositiveInt NegativeInt
16               ArrayRefOfPositiveInt ArrayRefOfAtLeastThreeNegativeInts
17               LotsOfInnerConstraints StrOrArrayRef
18               MyDateTime
19           )];
20
21         # import builtin types
22         use MooseX::Types::Moose qw/Int HashRef/;
23
24         # type definition.
25         subtype PositiveInt,
26             as Int,
27             where { $_ > 0 },
28             message { "Int is not larger than 0" };
29
30         subtype NegativeInt,
31             as Int,
32             where { $_ < 0 },
33             message { "Int is not smaller than 0" };
34
35         # type coercion
36         coerce PositiveInt,
37             from Int,
38                 via { 1 };
39
40         # with parameterized constraints.
41
42         subtype ArrayRefOfPositiveInt,
43           as ArrayRef[PositiveInt];
44
45         subtype ArrayRefOfAtLeastThreeNegativeInts,
46           as ArrayRef[NegativeInt],
47           where { scalar(@$_) > 2 };
48
49         subtype LotsOfInnerConstraints,
50           as ArrayRef[ArrayRef[HashRef[Int]]];
51
52         # with TypeConstraint Unions
53
54         subtype StrOrArrayRef,
55           as Str|ArrayRef;
56
57         # class types
58
59         class_type 'DateTime';
60
61         # or better
62
63         class_type MyDateTime, { class => 'DateTime' };
64
65         coerce MyDateTime,
66           from HashRef,
67           via { DateTime->new(%$_) };
68
69         1;
70
71   Usage
72         package Foo;
73         use Moose;
74         use MyLibrary qw( PositiveInt NegativeInt );
75
76         # use the exported constants as type names
77         has 'bar',
78             isa    => PositiveInt,
79             is     => 'rw';
80         has 'baz',
81             isa    => NegativeInt,
82             is     => 'rw';
83
84         sub quux {
85             my ($self, $value);
86
87             # test the value
88             print "positive\n" if is_PositiveInt($value);
89             print "negative\n" if is_NegativeInt($value);
90
91             # coerce the value, NegativeInt doesn't have a coercion
92             # helper, since it didn't define any coercions.
93             $value = to_PositiveInt($value) or die "Cannot coerce";
94         }
95
96         1;
97

DESCRIPTION

99       The types provided with Moose are by design global. This package helps
100       you to organise and selectively import your own and the built-in types
101       in libraries. As a nice side effect, it catches typos at compile-time
102       too.
103
104       However, the main reason for this module is to provide an easy way to
105       not have conflicts with your type names, since the internal fully
106       qualified names of the types will be prefixed with the library's name.
107
108       This module will also provide you with some helper functions to make it
109       easier to use Moose types in your code.
110
111       String type names will produce a warning, unless it's for a
112       "class_type" or "role_type" declared within the library, or a fully
113       qualified name like 'MyTypeLibrary::Foo'.
114

TYPE HANDLER FUNCTIONS

116   $type
117       A constant with the name of your type. It contains the type's fully
118       qualified name. Takes no value, as all constants.
119
120   is_$type
121       This handler takes a value and tests if it is a valid value for this
122       $type. It will return true or false.
123
124   to_$type
125       A handler that will take a value and coerce it into the $type. It will
126       return a false value if the type could not be coerced.
127
128       Important Note: This handler will only be exported for types that can
129       do type coercion. This has the advantage that a coercion to a type that
130       cannot hasn't defined any coercions will lead to a compile-time error.
131

LIBRARY DEFINITION

133       A MooseX::Types is just a normal Perl module. Unlike Moose itself, it
134       does not install "use strict" and "use warnings" in your class by
135       default, so this is up to you.
136
137       The only thing a library is required to do is
138
139         use MooseX::Types -declare => \@types;
140
141       with @types being a list of types you wish to define in this library.
142       This line will install a proper base class in your package as well as
143       the full set of handlers for your declared types. It will then hand
144       control over to Moose::Util::TypeConstraints' "import" method to export
145       the functions you will need to declare your types.
146
147       If you want to use Moose' built-in types (e.g. for subtyping) you will
148       want to
149
150         use MooseX::Types::Moose @types;
151
152       to import the helpers from the shipped MooseX::Types::Moose library
153       which can export all types that come with Moose.
154
155       You will have to define coercions for your types or your library won't
156       export a "to_$type" coercion helper for it.
157
158       Note that you currently cannot define types containing "::", since
159       exporting would be a problem.
160
161       You also don't need to use "warnings" and "strict", since the
162       definition of a library automatically exports those.
163

LIBRARY USAGE

165       You can import the "type helpers" of a library by "use"ing it with a
166       list of types to import as arguments. If you want all of them, use the
167       ":all" tag. For example:
168
169         use MyLibrary      ':all';
170         use MyOtherLibrary qw( TypeA TypeB );
171
172       MooseX::Types comes with a library of Moose' built-in types called
173       MooseX::Types::Moose.
174
175       The exporting mechanism is, since version 0.5, implemented via a
176       wrapper around Sub::Exporter. This means you can do something like
177       this:
178
179         use MyLibrary TypeA => { -as => 'MyTypeA' },
180                       TypeB => { -as => 'MyTypeB' };
181

WRAPPING A LIBRARY

183       You can define your own wrapper subclasses to manipulate the behaviour
184       of a set of library exports. Here is an example:
185
186         package MyWrapper;
187         use strict;
188         use MRO::Compat;
189         use base 'MooseX::Types::Wrapper';
190
191         sub coercion_export_generator {
192             my $class = shift;
193             my $code = $class->next::method(@_);
194             return sub {
195                 my $value = $code->(@_);
196                 warn "Coercion returned undef!"
197                     unless defined $value;
198                 return $value;
199             };
200         }
201
202         1;
203
204       This class wraps the coercion generator (e.g., "to_Int()") and warns if
205       a coercion returned an undefined value. You can wrap any library with
206       this:
207
208         package Foo;
209         use strict;
210         use MyWrapper MyLibrary => [qw( Foo Bar )],
211                       Moose     => [qw( Str Int )];
212
213         ...
214         1;
215
216       The "Moose" library name is a special shortcut for
217       MooseX::Types::Moose.
218
219   Generator methods you can overload
220       type_export_generator( $short, $full )
221           Creates a closure returning the type's Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint
222           object.
223
224       check_export_generator( $short, $full, $undef_message )
225           This creates the closure used to test if a value is valid for this
226           type.
227
228       coercion_export_generator( $short, $full, $undef_message )
229           This is the closure that's doing coercions.
230
231   Provided Parameters
232       $short
233           The short, exported name of the type.
234
235       $full
236           The fully qualified name of this type as Moose knows it.
237
238       $undef_message
239           A message that will be thrown when type functionality is used but
240           the type does not yet exist.
241

RECURSIVE SUBTYPES

243       As of version 0.08, Moose::Types has experimental support for Recursive
244       subtypes.  This will allow:
245
246           subtype Tree() => as HashRef[Str|Tree];
247
248       Which validates things like:
249
250           {key=>'value'};
251           {key=>{subkey1=>'value', subkey2=>'value'}}
252
253       And so on.  This feature is new and there may be lurking bugs so don't
254       be afraid to hunt me down with patches and test cases if you have
255       trouble.
256

NOTES REGARDING TYPE UNIONS

258       MooseX::Types uses MooseX::Types::TypeDecorator to do some overloading
259       which generally allows you to easily create union types:
260
261         subtype StrOrArrayRef,
262           as Str|ArrayRef;
263
264       As with parameterized constrains, this overloading extends to modules
265       using the types you define in a type library.
266
267           use Moose;
268           use MooseX::Types::Moose qw(HashRef Int);
269
270           has 'attr' => (isa=>HashRef|Int);
271
272       And everything should just work as you'd think.
273

METHODS

275   import
276       Installs the MooseX::Types::Base class into the caller and exports
277       types according to the specification described in "LIBRARY DEFINITION".
278       This will continue to Moose::Util::TypeConstraints' "import" method to
279       export helper functions you will need to declare your types.
280
281   type_export_generator
282       Generate a type export, e.g. "Int()". This will return either a
283       Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint object, or alternatively a
284       MooseX::Types::UndefinedType object if the type was not yet defined.
285
286   create_arged_type_constraint ($name, @args)
287       Given a String $name with @args find the matching typeconstraint and
288       parameterize it with @args.
289
290   create_base_type_constraint ($name)
291       Given a String $name, find the matching typeconstraint.
292
293   create_type_decorator ($type_constraint)
294       Given a $type_constraint, return a lightweight
295       MooseX::Types::TypeDecorator instance.
296
297   coercion_export_generator
298       This generates a coercion handler function, e.g. "to_Int($value)".
299
300   check_export_generator
301       Generates a constraint check closure, e.g. "is_Int($value)".
302

CAVEATS

304       The following are lists of gotcha's and their workarounds for
305       developers coming from the standard string based type constraint names
306
307   Uniqueness
308       A library makes the types quasi-unique by prefixing their names with
309       (by default) the library package name. If you're only using the type
310       handler functions provided by MooseX::Types, you shouldn't ever have to
311       use a type's actual full name.
312
313   Argument separation ('=>' versus ',')
314       The Perlop manpage has this to say about the '=>' operator: "The =>
315       operator is a synonym for the comma, but forces any word (consisting
316       entirely of word characters) to its left to be interpreted as a string
317       (as of 5.001). This includes words that might otherwise be considered a
318       constant or function call."
319
320       Due to this stringification, the following will NOT work as you might
321       think:
322
323         subtype StrOrArrayRef => as Str|ArrayRef;
324
325       The 'StrOrArrayRef' will have it's stringification activated this
326       causes the subtype to not be created.  Since the bareword type
327       constraints are not strings you really should not try to treat them
328       that way.  You will have to use the ',' operator instead.  The author's
329       of this package realize that all the Moose documention and examples
330       nearly uniformly use the '=>' version of the comma operator and this
331       could be an issue if you are converting code.
332
333       Patches welcome for discussion.
334
335   Compatibility with Sub::Exporter
336       If you want to use Sub::Exporter with a Type Library, you need to make
337       sure you export all the type constraints declared AS WELL AS any
338       additional export targets. For example if you do:
339
340           package TypeAndSubExporter; {
341
342               use MooseX::Types::Moose qw(Str);
343               use MooseX::Types -declare => [qw(MyStr)];
344               use Sub::Exporter -setup => { exports => [ qw(something) ] };
345
346               subtype MyStr,
347                as Str;
348
349               sub something {
350                   return 1;
351               }
352
353           } 1;
354
355           package Foo; {
356               use TypeAndSubExporter qw(MyStr);
357           } 1;
358
359       You'll get a '"MyStr" is not exported by the TypeAndSubExporter module'
360       error.  Upi can workaround by:
361
362               - use Sub::Exporter -setup => { exports => [ qw(something) ] };
363               + use Sub::Exporter -setup => { exports => [ qw(something MyStr) ] };
364
365       This is a workaround and I am exploring how to make these modules work
366       better together.  I realize this workaround will lead a lot of
367       duplication in your export declarations and will be onerous for large
368       type libraries.  Patches and detailed test cases welcome. See the tests
369       directory for a start on this.
370

SEE ALSO

372       Moose, Moose::Util::TypeConstraints, MooseX::Types::Moose,
373       Sub::Exporter
374

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

376       Many thanks to the "#moose" cabal on "irc.perl.org".
377

AUTHOR

379       Robert "phaylon" Sedlacek <rs@474.at>
380

CONTRIBUTORS

382       jnapiorkowski: John Napiorkowski <jjnapiork@cpan.org>
383
384       caelum: Rafael Kitover <rkitover@cpan.org>
385
386       rafl: Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>
387
388       hdp: Hans Dieter Pearcey <hdp@cpan.org>
389
390       autarch: Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>
391
393       Copyright (c) 2007-2009 Robert Sedlacek <rs@474.at>
394
395       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
396       under the same terms as perl itself.
397
398
399
400perl v5.12.1                      2010-06-01                  MooseX::Types(3)
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