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Type::Coercion(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Type::Coercion(3) |
Type::Coercion - a set of coercions to a particular target type constraint
This module is covered by the Type-Tiny stability policy.
- "new(%attributes)"
- Moose-style constructor function.
- "add($c1, $c2)"
- Create a Type::Coercion from two existing Type::Coercion objects.
Attributes are named values that may be passed to the constructor. For each
attribute, there is a corresponding reader method. For example:
my $c = Type::Coercion->new( type_constraint => Int );
my $t = $c->type_constraint; # Int
Important attributes
These are the attributes you are likely to be most interested in
providing when creating your own type coercions, and most interested in
reading when dealing with coercion objects.
- "type_constraint"
- Weak reference to the target type constraint (i.e. the type constraint
which the output of coercion coderefs is expected to conform to).
- "type_coercion_map"
- Arrayref of source-type/code pairs.
- "frozen"
- Boolean; default false. A frozen coercion cannot have
"add_type_coercions" called upon
it.
- "name"
- A name for the coercion. These need to conform to certain naming rules
(they must begin with an uppercase letter and continue using only letters,
digits 0-9 and underscores).
Optional; if not supplied will be an anonymous coercion.
- "display_name"
- A name to display for the coercion when stringified. These don't have to
conform to any naming rules. Optional; a default name will be calculated
from the "name".
- "library"
- The package name of the type library this coercion is associated with.
Optional. Informational only: setting this attribute does not install the
coercion into the package.
Attributes related to parameterizable and parameterized
coercions
The following attributes are used for parameterized coercions, but
are not fully documented because they may change in the near future:
- "coercion_generator"
- "parameters"
- "parameterized_from"
Lazy generated attributes
The following attributes should not be usually passed to the
constructor; unless you're doing something especially unusual, you should
rely on the default lazily-built return values.
- "compiled_coercion"
- Coderef to coerce a value ($_[0]).
The general point of this attribute is that you should not set
it, but rely on the lazily-built default. Type::Coerce will usually
generate a pretty fast coderef, inlining all type constraint checks,
etc.
- "moose_coercion"
- A Moose::Meta::TypeCoercion object equivalent to this one. Don't set this
manually; rely on the default built one.
Predicate methods
These methods return booleans indicating information about the
coercion. They are each tightly associated with a particular attribute. (See
"Attributes".)
- "has_type_constraint", "has_library"
- Simple Moose-style predicate methods indicating the presence or absence of
an attribute.
- "is_anon"
- Returns true iff the coercion does not have a
"name".
The following predicates are used for parameterized coercions, but
are not fully documented because they may change in the near future:
- "has_coercion_generator"
- "has_parameters"
- "is_parameterizable"
- "is_parameterized"
Coercion
The following methods are used for coercing values to a type
constraint:
- "coerce($value)"
- Coerce the value to the target type.
Returns the coerced value, or the original value if no
coercion was possible.
- "assert_coerce($value)"
- Coerce the value to the target type, and throw an exception if the result
does not validate against the target type constraint.
Returns the coerced value.
Coercion code definition methods
These methods all return $self so are
suitable for chaining.
- "add_type_coercions($type1, $code1, ...)"
- Takes one or more pairs of Type::Tiny constraints and coercion code,
creating an ordered list of source types and coercion codes.
Coercion codes can be expressed as either a string of Perl
code (this includes objects which overload stringification), or a
coderef (or object that overloads coderefification). In either case, the
value to be coerced is $_.
"add_type_coercions($coercion_object)"
also works, and can be used to copy coercions from another type
constraint:
$type->coercion->add_type_coercions($othertype->coercion)->freeze;
- "freeze"
- Sets the "frozen" attribute to true.
Called automatically by Type::Tiny sometimes.
- "i_really_want_to_unfreeze"
- If you really want to unfreeze a coercion, call this method.
Don't call this method. It will potentially lead to subtle
bugs.
This method is considered unstable; future versions of
Type::Tiny may alter its behaviour (e.g. to throw an exception if it has
been detected that unfreezing this particular coercion will cause
bugs).
Parameterization
The following method is used for parameterized coercions, but is
not fully documented because it may change in the near future:
- "parameterize(@params)"
Type coercion introspection methods
These methods allow you to determine a coercion's relationship to
type constraints:
- "has_coercion_for_type($source_type)"
- Returns true iff this coercion has a coercion from the source type.
Returns the special string "0 but
true" if no coercion should actually be necessary for this
type. (For example, if a coercion coerces to a theoretical
"Number" type, there is probably no coercion necessary for
values that already conform to the "Integer" type.)
- "has_coercion_for_value($value)"
- Returns true iff the value could be coerced by this coercion.
Returns the special string "0 but
true" if no coercion would be actually be necessary for this
value (due to it already meeting the target type constraint).
The "type_constraint" attribute
provides a type constraint object for the target type constraint of the
coercion. See "Attributes".
Inlining methods
The following methods are used to generate strings of Perl code
which may be pasted into stringy
"eval"uated subs to perform type
coercions:
- "can_be_inlined"
- Returns true iff the coercion can be inlined.
- "inline_coercion($varname)"
- Much like "inline_coerce" from
Type::Tiny.
Other methods
- "qualified_name"
- For non-anonymous coercions that have a library, returns a qualified
"MyLib::MyCoercion" sort of name.
Otherwise, returns the same as
"name".
- "isa($class)", "can($method)",
"AUTOLOAD(@args)"
- If Moose is loaded, then the combination of these methods is used to mock
a Moose::Meta::TypeCoercion.
The following methods exist for Moose/Mouse compatibility, but do
not do anything useful.
- "compile_type_coercion"
- "meta"
- Boolification is overloaded to always return true.
- Coderefification is overloaded to call
"coerce".
- On Perl 5.10.1 and above, smart match is overloaded to call
"has_coercion_for_value".
Previous versions of Type::Coercion would overload the
"+" operator to call
"add". Support for this was dropped after
0.040.
- Attempt to add coercion code to a Type::Coercion which has been
frozen
- Type::Tiny type constraints are designed as immutable objects. Once you've
created a constraint, rather than modifying it you generally create child
constraints to do what you need.
Type::Coercion objects, on the other hand, are mutable.
Coercion routines can be added at any time during the object's
lifetime.
Sometimes Type::Tiny needs to freeze a Type::Coercion object
to prevent this. In Moose and Mouse code this is likely to happen as
soon as you use a type constraint in an attribute.
Workarounds:
- Define as many of your coercions as possible within type libraries, not
within the code that uses the type libraries. The type library will be
evaluated relatively early, likely before there is any reason to freeze a
coercion.
- If you do need to add coercions to a type within application code outside
the type library, instead create a subtype and add coercions to that. The
"plus_coercions" method provided by
Type::Tiny should make this simple.
Please report any bugs to
<https://github.com/tobyink/p5-type-tiny/issues>.
Type::Tiny::Manual.
Type::Tiny, Type::Library, Type::Utils, Types::Standard.
Type::Coercion::Union.
Moose::Meta::TypeCoercion.
Toby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>.
This software is copyright (c) 2013-2014, 2017-2021 by Toby Inkster.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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