NAME¶
Config::MVP::Assembler - multivalue-property config-loading state machine
VERSION¶
version 2.200002
DESCRIPTION¶
First, you should probably read the example of using Config::MVP. If you already
  know how it works, keep going.
Config::MVP::Assembler is a helper for constructing a Config::MVP::Sequence
  object. It's a very simple state machine that lets you signal what kind of
  events you've encountered while reading configuration.
ATTRIBUTES¶
sequence_class¶
This attribute stores the name of the class to be used for the assembler's
  sequence. It defaults to Config::MVP::Sequence.
section_class¶
This attribute stores the name of the class to be used for sections created by
  the assembler. It defaults to Config::MVP::Section.
sequence¶
This is the sequence that the assembler is assembling. It defaults to a new
  instance of the assembler's "sequence_class".
METHODS¶
begin_section¶
  $assembler->begin_section($package_moniker, $name);
  $assembler->begin_section($package_moniker);
  $assembler->begin_section( \$package );
This method tells the assembler that it should begin work on a new section with
  the given identifier. If it is already working on a section, an error will be
  raised. See "change_section" for a method to begin a new section,
  ending the current one if needed.
The package moniker is expanded by the "expand_package" method. The
  name, if not given, defaults to the package moniker. These data are used to
  create a new section and the section is added to the end of the sequence. If
  the package argument is a reference, it is used as the literal value for the
  package, and no expansion is performed. If it is a reference to undef, a
  section with no package is created.
end_section¶
  $assembler->end_section;
This ends the current section. If there is no current section, an exception is
  raised.
change_section¶
  $assembler->change_section($package_moniker, $name);
  $assembler->change_section($package_moniker);
This method calls "begin_section", first calling
  "end_section" if needed.
add_value¶
  $assembler->add_value( $name => $value );
This method tells the assembler that it has encountered a named value and should
  add it to the current section. If there is no current section, an exception is
  raised. (If this is not the first time we've seen the name in the section and
  it's not a multivalue property, the section class will raise an exception on
  its own.)
expand_package¶
This method is passed a short identifier for a package and is expected to return
  the full name of the module to load and package to interrogate. By default it
  simply returns the name it was passed, meaning that package names must be
  given whole to the "change_section" method.
current_section¶
This returns the section object onto which the assembler is currently adding
  values. If no section has yet been created, this method will return false.
TYPICAL USE¶
  my $assembler = Config::MVP::Assembler->new;
  # Maybe you want a starting section:
  my $starting_section = $assembler->section_class->new({ name => '_' });
  $assembler->sequence->add_section($section_starting);
  # We'll add some values, which will go to the starting section:
  $assembler->add_value(x => 10);
  $assembler->add_value(y => 20);
  # Change to a new section...
  $assembler->change_section($moniker);
  # ...and add values to that section.
  $assembler->add_value(x => 100);
  $assembler->add_value(y => 200);
The code above creates an assembler and populates it step by step. In the end,
  to get values, you could do something like this:
  my @output;
  for my $section ($assembler->sequence->sections) {
    push @output, [ $section->name, $section->package, $section->payload ];
  }
When changing sections, the given section "moniker" is used for the
  new section name. The result of passing that moniker to the assembler's
  "expand_package" method is used as the section's package name. (By
  default, this method does nothing.) The new section's
  "multivalue_args" and "aliases" are determined by calling
  the "mvp_multivalue_args" and "mvp_aliases" methods on the
  package.
AUTHOR¶
Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Ricardo Signes.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
  terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.