NAME¶
Params::Coerce - Allows your classes to do coercion of parameters
SYNOPSIS¶
# Coerce a object of class Foo to a Bar
my $bar = Params::Coerce::coerce('Bar', $Foo)
# Create a coercion param function
use Params::Coerce '_Bar' => 'Bar';
my $bar = _Bar($Foo);
# Usage when Bar has a 'from' method
my $bar = Bar->from($Foo);
Real world example using HTML::Location.
# My class needs a URI
package Web::Spider;
use URI;
use Params::Coerce 'coerce';
sub new {
my $class = shift;
# Where do we start spidering
my $start = coerce('URI', shift) or die "Wasn't passed a URI";
bless { root => $start }, $class;
}
#############################################
# Now we can do the following
# Pass a URI as normal
my $URI = URI->new('http://ali.as/');
my $Spider1 = Web::Spider->new( $URI );
# We can also pass anything that can be coerced into being a URI
my $Website = HTML::Location->new( '/home/adam/public_html', 'http://ali.as' );
my $Spider2 = Web::Spider->new( $Website );
DESCRIPTION¶
A big part of good API design is that we should be able to be flexible in the
ways that we take parameters.
Params::Coerce attempts to encourage this, by making it easier to take a variety
of different arguments, while adding negligable additional complexity to your
code.
What is Coercion¶
"Coercion" in computing terms generally referse to "implicit type
conversion". This is where data and object are converted from one type to
another behind the scenes, and you just just magically get what you need.
The overload pragma, and its string overloading is the form of coercion you are
most likely to have encountered in Perl programming. In this case, your object
is automatically (within perl itself) coerced into a string.
"Params::Coerce" is intended for higher-order coercion between various
types of different objects, for use mainly in subroutine and (mostly) method
parameters, particularly on external APIs.
__as_Another_Class Methods¶
At the heart of "Params::Coerce" is the ability to transform objects
from one thing to another. This can be done by a variety of different
mechanisms.
The prefered mechanism for this is by creating a specially named method in a
class that indicates it can be coerced into another type of object.
As an example, HTML::Location provides an object method that returns an
equivalent URI object.
# In the package HTML::Location
# Coerce to a URI
sub __as_URI {
my $self = shift;
return URI->new( $self->uri );
}
__from_Another_Class Methods¶
From version 0.04 of "Params::Coerce", you may now also provide
__from_Another_Class methods as well. In the above example, rather then having
to define a method in HTML::Location, you may instead define one in URI. The
following code has an identical effect.
# In the package URI
# Coerce from a HTML::Location
sub __from_HTML_Location {
my $Location = shift;
return URI->new( $Location->uri );
}
"Params::Coerce" will only look for the __from method, if it does not
find a __as method.
Loading Classes¶
One thing to note with the "__as_Another_Class" methods is that you
are
not required to load the class you are converting to in the class
you are converting from.
In the above example, HTML::Location does
not have to load the URI class.
The need to load the classes for every object we might some day need to be
coerced to would result in highly excessive resource usage.
Instead, "Params::Coerce" guarentees that the class you are converting
to "will" be loaded before it calls the __as_Another_Class method.
Of course, in most situations you will have already loaded it for another
purpose in either the From or To classes and this won't be an issue.
If you make use of some class
other than the class you are being coerced
to in the __as_Another_Class method, you will need to make sure that is loaded
in your code, but it is suggested that you do it at run-time with a
"require" if you are not using it already elsewhere.
Coercing a Parameter¶
The most explicit way of accessing the coercion functionality is with the
Params::Coerce::coerce function. It takes as its first argument the name of
the class you wish to coerce
to, followed by the parameter to which you
wish to apply the coercion.
package My::Class;
use URI ();
use Params::Coerce '_URI' => 'URI';
sub new {
my $class = shift;
# Take a URI argument
my $URI = Params::Coerce::coerce('URI', shift) or return;
...
}
For people doing procedural programming, you may also import this function.
# Import the coerce function
use Params::Coerce 'coerce';
Please note thatThe "coerce|Params::Coerce" function is the
only function that can be imported, and that the two argument pragma
(or the passing of two or more arguments to ->import) means something
different entirely.
Importing Parameter Coercion Methods¶
The second way of using Params::Coerce, and the more common one for
Object-Oriented programming, is to create method specifically for taking
parameters in a coercing manner.
package My::Class;
use URI ();
use Params::Coerce '_URI' => 'URI';
sub new {
my $class = shift;
# Take a URI as parameter
my $URI1 = $class->_URI(shift) or return;
my $URI2 = _URI(shift) or return;
...
}
The "from" Constructor¶
From version 0.11 of "Params::Coerce", an additional mechanism is
available with the importable "from" constructor.
package My::Class;
use Params::Coerce 'from';
package Other::Class;
sub method {
my $self = shift;
my $My = My::Class->from(shift) or die "Bad param";
...
}
This is mainly a convenience. The above is equivalent to
package My::Class;
use Params::Coerce 'from' => 'Params::Coerce';
In future versions, this "->from" syntax may also tweak the
resolution order of the coercion.
Chained Coercion¶
While it is intended that Params::Coerce will eventually support coercion using
multiple steps, like
"<Foo::Bar-"__as_HTML_Location->__as_URI>>, it is not
currently capable of this. At this time only a single coercion step is
supported.
FUNCTIONS¶
coerce $class, $param¶
The "coerce" function takes a class name and a single parameter and
attempts to coerce the parameter into the intended class, or one of its
subclasses.
Please note that it is the responsibility of the consuming class to ensure that
the class you wish to coerce to is loaded. "coerce" will check this
and die is it is not loaded.
Returns an instance of the class you specify, or one of its subclasses. Returns
"undef" if the parameter cannot be coerced into the class you wish.
TO DO¶
- Write more unit tests
- Implement chained coercion
- Provide a way to coerce to string, int, etc that is compatible with overload
and other types of things.
SUPPORT¶
Bugs should always be submitted via the CPAN bug tracker
<
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Param-Coerce>
For other issues, contact the maintainer
AUTHORS¶
Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright 2004 - 2006 Adam Kennedy.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.
The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this
module.