NAME¶
Type::Params - Params::Validate-like parameter validation using Type::Tiny type
constraints and coercions
SYNOPSIS¶
use v5.10;
use strict;
use warnings;
use Type::Params qw( compile );
use Types::Standard qw( slurpy Str ArrayRef Num );
sub deposit_monies
{
state $check = compile( Str, Str, slurpy ArrayRef[Num] );
my ($sort_code, $account_number, $monies) = $check->(@_);
my $account = Local::BankAccount->new($sort_code, $account_number);
$account->deposit($_) for @$monies;
}
deposit_monies("12-34-56", "11223344", 1.2, 3, 99.99);
STATUS¶
This module is covered by the Type-Tiny stability policy.
DESCRIPTION¶
Type::Params uses Type::Tiny constraints to validate the parameters to a sub. It
takes the slightly unorthodox approach of separating validation into two
stages:
- 1.
- Compiling the parameter specification into a coderef; then
- 2.
- Using the coderef to validate parameters.
The first stage is slow (it might take a couple of milliseconds), but you only
need to do it the first time the sub is called. The second stage is fast;
according to my benchmarks faster even than the XS version of
Params::Validate.
If you're using a modern version of Perl, you can use the "state"
keyword which was a feature added to Perl in 5.10. If you're stuck on Perl
5.8, the example from the SYNOPSIS could be rewritten as:
my $deposit_monies_check;
sub deposit_monies
{
$deposit_monies_check ||= compile( Str, Str, slurpy ArrayRef[Num] );
my ($sort_code, $account_number, $monies) = $check->(@_);
...;
}
Not quite as neat, but not awful either.
There's a shortcut reducing it to one step:
use Type::Params qw( validate );
sub deposit_monies
{
my ($sort_code, $account_number, $monies) =
validate( \@_, Str, Str, slurpy ArrayRef[Num] );
...;
}
Type::Params has a few tricks up its sleeve to make sure performance doesn't
suffer too much with the shortcut, but it's never going to be as fast as the
two stage compile/execute.
COOKBOOK¶
Positional Parameters¶
sub nth_root
{
state $check = compile( Num, Num );
my ($x, $n) = $check->(@_);
return $x ** (1 / $n);
}
Method Calls¶
Type::Params exports an additional keyword "Invocant" on request. This
is a type constraint accepting blessed objects and also class names.
use Types::Standard qw( ClassName Object Str Int );
use Type::Params qw( compile Invocant );
# a class method
sub new_from_json
{
state $check = compile( ClassName, Str );
my ($class, $json) = $check->(@_);
$class->new( from_json($json) );
}
# an object method
sub dump
{
state $check = compile( Object, Int );
my ($self, $limit) = $check->(@_);
local $Data::Dumper::Maxdepth = $limit;
print Data::Dumper::Dumper($self);
}
# can be called as either and object or class method
sub run
{
state $check = compile( Invocant );
my ($proto) = $check->(@_);
my $self = ref($proto) ? $proto : $default_instance;
$self->_run;
}
Optional Parameters¶
use Types::Standard qw( Object Optional Int );
sub dump
{
state $check = compile( Object, Optional[Int] );
my ($self, $limit) = $check->(@_);
$limit //= 0;
local $Data::Dumper::Maxdepth = $limit;
print Data::Dumper::Dumper($self);
}
$obj->dump(1); # ok
$obj->dump(); # ok
$obj->dump(undef); # dies
Slurpy Parameters¶
use Types::Standard qw( slurpy ClassName HashRef );
sub new
{
state $check = compile( ClassName, slurpy HashRef );
my ($class, $ref) = $check->(@_);
bless $ref => $class;
}
__PACKAGE__->new(foo => 1, bar => 2);
The following types from Types::Standard can be made slurpy:
"ArrayRef", "Tuple", "HashRef", "Map",
"Dict". Hash-like types will die if an odd number of elements are
slurped in.
A check may only have one slurpy parameter, and it must be the last parameter.
Named Parameters¶
Just use a slurpy "Dict":
use Types::Standard qw( slurpy Dict Ref Optional Int );
sub dump
{
state $check = compile(
slurpy Dict[
var => Ref,
limit => Optional[Int],
],
);
my ($arg) = $check->(@_);
local $Data::Dumper::Maxdepth = $arg->{limit};
print Data::Dumper::Dumper($arg->{var});
}
dump(var => $foo, limit => 1); # ok
dump(var => $foo); # ok
dump(limit => 1); # dies
Mixed Positional and Named Parameters¶
use Types::Standard qw( slurpy Dict Ref Optional Int );
sub my_print
{
state $check = compile(
Str,
slurpy Dict[
colour => Optional[Str],
size => Optional[Int],
],
);
my ($string, $arg) = $check->(@_);
}
my_print("Hello World", colour => "blue");
Coercions¶
Coercions will automatically be applied for
all type constraints that
have a coercion associated.
use Type::Utils;
use Types::Standard qw( Int Num );
my $RoundedInt = declare as Int;
coerce $RoundedInt, from Num, q{ int($_) };
sub set_age
{
state $check = compile( Object, $RoundedInt );
my ($self, $age) = $check->(@_);
$self->{age} = $age;
}
$obj->set_age(32.5); # ok; coerced to "32".
Coercions carry over into structured types such as "ArrayRef"
automatically:
sub delete_articles
{
state $check = compile( Object, slurpy ArrayRef[$RoundedInt] );
my ($db, $articles) = $check->(@_);
$db->select_article($_)->delete for @$articles;
}
# delete articles 1, 2 and 3
delete_articles($my_db, 1.1, 2.2, 3.3);
If type "Foo" has coercions from "Str" and
"ArrayRef" and you want to
prevent coercion, then use:
state $check = compile( Foo->no_coercions );
Or if you just want to prevent coercion from "Str", use:
state $check = compile( Foo->minus_coercions(Str) );
Or maybe add an extra coercion:
state $check = compile(
Foo->plus_coercions(Int, q{ Foo->new_from_number($_) }),
);
Note that the coercion is specified as a string of Perl code. This is usually
the fastest way to do it, but a coderef is also accepted. Either way, the
value to be coerced is $_.
Alternatives¶
Type::Params can export a "multisig" function that compiles multiple
alternative signatures into one, and uses the first one that works:
state $check = multisig(
[ Int, ArrayRef ],
[ HashRef, Num ],
[ CodeRef ],
);
my ($int, $arrayref) = $check->( 1, [] );
my ($hashref, $num) = $check->( {}, 1.1 );
my ($code) = $check->( sub { 1 } );
$check->( sub { 1 }, 1.1 ); # throws an exception
Coercions, slurpy parameters, etc still work.
There's currently no indication of which of the multiple signatures succeeded.
The present implementation involves compiling each signature independently, and
trying them each (in their given order!) in an "eval" block. The
only slightly intelligent part is that it checks if "scalar(@_)"
fits into the signature properly (taking into account optional and slurpy
parameters), and skips evals which couldn't possibly succeed.
It's also possible to list coderefs as alternatives in "multisig":
state $check = multisig(
[ Int, ArrayRef ],
sub { ... },
[ HashRef, Num ],
[ CodeRef ],
);
The coderef is expected to die if that alternative should be abandoned (and the
next alternative tried), or return the list of accepted parameters. Here's a
full example:
sub get_from {
state $check = multisig(
[ Int, ArrayRef ],
[ Str, HashRef ],
sub {
my ($meth, $obj);
die unless is_Object($obj);
die unless $obj->can($meth);
return ($meth, $obj);
},
);
my ($needle, $haystack) = $check->(@_);
is_HashRef($haystack) ? $haystack->{$needle} :
is_ArrayRef($haystack) ? $haystack->[$needle] :
is_Object($haystack) ? $haystack->$needle :
die;
}
get_from(0, \@array); # returns $array[0]
get_from('foo', \%hash); # returns $hash{foo}
get_from('foo', $obj); # returns $obj->foo
COMPARISON WITH PARAMS::VALIDATE¶
Type::Params is not really a drop-in replacement for Params::Validate; the API
differs far too much to claim that. Yet it performs a similar task, so it
makes sense to compare them.
- •
- Type::Params will tend to be faster if you've got a sub which is called
repeatedly, but may be a little slower than Params::Validate for subs that
are only called a few times. This is because it does a bunch of work the
first time your sub is called to make subsequent calls a lot faster.
- •
- Type::Params is mostly geared towards positional parameters, while
Params::Validate seems to be primarily aimed at named parameters. (Though
either works for either.) Params::Validate doesn't appear to have a
particularly natural way of validating a mix of positional and named
parameters.
- •
- Type::Utils allows you to coerce parameters. For example, if you expect a
Path::Tiny object, you could coerce it from a string.
- •
- Params::Validate allows you to supply defaults for missing parameters;
Type::Params does not, but you may be able to use coercion from
Undef.
- •
- If you are primarily writing object-oriented code, using Moose or similar,
and you are using Type::Tiny type constraints for your attributes, then
using Type::Params allows you to use the same constraints for method
calls.
- •
- Type::Params comes bundled with Types::Standard, which provides a much
richer vocabulary of types than the type validation constants that come
with Params::Validate. For example, Types::Standard provides constraints
like "ArrayRef[Int]" (an arrayref of integers), while the
closest from Params::Validate is "ARRAYREF", which you'd need to
supplement with additional callbacks if you wanted to check that the
arrayref contained integers.
Whatsmore, Type::Params doesn't just work with Types::Standard, but also any
other Type::Tiny type constraints.
BUGS¶
Please report any bugs to
<
http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=Type-Tiny>.
SEE ALSO¶
Type::Tiny, Type::Coercion, Types::Standard.
AUTHOR¶
Toby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>.
COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE¶
This software is copyright (c) 2013-2014 by Toby Inkster.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTIES¶
THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.