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Moose::Manual::Delta(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Moose::Manual::Delta(3) |
Moose::Manual::Delta - Important Changes in Moose
This documents any important or noteworthy changes in Moose, with a focus on
things that affect backwards compatibility. This does duplicate data from the
Changes file, but aims to provide more details and when possible
workarounds.
Besides helping keep up with changes, you can also use this
document for finding the lowest version of Moose that supported a given
feature. If you encounter a problem and have a solution but don't see it
documented here, or think we missed an important feature, please send us a
patch.
- Overloading implementation has changed
- Overloading meta information used to be implemented by a
"Class::MOP::Method::Overload" class.
This class has been removed, and overloading is now implemented by
Class::MOP::Overload. Overloading is not really equivalent to a method, so
the former implementation didn't work properly for various cases.
All of the overloading-related methods for classes and roles
have the same names, but those methods now return Class::MOP::Overload
objects.
- Core support for overloading in roles
- Roles which use overloading now pass that overloading onto other classes
(and roles) which consume that role.
This works much like MooseX::Role::WithOverloading, except
that we properly detect overloading conflicts during role summation and
when applying one role to another. MooseX::Role::WithOverloading did not
do any conflict detection.
If you want to write code that uses overloading and works with
previous versions of Moose and this one, upgrade to
MooseX::Role::WithOverloading version 0.15 or greater. That version will
detect when Moose itself handles overloading and get out of the way.
- Classes created by Moose are now registered in %INC
- This means that this will no longer die (and will also no longer try to
load "Foo.pm"):
{
package Foo;
use Moose;
}
# ...
use Foo;
If you're using the MOP, this behavior will occur when the
"create" (or
"create_anon_class") method is used,
but not when the "initialize" method
is used.
- Moose now uses Module::Runtime instead of Class::Load to load classes
- Class::Load has always had some weird issues with the ways that it tries
to figure out if a class is loaded. For instance, extending an empty
package was previously impossible, because Class::Load would think that
the class failed to load, even though that is a perfectly valid thing to
do. It was also difficult to deal with modules like IO::Handle, which
partially populate several other packages when they are loaded (so calling
"load_class" on
'IO::Handle' followed by
'IO::File' could end up with a broken
"IO::File", in some cases).
Now, Moose uses the same mechanisms as perl itself to figure
out if a class is loaded. A class is considered to be loaded if its
entry in %INC is set. Perl sets the
%INC entry for you automatically whenever a file
is loaded via "use" or
"require". Also, as mentioned above,
Moose also now sets the %INC entry for any
classes defined with it, even if they aren't loaded from a separate
file. This does however mean that if you are trying to use Moose with
non-Moose classes defined in the same file, then you will need to set
%INC manually now, where it may have worked in
the past. For instance:
{
package My::NonMoose;
sub new { bless {}, shift }
$INC{'My/NonMoose.pm'} = __FILE__;
# alternatively:
# use Module::Runtime 'module_notional_filename';
# $INC{module_notional_filename(__PACKAGE__)} = __FILE__;
}
{
package My::Moose;
use Moose;
extends 'My::NonMoose';
}
If you don't do this, you will get an error message about not
being able to locate "My::NonMoose" in
@INC. We hope that this case will be fairly
rare.
- The Class::Load wrapper functions in Class::MOP have been deprecated
- "Class::MOP::load_class",
"Class::MOP::is_class_loaded", and
"Class::MOP::load_first_existing_class"
have been deprecated. They have been undocumented and discouraged since
version 2.0200. You should replace their use with the corresponding
functions in Class::Load, or just use Module::Runtime directly.
- The non-arrayref forms of "enum" and "duck_type" have
been deprecated
- Originally, "enum" could be called like
this:
enum('MyType' => qw(foo bar baz))
This was confusing, however (since it was different from the
syntax for anonymous enum types), and it makes error checking more
difficult (since you can't tell just by looking whether
"enum('Foo', 'Bar', 'Baz')" was
intended to be a type named "Foo" with
elements of "Bar" and
"Baz", or if this was actually a
mistake where someone got the syntax for an anonymous enum type wrong).
This all also applies to
"duck_type".
Calling "enum" and
"duck_type" with a list of arguments
as described above has been undocumented since version 0.93, and is now
deprecated. You should replace
enum MyType => qw(foo bar baz);
in your code with
enum MyType => [qw(foo bar baz)];
- Moose string exceptions have been replaced by Moose exception objects
- Previously, Moose threw string exceptions on error conditions, which were
not so verbose. All those string exceptions have now been converted to
exception objects, which provide very detailed information about the
exceptions. These exception objects provide a string overload that matches
the previous exception message, so in most cases you should not have to
change your code.
For learning about the usage of Moose exception objects, read
Moose::Manual::Exceptions. Individual exceptions are documented in
Moose::Manual::Exceptions::Manifest.
This work was funded as part of the GNOME Outreach Program for
Women.
- The Num type is now stricter
- The "Num" type used to accept anything
that fits Perl's notion of a number, which included Inf, NaN, and strings
like " 1234 \n". We believe that the
type constraint should indicate "this is a number", not
"this coerces to a number". Therefore, Num now only accepts
integers, floating point numbers (both in decimal notation and exponential
notation), 0, .0, 0.0, etc.
If you want the old behavior you can use the
"LaxNum" type in
MooseX::Types::LaxNum.
- You can use Specio instead of core Moose types
- The Specio distribution is an experimental new type system intended to
eventually replace the core Moose types, but yet also work with things
like Moo and Mouse and anything else. Right now this is all speculative,
but at least you can use Specio with Moose.
- "->init_meta" is even less reliable at loading
extensions
- Previously, calling
"MooseX::Foo->init_meta(@_)" (and
nothing else) from within your own
"init_meta" had a decent chance of doing
something useful. This was never supported behavior, and didn't always
work anyway. Due to some implementation adjustments, this now has a
smaller chance of doing something useful, which could break code that was
expecting it to continue doing useful things. Code that does this should
instead just call "MooseX::Foo->import({ into
=> $into })".
- All the Cookbook recipes have been renamed
- We've given them all descriptive names, rather than numbers. This makes it
easier to talk about them, and eliminates the need to renumber recipes in
order to reorder them or delete one.
- The parent of a union type is its components' nearest common ancestor
- Previously, union types considered all of their component types their
parent types. This was incorrect because parent types are defined as types
that must be satisfied in order for the child type to be satisfied, but in
a union, validating as any parent type will validate against the entire
union. This has been changed to find the nearest common ancestor for all
of its components. For example, a union of "Int|ArrayRef[Int]"
now has a parent of "Defined".
- Union types consider all members in the "is_subtype_of" and
"is_a_type_of" methods
- Previously, a union type would report itself as being of a subtype of a
type if any of its member types were subtypes of that type. This
was incorrect because any value that passes a subtype constraint must also
pass a parent constraint. This has changed so that all of its
member types must be a subtype of the specified type.
- Enum types now work with just one value
- Previously, an "enum" type needed to
have two or more values. Nobody knew why, so we fixed it.
- Methods defined in UNIVERSAL now appear in the MOP
- Any method introspection methods that look at methods from parent classes
now find methods defined in UNIVERSAL. This includes methods like
"$class->get_all_methods" and
"$class->find_method_by_name".
This also means that you can now apply method modifiers to
these methods.
- Hand-optimized type constraint code causes a deprecation warning
- If you provide an optimized sub ref for a type constraint, this now causes
a deprecation warning. Typically, this comes from passing an
"optimize_as" parameter to
"subtype", but it could also happen if
you create a Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint object directly.
Use the inlining feature
("inline_as") added in 2.0100
instead.
- "Class::Load::load_class" and "is_class_loaded" have
been removed
- The "Class::MOP::load_class" and
"Class::MOP::is_class_loaded"
subroutines are no longer documented, and will cause a deprecation warning
in the future. Moose now uses Class::Load to provide this functionality,
and you should do so as well.
- Array and Hash native traits provide a "shallow_clone"
method
- The Array and Hash native traits now provide a "shallow_clone"
method, which will return a reference to a new container with the same
contents as the attribute's reference.
- Hand-optimized type constraint code is deprecated in favor of
inlining
- Moose allows you to provide a hand-optimized version of a type
constraint's subroutine reference. This version allows type constraints to
generate inline code, and you should use this inlining instead of
providing a hand-optimized subroutine reference.
This affects the
"optimize_as" sub exported by
Moose::Util::TypeConstraints. Use
"inline_as" instead.
This will start warning in the 2.0300 release.
- More useful type constraint error messages
- If you have Devel::PartialDump version 0.14 or higher installed, Moose's
type constraint error messages will use it to display the invalid value,
rather than just displaying it directly. This will generally be much more
useful. For instance, instead of this:
Attribute (foo) does not pass the type constraint because: Validation failed for 'ArrayRef[Int]' with value ARRAY(0x275eed8)
the error message will instead look like
Attribute (foo) does not pass the type constraint because: Validation failed for 'ArrayRef[Int]' with value [ "a" ]
Note that Devel::PartialDump can't be made a direct dependency
at the moment, because it uses Moose itself, but we're considering
options to make this easier.
- Roles have their own default attribute metaclass
- Previously, when a role was applied to a class, it would use the attribute
metaclass defined in the class when copying over the attributes in the
role. This was wrong, because for instance, using MooseX::FollowPBP in the
class would end up renaming all of the accessors generated by the role,
some of which may be being called in the role, causing it to break. Roles
now keep track of their own attribute metaclass to use by default when
being applied to a class (defaulting to Moose::Meta::Attribute). This is
modifiable using Moose::Util::MetaRole by passing the
"applied_attribute" key to the
"role_metaroles" option, as in:
Moose::Util::MetaRole::apply_metaroles(
for => __PACKAGE__,
class_metaroles => {
attribute => ['My::Meta::Role::Attribute'],
},
role_metaroles => {
applied_attribute => ['My::Meta::Role::Attribute'],
},
);
- Class::MOP has been folded into the Moose dist
- Moose and Class::MOP are tightly related enough that they have always had
to be kept pretty closely in step in terms of versions. Making them into a
single dist should simplify the upgrade process for users, as it should no
longer be possible to upgrade one without the other and potentially cause
issues. No functionality has changed, and this should be entirely
transparent.
- Moose's conflict checking is more robust and useful
- There are two parts to this. The most useful one right now is that Moose
will ship with a "moose-outdated"
script, which can be run at any point to list the modules which are
installed that conflict with the installed version of Moose. After
upgrading Moose, running "moose-outdated |
cpanm" should be sufficient to ensure that all of the Moose
extensions you use will continue to work.
The other part is that Moose's
"META.json" file will also specify the
conflicts under the "x_conflicts" (now
"x_breaks") key. We are working with
the Perl tool chain developers to try to get conflicts support added to
CPAN clients, and if/when that happens, the metadata already exists, and
so the conflict checking will become automatic.
- The lazy_build attribute feature is discouraged
- While not deprecated, we strongly discourage you from using this
feature.
- Most deprecated APIs/features are slated for removal in Moose 2.0200
- Most of the deprecated APIs and features in Moose will start throwing an
error in Moose 2.0200. Some of the features will go away entirely, and
some will simply throw an error.
The things on the chopping block are:
- Old public methods in Class::MOP and Moose
This includes things like
"Class::MOP::Class->get_attribute_map",
"Class::MOP::Class->construct_instance",
and many others. These were deprecated in Class::MOP 0.80_01, released
on April 5, 2009.
These methods will be removed entirely in Moose 2.0200.
- Old public functions in Class::MOP
This include
"Class::MOP::subname",
"Class::MOP::in_global_destruction",
and the "Class::MOP::HAS_ISAREV"
constant. The first two were deprecated in 0.84, and the last in 0.80.
Class::MOP 0.84 was released on May 12, 2009.
These functions will be removed entirely in Moose 2.0200.
- The "alias" and
"excludes" option for role composition
These were renamed to
"-alias" and
"-excludes" in Moose 0.89, released on
August 13, 2009.
Passing these will throw an error in Moose 2.0200.
- The old Moose::Util::MetaRole API
This include the
"apply_metaclass_roles()" function, as
well as passing the "for_class" or any
key ending in "_roles" to
"apply_metaroles()". This was
deprecated in Moose 0.93_01, released on January 4, 2010.
These will all throw an error in Moose 2.0200.
- Passing plain lists to "type()" or
"subtype()"
The old API for these functions allowed you to pass a plain
list of parameter, rather than a list of hash references (which is what
"as()",
"where", etc. return). This was
deprecated in Moose 0.71_01, released on February 22, 2009.
This will throw an error in Moose 2.0200.
- The Role subtype
This subtype was deprecated in Moose 0.84, released on June
26, 2009.
This will be removed entirely in Moose 2.0200.
- •
- New release policy
As of the 2.0 release, Moose now has an official release and
support policy, documented in Moose::Manual::Support. All API changes
will now go through a deprecation cycle of at least one year, after
which the deprecated API can be removed. Deprecations and removals will
only happen in major releases.
In between major releases, we will still make minor releases
to add new features, fix bugs, update documentation, etc.
- Configurable stacktraces
- Classes which use the Moose::Error::Default error class can now have
stacktraces disabled by setting the
"MOOSE_ERROR_STYLE" env var to
"croak". This is experimental, fairly
incomplete, and won't work in all cases (because Moose's error system in
general is all of these things), but this should allow for reducing at
least some of the verbosity in most cases.
- Native Delegations
- In previous versions of Moose, the Native delegations were created as
closures. The generated code was often quite slow compared to doing the
same thing by hand. For example, the Array's push delegation ended up
doing something like this:
push @{ $self->$reader() }, @_;
If the attribute was created without a reader, the
$reader sub reference followed a very slow code
path. Even with a reader, this is still slower than it needs to be.
Native delegations are now generated as inline code, just like
other accessors, so we can access the slot directly.
In addition, native traits now do proper constraint checking
in all cases. In particular, constraint checking has been improved for
array and hash references. Previously, only the contained type
(the "Str" in
"HashRef[Str]") would be checked when
a new value was added to the collection. However, if there was a
constraint that applied to the whole value, this was never checked.
In addition, coercions are now called on the whole value.
The delegation methods now do more argument checking. All of
the methods check that a valid number of arguments were passed to the
method. In addition, the delegation methods check that the arguments are
sane (array indexes, hash keys, numbers, etc.) when applicable. We have
tried to emulate the behavior of Perl builtins as much as possible.
Finally, triggers are called whenever the value of the
attribute is changed by a Native delegation.
These changes are only likely to break code in a few
cases.
The inlining code may or may not preserve the original
reference when changes are made. In some cases, methods which change the
value may replace it entirely. This will break tied values.
If you have a typed arrayref or hashref attribute where the
type enforces a constraint on the whole collection, this constraint will
now be checked. It's possible that code which previously ran without
errors will now cause the constraint to fail. However, presumably this
is a good thing ;)
If you are passing invalid arguments to a delegation which
were previously being ignored, these calls will now fail.
If your code relied on the trigger only being called for a
regular writer, that may cause problems.
As always, you are encouraged to test before deploying the
latest version of Moose to production.
- Defaults is and default for String, Counter, and Bool
- A few native traits (String, Counter, Bool) provide default values of
"is" and "default" when you created an attribute.
Allowing them to provide these values is now deprecated. Supply the value
yourself when creating the attribute.
- The "meta" method
- Moose and Class::MOP have been cleaned up internally enough to make the
"meta" method that you get by default
optional. "use Moose" and
"use Moose::Role" now can take an
additional "-meta_name" option, which
tells Moose what name to use when installing the
"meta" method. Passing
"undef" to this option suppresses
generation of the "meta" method
entirely. This should be useful for users of modules which also use a
"meta" method or function, such as
Curses or Rose::DB::Object.
- All deprecated features now warn
- Previously, deprecation mostly consisted of simply saying "X is
deprecated" in the Changes file. We were not very consistent about
actually warning. Now, all deprecated features still present in Moose
actually give a warning. The warning is issued once per calling package.
See Moose::Deprecated for more details.
- You cannot pass "coerce => 1" unless the attribute's type
constraint has a coercion
- Previously, this was accepted, and it sort of worked, except that if you
attempted to set the attribute after the object was created, you would get
a runtime error.
Now you will get a warning when you attempt to define the
attribute.
- "no Moose", "no Moose::Role", and "no
Moose::Exporter" no longer unimport strict and warnings
- This change was made in 1.05, and has now been reverted. We don't know if
the user has explicitly loaded strict or warnings on their own, and
unimporting them is just broken in that case.
- Reversed logic when defining which options can be changed
- Moose::Meta::Attribute now allows all options to be changed in an
overridden attribute. The previous behaviour required each option to be
whitelisted using the
"legal_options_for_inheritance" method.
This method has been removed, and there is a new method,
"illegal_options_for_inheritance", which
can now be used to prevent certain options from being changeable.
In addition, we only throw an error if the illegal option is
actually changed. If the superclass didn't specify this option at all
when defining the attribute, the subclass version can still add it as an
option.
Example of overriding this in an attribute trait:
package Bar::Meta::Attribute;
use Moose::Role;
has 'my_illegal_option' => (
isa => 'CodeRef',
is => 'rw',
);
around illegal_options_for_inheritance => sub {
return ( shift->(@_), qw/my_illegal_option/ );
};
- "BUILD" in Moose::Object methods are now called when calling
"new_object"
- Previously, "BUILD" methods would only
be called from "Moose::Object::new", but
now they are also called when constructing an object via
"Moose::Meta::Class::new_object".
"BUILD" methods are an inherent part of
the object construction process, and this should make
"$meta->new_object" actually usable
without forcing people to use
"$meta->name->new".
- "no Moose", "no Moose::Role", and "no
Moose::Exporter" now unimport strict and warnings
- In the interest of having "no Moose"
clean up everything that "use Moose"
does in the calling scope, "no Moose"
(as well as all other Moose::Exporter-using modules) now unimports strict
and warnings.
- Metaclass compatibility checking and fixing should be much more
robust
- The metaclass compatibility checking and fixing algorithms have been
completely rewritten, in both Class::MOP and Moose. This should resolve
many confusing errors when dealing with non-Moose inheritance and with
custom metaclasses for things like attributes, constructors, etc. For
correct code, the only thing that should require a change is that custom
error metaclasses must now inherit from Moose::Error::Default.
- Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::Class is_subtype_of behavior
- Earlier versions of is_subtype_of would incorrectly return true when
called with itself, its own TC name or its class name as an argument.
(i.e. $foo_tc->is_subtype_of('Foo') == 1) This
behavior was a caused by "isa" being
checked before the class name. The old behavior can be accessed with
is_type_of
- Moose::Meta::Attribute::Native::Trait::Code no longer creates reader
methods by default
- Earlier versions of Moose::Meta::Attribute::Native::Trait::Code created
read-only accessors for the attributes it's been applied to, even if you
didn't ask for it with "is => 'ro'".
This incorrect behaviour has now been fixed.
- Moose::Util add_method_modifier behavior
- add_method_modifier (and subsequently the sugar functions Moose::before,
Moose::after, and Moose::around) can now accept arrayrefs, with the same
behavior as lists. Types other than arrayref and regexp result in an
error.
- Moose::Util::MetaRole API has changed
- The "apply_metaclass_roles" function is
now called "apply_metaroles". The way
arguments are supplied has been changed to force you to distinguish
between metaroles applied to Moose::Meta::Class (and helpers) versus
Moose::Meta::Role.
The old API still works, but will warn in a future release,
and eventually be removed.
- Moose::Meta::Role has real attributes
- The attributes returned by Moose::Meta::Role are now instances of the
Moose::Meta::Role::Attribute class, instead of bare hash references.
- "no Moose" now removes "blessed" and
"confess"
- Moose is now smart enough to know exactly what it exported, even when it
re-exports functions from other packages. When you unimport Moose, it will
remove these functions from your namespace unless you also imported
them directly from their respective packages.
If you have a "no Moose" in
your code before you call
"blessed" or
"confess", your code will break. You
can either move the "no Moose" call
later in your code, or explicitly import the relevant functions from the
packages that provide them.
- Moose::Exporter is smarter about unimporting re-exports
- The change above comes from a general improvement to Moose::Exporter. It
will now unimport any function it exports, even if that function is a
re-export from another package.
- Attributes in roles can no longer override class attributes with
"+foo"
- Previously, this worked more or less accidentally, because role attributes
weren't objects. This was never documented, but a few MooseX modules took
advantage of this.
- The composition_class_roles attribute in Moose::Meta::Role is now a
method
- This was done to make it possible for roles to alter the list of
composition class roles by applying a method modifiers. Previously, this
was an attribute and MooseX modules override it. Since that no longer
works, this was made a method.
This should be an attribute, so this may switch back to
being an attribute in the future if we can figure out how to make this
work.
- Calling $object->new() is no longer deprecated
- We decided to undeprecate this. Now it just works.
- Both "get_method_map" and "get_attribute_map" is
deprecated
- These metaclass methods were never meant to be public, and they are both
now deprecated. The work around if you still need the functionality they
provided is to iterate over the list of names manually.
my %fields = map { $_ => $meta->get_attribute($_) } $meta->get_attribute_list;
This was actually a change in Class::MOP, but this version of
Moose requires a version of Class::MOP that includes said change.
- Added Native delegation for Code refs
- See Moose::Meta::Attribute::Native::Trait::Code for details.
- Calling $object->new() is deprecated
- Moose has long supported this, but it's never really been documented, and
we don't think this is a good practice. If you want to construct an object
from an existing object, you should provide some sort of alternate
constructor like "$object->clone".
Calling "$object->new"
now issues a warning, and will be an error in a future release.
- Moose no longer warns if you call "make_immutable" for a class
with mutable ancestors
- While in theory this is a good thing to warn about, we found so many
exceptions to this that doing this properly became quite problematic.
- New Native delegation methods from List::Util and List::MoreUtils
- In particular, we now have "reduce",
"shuffle",
"uniq", and
"natatime".
- The Moose::Exporter with_caller feature is now deprecated
- Use "with_meta" instead. The
"with_caller" option will start warning
in a future release.
- Moose now warns if you call "make_immutable" for a class with
mutable ancestors
- This is dangerous because modifying a class after a subclass has been
immutabilized will lead to incorrect results in the subclass, due to
inlining, caching, etc. This occasionally happens accidentally, when a
class loads one of its subclasses in the middle of its class definition,
so pointing out that this may cause issues should be helpful. Metaclasses
(classes that inherit from Class::MOP::Object) are currently exempt from
this check, since at the moment we aren't very consistent about which
metaclasses we immutabilize.
- "enum" and "duck_type" now take arrayrefs for all
forms
- Previously, calling these functions with a list would take the first
element of the list as the type constraint name, and use the remainder as
the enum values or method names. This makes the interface inconsistent
with the anon-type forms of these functions (which must take an arrayref),
and a free-form list where the first value is sometimes special is hard to
validate (and harder to give reasonable error messages for). These
functions have been changed to take arrayrefs in all their forms - so,
"enum 'My::Type' => [qw(foo bar)]" is
now the preferred way to create an enum type constraint. The old syntax
still works for now, but it will hopefully be deprecated and removed in a
future release.
Moose::Meta::Attribute::Native has been moved into the Moose core from
MooseX::AttributeHelpers. Major changes include:
- "traits", not "metaclass"
- Method providers are only available via traits.
- "handles", not "provides" or "curries"
- The "provides" syntax was like core
Moose "handles => HASHREF" syntax,
but with the keys and values reversed. This was confusing, and
AttributeHelpers now uses "handles =>
HASHREF" in a way that should be intuitive to anyone already
familiar with how it is used for other attributes.
The "curries" functionality
provided by AttributeHelpers has been generalized to apply to all cases
of "handles => HASHREF", though not
every piece of functionality has been ported (currying with a CODEREF is
not supported).
- "empty" is now "is_empty", and means empty, not
non-empty
- Previously, the "empty" method provided
by Arrays and Hashes returned true if the attribute was not empty
(no elements). Now it returns true if the attribute is empty. It
was also renamed to "is_empty", to
reflect this.
- "find" was renamed to "first", and "first"
and "last" were removed
- List::Util refers to the functionality that we used to provide under
"find" as first, so that will likely be
more familiar (and will fit in better if we decide to add more List::Util
functions). "first" and
"last" were removed, since their
functionality is easily duplicated with curries of
"get".
- Helpers that take a coderef of one argument now use $_
- Subroutines passed as the first argument to
"first",
"map", and
"grep" now receive their argument in
$_ rather than as a parameter to the subroutine.
Helpers that take a coderef of two or more arguments remain using the
argument list (there are technical limitations to using
$a and $b like
"sort" does).
See Moose::Meta::Attribute::Native for the new
documentation.
The "alias" and
"excludes" role parameters have been
renamed to "-alias" and
"-excludes". The old names still work, but
new code should use the new names, and eventually the old ones will be
deprecated and removed.
"use Moose -metaclass => 'Foo'" now does
alias resolution, just like "-traits" (and
the "metaclass" and
"traits" options to
"has").
Added two functions
"meta_class_alias" and
"meta_attribute_alias" to Moose::Util, to
simplify aliasing metaclasses and metatraits. This is a wrapper around the
old
package Moose::Meta::Class::Custom::Trait::FooTrait;
sub register_implementation { 'My::Meta::Trait' }
way of doing this.
When an attribute generates no accessors, we now warn. This is to help
users who forget the "is" option. If you
really do not want any accessors, you can use "is =>
'bare'". You can maintain back compat with older versions of Moose
by using something like:
($Moose::VERSION >= 0.84 ? is => 'bare' : ())
When an accessor overwrites an existing method, we now warn. To
work around this warning (if you really must have this behavior), you can
explicitly remove the method before creating it as an accessor:
sub foo {}
__PACKAGE__->meta->remove_method('foo');
has foo => (
is => 'ro',
);
When an unknown option is passed to
"has", we now warn. You can silence the
warning by fixing your code. :)
The "Role" type has been
deprecated. On its own, it was useless, since it just checked
"$object->can('does')". If you were
using it as a parent type, just call
"role_type('Role::Name')" to create an
appropriate type instead.
"use Moose::Exporter;" now imports
"strict" and
"warnings" into packages that use it.
"DEMOLISHALL" and
"DEMOLISH" now receive an argument
indicating whether or not we are in global destruction.
Type constraints no longer run coercions for a value that already matches the
constraint. This may affect some (arguably buggy) edge case coercions that
rely on side effects in the "via" clause.
Moose::Exporter now accepts the "-metaclass"
option for easily overriding the metaclass (without metaclass). This works for
classes and roles.
Added a "duck_type" sugar function to
Moose::Util::TypeConstraints to make integration with non-Moose classes
easier. It simply checks if "$obj->can()"
a list of methods.
A number of methods (mostly inherited from Class::MOP) have been
renamed with a leading underscore to indicate their internal-ness. The old
method names will still work for a while, but will warn that the method has
been renamed. In a few cases, the method will be removed entirely in the
future. This may affect MooseX authors who were using these methods.
Calling "subtype" with a name as the only
argument now throws an exception. If you want an anonymous subtype do:
my $subtype = subtype as 'Foo';
This is related to the changes in version 0.71_01.
The "is_needed" method in
Moose::Meta::Method::Destructor is now only usable as a class method.
Previously, it worked as a class or object method, with a different internal
implementation for each version.
The internals of making a class immutable changed a lot in
Class::MOP 0.78_02, and Moose's internals have changed along with it. The
external "$metaclass->make_immutable"
method still works the same way.
A mutable class accepted "Foo->new(undef)"
without complaint, while an immutable class would blow up with an unhelpful
error. Now, in both cases we throw a helpful error instead.
This "feature" was originally added to allow for cases
such as this:
my $args;
if ( something() ) {
$args = {...};
}
return My::Class->new($args);
But we decided this is a bad idea and a little too magical,
because it can easily mask real errors.
Calling "type" or
"subtype" without the sugar helpers
("as",
"where",
"message") is now deprecated.
As a side effect, this meant we ended up using Perl prototypes on
"as", and code like this will no longer
work:
use Moose::Util::TypeConstraints;
use Declare::Constraints::Simple -All;
subtype 'ArrayOfInts'
=> as 'ArrayRef'
=> IsArrayRef(IsInt);
Instead it must be changed to this:
subtype(
'ArrayOfInts' => {
as => 'ArrayRef',
where => IsArrayRef(IsInt)
}
);
If you want to maintain backwards compat with older versions of
Moose, you must explicitly test Moose's
"VERSION":
if ( Moose->VERSION < 0.71_01 ) {
subtype 'ArrayOfInts'
=> as 'ArrayRef'
=> IsArrayRef(IsInt);
}
else {
subtype(
'ArrayOfInts' => {
as => 'ArrayRef',
where => IsArrayRef(IsInt)
}
);
}
We no longer pass the meta-attribute object as a final argument to triggers.
This actually changed for inlined code a while back, but the non-inlined
version and the docs were still out of date.
If by some chance you actually used this feature, the workaround
is simple. You fetch the attribute object from out of the
$self that is passed as the first argument to
trigger, like so:
has 'foo' => (
is => 'ro',
isa => 'Any',
trigger => sub {
my ( $self, $value ) = @_;
my $attr = $self->meta->find_attribute_by_name('foo');
# ...
}
);
If you created a subtype and passed a parent that Moose didn't know about, it
simply ignored the parent. Now it automatically creates the parent as a class
type. This may not be what you want, but is less broken than before.
You could declare a name with subtype such as "Foo!Bar".
Moose would accept this allowed, but if you used it in a parameterized type
such as "ArrayRef[Foo!Bar]" it wouldn't work. We now do some
vetting on names created via the sugar functions, so that they can only
contain alphanumerics, ":", and ".".
Methods created via an attribute can now fulfill a
"requires" declaration for a role. Honestly
we don't know why Stevan didn't make this work originally, he was just insane
or something.
Stack traces from inlined code will now report the line and file
as being in your class, as opposed to in Moose guts.
When a class does not provide all of a role's required methods, the error thrown
now mentions all of the missing methods, as opposed to just the first missing
method.
Moose will no longer inline a constructor for your class unless it
inherits its constructor from Moose::Object, and will warn when it doesn't
inline. If you want to force inlining anyway, pass
"replace_constructor => 1" to
"make_immutable".
If you want to get rid of the warning, pass
"inline_constructor =>
0".
Removed the (deprecated) "make_immutable"
keyword.
Removing an attribute from a class now also removes delegation
("handles") methods installed for that
attribute. This is correct behavior, but if you were wrongly relying on it
you might get bit.
Roles now add methods by calling "add_method",
not "alias_method". They make sure to always
provide a method object, which will be cloned internally. This means that it
is now possible to track the source of a method provided by a role, and even
follow its history through intermediate roles. This means that methods added
by a role now show up when looking at a class's method list/map.
Parameter and Union args are now sorted, this makes Int|Str the
same constraint as Str|Int. Also, incoming type constraint strings are
normalized to remove all whitespace differences. This is mostly for
internals and should not affect outside code.
Moose::Exporter will no longer remove a subroutine that the
exporting package re-exports. Moose re-exports the Carp::confess function,
among others. The reasoning is that we cannot know whether you have also
explicitly imported those functions for your own use, so we err on the safe
side and always keep them.
"Moose::init_meta" should now be called as a
method.
New modules for extension writers, Moose::Exporter and
Moose::Util::MetaRole.
Implemented metaclass traits (and wrote a recipe for it):
use Moose -traits => 'Foo'
This should make writing small Moose extensions a little
easier.
Fixed "coerce" to accept anon types just like
"subtype" can. So that you can do:
coerce $some_anon_type => from 'Str' => via { ... };
Added "BUILDARGS", a new step in
"Moose::Object->new()".
Fixed how the "is => (ro|rw)" works with
custom defined "reader",
"writer" and
"accessor" options. See the below table for
details:
is => ro, writer => _foo # turns into (reader => foo, writer => _foo)
is => rw, writer => _foo # turns into (reader => foo, writer => _foo)
is => rw, accessor => _foo # turns into (accessor => _foo)
is => ro, accessor => _foo # error, accesor is rw
The "before/around/after" method modifiers now
support regexp matching of method names. NOTE: this only works for classes, it
is currently not supported in roles, but, ... patches welcome.
The "has" keyword for roles now
accepts the same array ref form that Moose.pm does for classes.
A trigger on a read-only attribute is no longer an error, as it's
useful to trigger off of the constructor.
Subtypes of parameterizable types now are parameterizable types
themselves.
Fixed issue where "DEMOLISHALL" was eating the
value in $@, and so not working correctly. It still
kind of eats them, but so does vanilla perl.
Inherited attributes may now be extended without restriction on the type ('isa',
'does').
The entire set of Moose::Meta::TypeConstraint::* classes were
refactored in this release. If you were relying on their internals you
should test your code carefully.
Documenting the use of '+name' with attributes that come from recently composed
roles. It makes sense, people are using it, and so why not just officially
support it.
The
"Moose::Meta::Class->create" method now
supports roles.
It is now possible to make anonymous enum types by passing
"enum" an array reference instead of the
"enum $name => @values".
Added the "make_immutable" keyword as a
shortcut to calling "make_immutable" on the
meta object. This eventually got removed!
Made "init_arg => undef" work
in Moose. This means "do not accept a constructor parameter for this
attribute".
Type errors now use the provided message. Prior to this release
they didn't.
Moose is now a postmodern object system :)
The Role system was completely refactored. It is 100% backwards
compat, but the internals were totally changed. If you relied on the
internals then you are advised to test carefully.
Added method exclusion and aliasing for Roles in this release.
Added the Moose::Util::TypeConstraints::OptimizedConstraints
module.
Passing a list of values to an accessor (which is only expecting
one value) used to be silently ignored, now it throws an error.
Added parameterized types and did a pretty heavy refactoring of the type
constraint system.
Better framework extensibility and better support for "making
your own Moose".
Honestly, you shouldn't be using versions of Moose that are this old, so many
bug fixes and speed improvements have been made you would be crazy to not
upgrade.
Also, I am tired of going through the Changelog so I am stopping
here, if anyone would like to continue this please feel free.
- Stevan Little <stevan@cpan.org>
- Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>
- Jesse Luehrs <doy@cpan.org>
- Shawn M Moore <sartak@cpan.org>
- יובל קוג'מן
(Yuval Kogman) <nothingmuch@woobling.org>
- Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>
- Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>
- Hans Dieter Pearcey <hdp@cpan.org>
- Chris Prather <chris@prather.org>
- Matt S Trout <mstrout@cpan.org>
This software is copyright (c) 2006 by Infinity Interactive, Inc.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
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