558 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
558 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
# PODNAME: Moose::Manual::Roles
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# ABSTRACT: Roles, an alternative to deep hierarchies and base classes
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__END__
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=pod
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=encoding UTF-8
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=head1 NAME
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Moose::Manual::Roles - Roles, an alternative to deep hierarchies and base classes
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=head1 VERSION
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version 2.2207
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=head1 WHAT IS A ROLE?
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A role encapsulates some piece of behavior or state that can be shared between
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classes. It is something that classes I<do>. It is important to understand that
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I<roles are not classes>. You cannot inherit from a role, and a role cannot be
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instantiated. We sometimes say that roles are I<consumed>, either by classes
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or other roles.
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Instead, a role is I<composed> into a class. In practical terms, this
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means that all of the methods, method modifiers, and attributes defined in a role are
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added directly to (we sometimes say "flattened into") the class that
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consumes the role. These attributes and methods then appear as if they
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were defined in the class itself. A subclass of the consuming class
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will inherit all of these methods and attributes.
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Moose roles are similar to mixins or interfaces in other languages and are
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based on the L<original concept of Traits|http://scg.unibe.ch/research/traits/>
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for the Smalltalk-80 dialect Squeak.
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Besides defining their own methods and attributes, roles can also
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require that the consuming class define certain methods of its
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own. You could have a role that consisted only of a list of required
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methods, in which case the role would be very much like a Java
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interface.
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Note that attribute accessors also count as methods for the
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purposes of satisfying the requirements of a role.
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=head1 A SIMPLE ROLE
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Creating a role looks a lot like creating a Moose class:
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package Breakable;
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use Moose::Role;
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has 'is_broken' => (
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is => 'rw',
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isa => 'Bool',
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);
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sub break {
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my $self = shift;
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print "I broke\n";
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$self->is_broken(1);
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}
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Except for our use of L<Moose::Role>, this looks just like a class
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definition with Moose. However, this is not a class, and it cannot be
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instantiated.
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Instead, its attributes and methods will be composed into classes
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which use the role:
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package Car;
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use Moose;
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with 'Breakable';
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has 'engine' => (
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is => 'ro',
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isa => 'Engine',
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);
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The C<with> function composes roles into a class. Once that is done,
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the C<Car> class has an C<is_broken> attribute and a C<break>
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method. The C<Car> class also C<does('Breakable')>:
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my $car = Car->new( engine => Engine->new );
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print $car->is_broken ? 'Busted' : 'Still working';
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$car->break;
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print $car->is_broken ? 'Busted' : 'Still working';
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$car->does('Breakable'); # true
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This prints:
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Still working
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I broke
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Busted
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We could use this same role in a C<Bone> class:
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package Bone;
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use Moose;
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with 'Breakable';
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has 'marrow' => (
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is => 'ro',
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isa => 'Marrow',
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);
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See also L<Moose::Cookbook::Roles::Comparable_CodeReuse> for an example.
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It's possible to compose existing roles into new roles. For example, we can
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have a C<HandleWithCare> class which applies both the C<Breakable> and
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C<Package> roles to any class which consumes it:
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package HandleWithCare;
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use Moose::Role;
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with 'Breakable', 'Package';
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=head1 REQUIRED METHODS
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As mentioned previously, a role can require that consuming classes
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provide one or more methods. Using our C<Breakable> example, let's
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make it require that consuming classes implement their own C<break>
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methods:
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package Breakable;
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use Moose::Role;
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requires 'break';
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has 'is_broken' => (
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is => 'rw',
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isa => 'Bool',
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);
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after 'break' => sub {
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my $self = shift;
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$self->is_broken(1);
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};
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If we try to consume this role in a class that does not have a
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C<break> method, we will get an exception.
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You can see that we added a method modifier on C<break>. We want
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classes that consume this role to implement their own logic for
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breaking, but we make sure that the C<is_broken> attribute is always
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set to true when C<break> is called.
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package Car
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use Moose;
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with 'Breakable';
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has 'engine' => (
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is => 'ro',
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isa => 'Engine',
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);
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sub break {
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my $self = shift;
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if ( $self->is_moving ) {
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$self->stop;
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}
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}
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=head2 Roles Versus Abstract Base Classes
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If you are familiar with the concept of abstract base classes in other
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languages, you may be tempted to use roles in the same way.
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You I<can> define an "interface-only" role, one that contains I<just>
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a list of required methods.
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However, any class which consumes this role must implement all of the
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required methods, either directly or through inheritance from a
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parent. You cannot delay the method requirement check so that they can
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be implemented by future subclasses.
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Because the role defines the required methods directly, adding a base
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class to the mix would not achieve anything. We recommend that you
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simply consume the interface role in each class which implements that
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interface.
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=head1 CONSUMING ROLES
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Roles are consumed using the C<with> function.
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Most of the time, you should only use one C<with>, even if you are consuming
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multiple roles. If you consume roles using multiple C<with> statements Moose
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cannot detect method conflicts between those roles.
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Roles can be consumed by classes or by other roles. When a class consumes a
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role which in turn consumes other roles, the class gets all of the roles
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applied at once.
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=head2 Required Methods Provided by Attributes
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As mentioned before, a role's required method may also be satisfied by an
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attribute accessor. However, the call to C<has> which defines an attribute
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happens at runtime. This means that you must define the attribute I<before>
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consuming the role, or else the role will not see the generated accessor.
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These attributes are L<Moose Attributes|Moose::Manual::Attributes>.
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package Breakable;
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use Moose::Role;
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requires 'stress';
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########
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package Car;
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use Moose;
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has 'stress' => (
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is => 'ro',
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isa => 'Int',
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);
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with 'Breakable';
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In general, we recommend that you always consume roles I<after> declaring all
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your attributes.
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It may also be the case that a class wants to consume two roles where one role
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has an attribute providing a required method for another. For example:
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package Breakable;
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use Moose::Role;
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requires 'stress';
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########
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package Stressable;
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use Moose::Role;
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has 'stress' => (
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is => 'ro',
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isa => 'Int',
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);
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########
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package Car;
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use Moose;
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# XXX - this will not work
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with 'Breakable', 'Stressable';
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However, this won't work. The problem is that the accessor methods created for
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the C<stress> attribute won't be present in the class when the required method
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checks are done.
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There are two possible workarounds. The recommended one is to use "stub"
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subroutine(s) in the role providing the accessor(s):
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package Stressable;
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use Moose::Role;
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sub stress;
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has 'stress' => (
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is => 'ro',
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isa => 'Int',
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);
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The C<sub stress;> line is called a "forward" declaration in the Perl
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documentation. It creates what is called a "stub" subroutine, a declaration
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without a body. This is good enough to satisfy the required method checks done
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by Moose. The stub will not interfere with the creation of a real subroutine
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later.
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The other alternative is to use two separate calls to C<with> in the consuming
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class:
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package Car;
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use Moose;
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# Not recommended
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with 'Stressable';
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with 'Breakable';
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Each C<with> is run as it is seen. The first call will consume just the
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C<Stressable> role, which will add the C<stress> attribute to the C<Car>
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package, which in turn will create an accessor method named C<stress>. Then
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when the C<Breakable> role is consumed, the method it requires already exists.
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However, as mentioned earlier, multiple C<with> declarations are not
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recommended, because method conflicts between the roles cannot be seen. In the
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example above, if both C<Stressable> and C<Breakable> contained methods of the
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same name, what would happen is that the version in C<Stressable> would
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I<silently> override the one in C<Breakable>.
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=head1 USING METHOD MODIFIERS
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Method modifiers and roles are a very powerful combination. Often, a
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role will combine method modifiers and required methods. We already
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saw one example with our C<Breakable> example.
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Method modifiers increase the complexity of roles, because they make
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the role application order relevant. If a class uses multiple roles,
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each of which modify the same method, those modifiers will be applied
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in the same order as the roles are used:
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package MovieCar;
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use Moose;
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extends 'Car';
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with 'Breakable', 'ExplodesOnBreakage';
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Assuming that the new C<ExplodesOnBreakage> role I<also> has an
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C<after> modifier on C<break>, the C<after> modifiers will run one
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after the other. The modifier from C<Breakable> will run first, then
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the one from C<ExplodesOnBreakage>.
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=head1 METHOD CONFLICTS
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If a class composes multiple roles, and those roles have methods of
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the same name, we will have a conflict. In that case, the composing
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class is required to provide its I<own> method of the same name.
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package Breakdancer;
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use Moose::Role;
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sub break {
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}
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If we compose both C<Breakable> and C<Breakdancer> in a class, we must
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provide our own C<break> method:
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package FragileDancer;
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use Moose;
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with 'Breakable', 'Breakdancer';
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sub break { ... }
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A role can be a collection of other roles:
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package Break::Bundle;
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use Moose::Role;
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with ('Breakable', 'Breakdancer');
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When a role consumes another a role, the I<consuming> role's methods silently
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win in any conflict, and the consumed role's methods are simply ignored.
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=head1 METHOD EXCLUSION AND ALIASING
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If we want our C<FragileDancer> class to be able to call the methods
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from both its roles, we can alias the methods:
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package FragileDancer;
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use Moose;
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with 'Breakable' => { -alias => { break => 'break_bone' } },
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'Breakdancer' => { -alias => { break => 'break_dance' } };
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However, aliasing a method simply makes a I<copy> of the method with
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the new name. We also need to exclude the original name:
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with 'Breakable' => {
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-alias => { break => 'break_bone' },
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-excludes => 'break',
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},
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'Breakdancer' => {
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-alias => { break => 'break_dance' },
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-excludes => 'break',
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};
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The excludes parameter prevents the C<break> method from being composed
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into the C<FragileDancer> class, so we don't have a conflict. This
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means that C<FragileDancer> does not need to implement its own
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C<break> method.
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This is useful, but it's worth noting that this breaks the contract
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implicit in consuming a role. Our C<FragileDancer> class does both the
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C<Breakable> and C<BreakDancer>, but does not provide a C<break>
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method. If some API expects an object that does one of those roles, it
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probably expects it to implement that method.
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In some use cases we might alias and exclude methods from roles, but
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then provide a method of the same name in the class itself.
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Also see L<Moose::Cookbook::Roles::Restartable_AdvancedComposition> for an example.
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=head1 OVERLOADING
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When a Moose role uses overloading, that overloading is composed into any
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classes that consume the role. This includes the setting of the C<fallback>
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value for that role's overloading. Just as with methods and attributes, when a
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role consumes another role, that other role's overloading settings are applied
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to the role.
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Just as with methods, there can be conflicts with overloading implementations
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between multiple roles when they are all consumed by a class. If two roles
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both provide different overloading implementations for a given operator, that
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is a conflict. If two roles both implement overloading and have different
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C<fallback> values, that is also considered a conflict. These conflicts are
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detected when multiple roles are being composed into a class together.
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When a role consumes another role, the consuming role's overloading fallback
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and operator implementations silently "win" the conflict.
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=head1 ROLE EXCLUSION
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A role can say that it cannot be combined with some other role. This
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should be used with great caution, since it limits the re-usability of
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the role.
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package Breakable;
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use Moose::Role;
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excludes 'BreakDancer';
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=head1 ADDING A ROLE TO AN OBJECT INSTANCE
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You may want to add a role to an object instance, rather than to a class. For
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example, you may want to add debug tracing to one instance of an object while
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debugging a particular bug. Another use case might be to dynamically change
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objects based on a user's configuration, as a plugin system.
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The best way to do this is to use the C<apply_all_roles()> function from
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L<Moose::Util>:
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use Moose::Util qw( apply_all_roles );
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my $car = Car->new;
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apply_all_roles( $car, 'Breakable' );
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This function can apply more than one role at a time, and will do so using the
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normal Moose role combination system. We recommend using this function to
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apply roles to an object. This is what Moose uses internally when you call
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C<with>.
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=head2 Handling required attributes for roles.
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Application of some roles will require additional parameters being specified to
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satisfy them, for example:
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{
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package Car;
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use Moose;
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}
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{
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package Breakable;
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use Moose::Role;
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has 'breakable_parts' => ( is => 'ro', required => 1 );
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}
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my $car = Car->new;
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# next line dies with: Attribute (breakable_parts) is required
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apply_all_roles( $car, 'Breakable' );
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This will require passing the additional parameters at application time as
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follows:
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apply_all_roles( $car, 'Breakable' => {
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rebless_params => {
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# Parameters to 'Breakable'
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breakable_parts => [qw( tires wheels windscreen )],
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}
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});
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Obviously, this interface is better simplified as a method on C<Car>:
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sub make_breakable {
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my ( $self, %params ) = @_;
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apply_all_roles($self, 'Breakable', { rebless_params => \%params });
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}
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my $car = Car->new();
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$car->make_breakable( breakable_parts => [qw( tires wheels windscreen )] );
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=head1 AUTHORS
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=over 4
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=item *
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Stevan Little <stevan@cpan.org>
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=item *
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Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>
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=item *
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Jesse Luehrs <doy@cpan.org>
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=item *
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Shawn M Moore <sartak@cpan.org>
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=item *
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יובל קוג'מן (Yuval Kogman) <nothingmuch@woobling.org>
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=item *
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Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>
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=item *
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Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>
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=item *
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Hans Dieter Pearcey <hdp@cpan.org>
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=item *
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Chris Prather <chris@prather.org>
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=item *
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Matt S Trout <mstrout@cpan.org>
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=back
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=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
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This software is copyright (c) 2006 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
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This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
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the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
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=cut
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