MooseX::Method::Signatures.3pm

Langue: en

Version: 2010-07-19 (fedora - 01/12/10)

Section: 3 (Bibliothèques de fonctions)

NAME

MooseX::Method::Signatures - Method declarations with type constraints and no source filter

SYNOPSIS

     package Foo;
 
     use Moose;
     use MooseX::Method::Signatures;
 
     method morning (Str $name) {
         $self->say("Good morning ${name}!");
     }
 
     method hello (Str :$who, Int :$age where { $_ > 0 }) {
         $self->say("Hello ${who}, I am ${age} years old!");
     }
 
     method greet (Str $name, Bool :$excited = 0) {
         if ($excited) {
             $self->say("GREETINGS ${name}!");
         }
         else {
             $self->say("Hi ${name}!");
         }
     }
 
     $foo->morning('Resi');                          # This works.
 
     $foo->hello(who => 'world', age => 42);         # This too.
 
     $foo->greet('Resi', excited => 1);              # And this as well.
 
     $foo->hello(who => 'world', age => 'fortytwo'); # This doesn't.
 
     $foo->hello(who => 'world', age => -23);        # This neither.
 
     $foo->morning;                                  # Won't work.
 
     $foo->greet;                                    # Will fail.
 
 

DESCRIPTION

Provides a proper method keyword, like ``sub'' but specifically for making methods and validating their arguments against Moose type constraints.

SIGNATURE SYNTAX

The signature syntax is heavily based on Perl 6. However not the full Perl 6 signature syntax is supported yet and some of it never will be.

Type Constraints

     method foo (             $affe) # no type checking
     method bar (Animal       $affe) # $affe->isa('Animal')
     method baz (Animal|Human $affe) # $affe->isa('Animal') || $affe->isa('Human')
 
 

Positional vs. Named

     method foo ( $a,  $b,  $c) # positional
     method bar (:$a, :$b, :$c) # named
     method baz ( $a,  $b, :$c) # combined
 
 

Required vs. Optional

     method foo ($a , $b!, :$c!, :$d!) # required
     method bar ($a?, $b?, :$c , :$d?) # optional
 
 

Defaults

     method foo ($a = 42) # defaults to 42
 
 

Constraints

     method foo ($foo where { $_ % 2 == 0 }) # only even
 
 

Invocant

     method foo (        $moo) # invocant is called $self and is required
     method bar ($self:  $moo) # same, but explicit
     method baz ($class: $moo) # invocant is called $class
 
 

Labels

     method foo (:     $affe ) # called as $obj->foo(affe => $value)
     method bar (:apan($affe)) # called as $obj->foo(apan => $value)
 
 

Traits

     method foo (Affe $bar does trait)
     method foo (Affe $bar is trait)
 
 

The only currently supported trait is "coerce", which will attempt to coerce the value provided if it doesn't satisfy the requirements of the type constraint.

Placeholders

     method foo ($bar, $, $baz)
 
 

Sometimes you don't care about some params you're being called with. Just put the bare sigil instead of a full variable name into the signature to avoid an extra lexical variable to be created.

Complex Example

     method foo ( SomeClass $thing where { $_->can('stuff') }:
                  Str  $bar  = "apan",
                  Int :$baz! = 42 where { $_ % 2 == 0 } where { $_ > 10 } )
 
     # the invocant is called $thing, must be an instance of SomeClass and
            has to implement a 'stuff' method
     # $bar is positional, required, must be a string and defaults to "apan"
     # $baz is named, required, must be an integer, defaults to 42 and needs
     #      to be even and greater than 10
 
 

BUGS, CAVEATS AND NOTES

This module is as stable now, but this is not to say that it is entirely bug free. If you notice any odd behaviour (messages not being as good as they could for example) then please raise a bug.

Fancy signatures

Parse::Method::Signatures is used to parse the signatures. However, some signatures that can be parsed by it aren't supported by this module (yet).

No source filter

While this module does rely on the hairy black magic of Devel::Declare it does not depend on a source filter. As such, it doesn't try to parse and rewrite your source code and there should be no weird side effects.

Devel::Declare only effects compilation. After that, it's a normal subroutine. As such, for all that hairy magic, this module is surprisingly stable.

What about regular subroutines?

Devel::Declare cannot yet change the way "sub" behaves. However, the signatures module can. Right now it only provides very basic signatures, but it's extendable enough that plugging MooseX::Method::Signatures signatures into that should be quite possible.

What about the return value?

Type constraints for return values can be declared using
   method foo (Int $x, Str $y) returns (Bool) { ... }
 
 

however, this feature only works with scalar return values and is still considered to be experimental.

Interaction with Moose::Role

Methods not seen by a role's "requires"

Because the processing of the MooseX::Method::Signatures "method" and the Moose "with" keywords are both done at runtime, it can happen that a role will require a method before it is declared (which will cause Moose to complain very loudly and abort the program).

For example, the following will not work:

     # in file Canine.pm
 
     package Canine;
 
     use Moose;
     use MooseX::Method::Signatures;
 
     with 'Watchdog';
 
     method bark { print "Woof!\n"; }
 
     1;
 
 
     # in file Watchdog.pm
 
     package Watchdog;
 
     use Moose::Role;
 
     requires 'bark';  # will assert! evaluated before 'method' is processed
 
     sub warn_intruder {
         my $self = shift;
         my $intruder = shift;
 
         $self->bark until $intruder->gone;
     }
 
     1;
 
 

A workaround for this problem is to use "with" only after the methods have been defined. To take our previous example, Canine could be reworked thus:

     package Canine;
 
     use Moose;
     use MooseX::Method::Signatures;
 
     method bark { print "Woof!\n"; }
 
     with 'Watchdog';
 
     1;
 
 

A better solution is to use MooseX::Declare instead of plain MooseX::Method::Signatures. It defers application of roles until the end of the class definition. With it, our example would becomes:

     # in file Canine.pm
 
     use MooseX::Declare;
 
     class Canine with Watchdog {
         method bark { print "Woof!\n"; }
     }
 
     1;
 
     # in file Watchdog.pm
 
     use MooseX::Declare;
 
     role Watchdog {
         requires 'bark';
 
         method warn_intruder ( $intruder ) {
             $self->bark until $intruder->gone;
         }
     }
 
     1;
 
 

Subroutine redefined warnings

When composing a Moose::Role into a class that uses MooseX::Method::Signatures, you may get a ``Subroutine redefined'' warning. This happens when both the role and the class define a method/subroutine of the same name. (The way roles work, the one defined in the class takes precedence.) To eliminate this warning, make sure that your "with" declaration happens after any method/subroutine declarations that may have the same name as a method/subroutine within a role.

SEE ALSO

MooseX::Declare

Method::Signatures::Simple

Method::Signatures

Perl6::Subs

Devel::Declare

Parse::Method::Signatures

Moose

AUTHORS

*
Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>
*
Ash Berlin <ash@cpan.org>
*
Cory Watson <gphat@cpan.org>
*
Daniel Ruoso <daniel@ruoso.com>
*
Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>
*
Hakim Cassimally <hakim.cassimally@gmail.com>
*
Jonathan Scott Duff <duff@pobox.com>
*
Justin Hunter <justin.d.hunter@gmail.com>
*
Kent Fredric <kentfredric@gmail.com>
*
Maik Hentsche <maik.hentsche@amd.com>
*
Matt Kraai <kraai@ftbfs.org>
*
Rhesa Rozendaal <rhesa@cpan.org>
*
Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@cpan.org>
*
Steffen Schwigon <ss5@renormalist.net>
*
Yanick Champoux <yanick@babyl.dyndns.org>
*
Nicholas Perez <nperez@cpan.org>
This software is copyright (c) 2010 by Florian Ragwitz.

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