NAME¶
Mouse::Util::TypeConstraints - Type constraint system for Mouse
VERSION¶
This document describes Mouse version 0.99
SYNOPSIS¶
use Mouse::Util::TypeConstraints;
subtype 'Natural'
=> as 'Int'
=> where { $_ > 0 };
subtype 'NaturalLessThanTen'
=> as 'Natural'
=> where { $_ < 10 }
=> message { "This number ($_) is not less than ten!" };
coerce 'Num'
=> from 'Str'
=> via { 0+$_ };
enum 'RGBColors' => qw(red green blue);
no Mouse::Util::TypeConstraints;
DESCRIPTION¶
This module provides Mouse with the ability to create custom type constraints to
be used in attribute definition.
Important Caveat¶
This is
NOT a type system for Perl 5. These are type constraints, and
they are not used by Mouse unless you tell it to. No type inference is
performed, expressions are not typed, etc. etc. etc.
A type constraint is at heart a small "check if a value is valid"
function. A constraint can be associated with an attribute. This simplifies
parameter validation, and makes your code clearer to read, because you can
refer to constraints by name.
Slightly Less Important Caveat¶
It is
always a good idea to quote your type names.
This prevents Perl from trying to execute the call as an indirect object call.
This can be an issue when you have a subtype with the same name as a valid
class.
For instance:
subtype DateTime => as Object => where { $_->isa('DateTime') };
will
just work, while this:
use DateTime;
subtype DateTime => as Object => where { $_->isa('DateTime') };
will fail silently and cause many headaches. The simple way to solve this, as
well as future proof your subtypes from classes which have yet to have been
created, is to quote the type name:
use DateTime;
subtype 'DateTime' => as 'Object' => where { $_->isa('DateTime') };
Default Type Constraints¶
This module also provides a simple hierarchy for Perl 5 types, here is that
hierarchy represented visually.
Any
Item
Bool
Maybe[`a]
Undef
Defined
Value
Str
Num
Int
ClassName
RoleName
Ref
ScalarRef
ArrayRef[`a]
HashRef[`a]
CodeRef
RegexpRef
GlobRef
FileHandle
Object
NOTE: Any type followed by a type parameter "[`a]" can be
parameterized, this means you can say:
ArrayRef[Int] # an array of integers
HashRef[CodeRef] # a hash of str to CODE ref mappings
Maybe[Str] # value may be a string, may be undefined
If Mouse finds a name in brackets that it does not recognize as an existing
type, it assumes that this is a class name, for example
"ArrayRef[DateTime]".
NOTE: The "Undef" type constraint for the most part works
correctly now, but edge cases may still exist, please use it sparingly.
NOTE: The "ClassName" type constraint does a complex package
existence check. This means that your class
must be loaded for this
type constraint to pass.
NOTE: The "RoleName" constraint checks a string is a
package name which is a role, like 'MyApp::Role::Comparable'.
The "Role" constraint checks that an
object does the named
role.
Type Constraint Naming¶
Type name declared via this module can only contain alphanumeric characters,
colons (:), and periods (.).
Since the types created by this module are global, it is suggested that you
namespace your types just as you would namespace your modules. So instead of
creating a
Color type for your
My::Graphics module, you would
call the type
My::Graphics::Types::Color instead.
Use with Other Constraint Modules¶
This module can play nicely with other constraint modules with some slight
tweaking. The "where" clause in types is expected to be a
"CODE" reference which checks it's first argument and returns a
boolean. Since most constraint modules work in a similar way, it should be
simple to adapt them to work with Mouse.
For instance, this is how you could use it with Declare::Constraints::Simple to
declare a completely new type.
type 'HashOfArrayOfObjects',
{
where => IsHashRef(
-keys => HasLength,
-values => IsArrayRef(IsObject)
)
};
Here is an example of using Test::Deep and it's non-test related
"eq_deeply" function.
type 'ArrayOfHashOfBarsAndRandomNumbers'
=> where {
eq_deeply($_,
array_each(subhashof({
bar => isa('Bar'),
random_number => ignore()
})))
};
METHODS¶
"list_all_builtin_type_constraints -> (Names)"¶
Returns the names of builtin type constraints.
"list_all_type_constraints -> (Names)"¶
Returns the names of all the type constraints.
FUNCTIONS¶
- "type $name => where { } ... ->
Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint"
- "subtype $name => as $parent => where { } ...
-> Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint"
- "subtype as $parent => where { } ... ->
Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint"
- "class_type ($class, ?$options) ->
Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint"
- "role_type ($role, ?$options) ->
Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint"
- "duck_type($name, @methods | \@methods) ->
Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint"
- "duck_type(\@methods) ->
Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint"
- "enum($name, @values | \@values) ->
Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint"
- "enum (\@values) ->
Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint"
- "coerce $type => from $another_type, via { },
..."
- "find_type_constraint(Type) ->
Mouse::Meta::TypeConstraint"
THANKS¶
Much of this documentation was taken from
"Moose::Util::TypeConstraints"
SEE ALSO¶
Moose::Util::TypeConstraints