Name
Moos - Moo s{imple,peedy,ingle}
Synopsis
package Foos;
use Moos;
extends 'Boos';
with 'Cloos';
has this => ();
has that => 42;
has other => (
builder => 'build_other',
lazy => 1,
);
sub BUILD {
my $self = shift;
# build, build, build
}
sub BUILDARGS {
my ($self, @args) = @_;
# munge, munge, munge
return {%munged_args};
}
Description
Moos completes the M to Moose sequence of Perl OO modules.
This one is pure Perl, no dependencies, single file and Moose compatible
(for what it does).
Features
Here's a quick list of the Moose compatible features that are supported
by Moos.
strict / warnings
Turns on "strict" and "warnings" for you.
Helpful exports
The ever useful "blessed" (from Scalar::Util) and "confess" (from Carp)
are exported to your namespace.
extends
For inheritance. "Moos::Object" is the default base class.
package MyClass;
extends 'MyBaseClass';
Supports multiple inheritance, by allowing multiple classes on a single
invocation.
with
Moos can consume roles using the "with" keyword. Using this feature
requires Role::Tiny to be installed.
with 'ThisClass', 'ThatClass';
has
Accessor generator. Supports the "is", "default", "build", "lazy",
"clearer", "predicate", "required", "handles" and "trigger" options,
described below. The supported options are about the same as Moose.
Other arguments (e.g. "isa" and "coerce") are currently ignored.
has this => ();
NOTE: Class::XSAccessor will be used for simple accessors if it is
installed. This can be disabled by setting $Moos::CAN_HAZ_XS to false or
by setting the PERL_MOOS_XS_DISABLE to true.
is Specify which type of attribute accessor to provide. The default is
"rw", a read-write accessor. Read-only "ro" accessors are also
supported.
has this => ( is => "ro" );
has 'this'; # read-write
has that => (); # read-write
Unlike Moose, Moos cannot generate differently named getters and
setters. If you want your setter named something different (e.g. a
private method), then you could do something like:
has this => ( is => 'ro' );
sub _set_this { $_[0]{this} = $_[1] }
required
Require that a value for the attribute be provided to the
constructor or generated during object construction.
has this => ( required => 1 );
lazy
Don't generate defaults during object construction.
has this => ( builder => '_build_this', lazy => 1 );
trigger
A coderef which will be called when the attribute is assigned to via
a method call or the constructor. (But not when an attribute is
implicitly given a value via a default or builder.) The coderef is
called with the instance as the first parameter, the new value as
the second parameter, and the old value (if any) as the third
parameter.
has age => ( trigger => sub {
croak "non-numeric age" unless looks_like_number($_[1]);
} );
Triggers can be used to emulate Moose's type constraints, coercion
and weakened reference features, but if you find yourself doing this
frequently then you should consider upgrading to Moo or Moose.
handles
Delegated method calls.
has wheels => (handles => [qw/ roll /]);
This accepts a hashref or arrayref, but not the other possibilities
offered by Moose.
builder
Specify the method name to generate a default value.
has this => ( builder => '_build_this' );
has that => ( builder => 1 ); # accept default name for method
default
Specify the sub to generate a default value.
has this => ( default => sub { 42 } );
Moos provides a shortcut for specifying the default. If the number
of arguments (after the name) is an odd number, then the first
argument is the default. The following forms are valid:
has a => 42;
has b => 'string' => (lazy => 1);
has c => {};
has d => [1, 2, 3, 4];
These all result in creating a Moos "default" argument. If the
default is an array or hash reference, a shallow copy is made.
clearer
Creates a clearer method.
has this => ( clearer => "clear_this" );
has that => ( clearer => 1 ); # accept default name for method
predicate
Creates a predicate method, which can be used to check if the
attribute is set or unset.
has this => ( predicate => "has_this" );
has that => ( predicate => 1 ); # accept default name for method
Class and Object Methods
new A constructor class method.
my $object = MyClass->new(this => 'nice', that => 2);
BUILD
Custom object construction. If you define BUILD, it is passed the
value of the new object during construction. You can modify the
object. Any value you return is ignored.
sub BUILD { my $self = shift; ... }
BUILDARGS
Custom constructor argument processing. If you define BUILDARGS, you
can control how the constructor's arguments are built into the
object hashref.
sub BUILDARGS { my ($class, @args) = @_; ... }
dump
Returns a textual dump of the object.
meta
Returns a Moos::Meta::Class object for the class. This has a very
limited subset of Moose::Meta::Class' functionality, including
implementations of the following methods: "name",
"attribute_metaclass", "add_attribute", "superclasses",
"linearized_isa", "new_object", "get_all_attributes",
"get_attribute" and "find_attribute_by_name".
The attribute introspection methods return Moos::Meta::Attribute
objects which provide a very limited subset of
Moose::Meta::Attribute's functionality, including implementations of
the following methods: "name", "associated_class", "predicate",
"clearer", "default", "builder", "trigger", "required", "lazy" and
"documentation".
does / DOES
Methods to check whether the class/object performs a particular
role. The methods differ in that "does" checks roles only in the
Moose/Moo/Role::Tiny sense; "DOES" also takes into account
UNIVERSAL::DOES.
Roles
If you need roles, then Moos classes have experimental support for
Role::Tiny, Moo::Role and Moose::Role roles. (Moos provides a "with"
command that uses Role::Tiny to do the work.)
{
package Local::Class;
use Moos;
with "Local::Role";
...;
}
Limitations: Note that Moo and Moose each allow type constraints for
attributes; Moos does not. This means that if you compose, say, a
Moose::Role into a Moos class, you end up with a strange situation where
the accessor methods will enforce type constraints (because they were
generated by Moose) but the constructor will not (because it is
inherited from Moos::Object).
Method Modifiers
If you need method modifiers, then try Class::Method::Modifiers.
Development Options
Moos has a couple of builtin dev options. They are controlled by
environment variables.
PERL_MOOS_ACCESSOR_CALLS
By setting this environment variable, Moos will warn everytime an
accessor method is called.
PERL_MOOS_XXX
By setting the environment variable, Moos will export the XXX
debugging keywords.
Whence Moos
I(ngy) created Moos during Pegex development. Pegex uses a clone of Moos
called Pegex::Base. (Moos ships with a commandline utility called
"remoos" that does this cloning.)
Pegex is a parser framework and needs to be fast. While looking into
speed issues I noted that accessor calling was the biggest hit. I tried
all the various Mo* solutions and Mouse was the fastest.
I was happy until I remembered that Mouse uses XS, and for various
reasons this broke my toolchain (TestML, Module::Install, etc).
So I made a single module/file Moose clone and it worked out well. I've
shared Pegex::Base as Moos in case any other projects want it.
Later on, Toby Inkster added a bunch of low-cost but very handy features
from Moose.
The name Moos was chosen because it was the only name left between M and
Moose. (Thus adding to the epic confusion that we embrace as Perl
Mongers! :)
On Speed
In the end, I got Pegex to run even faster with Moos than it originally
did with Mouse. I'll tell you my secret...
Accessors *(usually)* do not need to be method calls.
Replace these:
my $foo = $self->foo;
$self->foo($foo);
with:
my $foo = $self->{foo};
$self->{foo} = $foo;
And your code will be faster (and a bit uglier).
The only time that you need to call an accessor method is when you are
accessing a property and it might invoke a "lazy" "builder", "default"
or "trigger" method. Otherwise you are just wasting time. At least with
the minimal feature set offered by Moos.
The PERL_MOOS_ACCESSOR_CALLS feature described above is for finding
these method calls.
Note that third parties can still use your module's accessor methods
like they would expect to.
I'm sure I've missed some subtleties, and would be glad to hear
opinions, but in the meantime I'm happy that my code is faster and pure
Perl.
See Also
* M
* Mo
* Moo
* Moos
* Moose
* Mouse
* Mousse
Authors
Ingy döt Net <ingy@cpan.org>
Toby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>
Copyright and License
Copyright (c) 2012. Ingy döt Net.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html